Publication Date:
2019
abstract:
Optical tweezers are a crucial tool for the manipulation and characterisation,
without mechanical contact, of micro- and nanoparticles, ranging from biological components,
such as biomolecules, viruses, bacteria, and cells, to nanotubes, nanowires, layered
materials, plasmonic nanoparticles, and their composites. Despite the many interdisciplinary
applications, only recently it has been possible to develop an accurate theoretical modelling
for the mesoscale size range. This goes beyond the strong approximations typically used for
the calculation of optical forces on particles much smaller (dipole approximation) or much
larger (ray optics) than the wavelength of the trapping light. Among the different methods
used to calculate optical forces on model particles, the ones based on the transition matrix
(T-matrix) are currently among the most accurate and efficient, particularly when applied to
non-spherical particles, both isolated and interacting, or in composite structures. Here, we
first give an overview of the theoretical background on optical forces, optomechanics, and
T-matrix methods. Then, we focus on calculations of optical trapping on model polystyrene
nanowires with the aim to investigate their scaling with nanowire length at the mesoscale.
We compare the force constant dependence with approximations at small or large length
with respect to the trapping wavelength and with calculations on spheres, pointing out the
role of shape.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Optical tweezers; T-matrix; Nanowires
List of contributors: