26 research outputs found

    Optical trapping and manipulation of nanostructures

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    Optical trapping and manipulation of micrometre-sized particles was first reported in 1970. Since then, it has been successfully implemented in two size ranges: the subnanometre scale, where light-matter mechanical coupling enables cooling of atoms, ions and molecules, and the micrometre scale, where the momentum transfer resulting from light scattering allows manipulation of microscopic objects such as cells. But it has been difficult to apply these techniques to the intermediate-nanoscale-range that includes structures such as quantum dots, nanowires, nanotubes, graphene and two-dimensional crystals, all of crucial importance for nanomaterials-based applications. Recently, however, several new approaches have been developed and demonstrated for trapping plasmonic nanoparticles, semiconductor nanowires and carbon nanostructures. Here we review the state-of-the-art in optical trapping at the nanoscale, with an emphasis on some of the most promising advances, such as controlled manipulation and assembly of individual and multiple nanostructures, force measurement with femtonewton resolution, and biosensors

    Optical feedback radiation forces: Intracavity optical trapping with feedback-locked diode lasers

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    We demonstrate a novel mechanism for optical tweezing, where a trapped particle dynamically alters an external cavity quality factor, reduceing the average intensity and photodamage, even employing low-numerical aperture lenses and wide fields-of-view. © OSA 2012

    Assessment of NSOM resolution on III-V semiconductor thin films

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