This invention is directed toward a system and method for applying optical forces by use of phase gradients. More particularly, the system and method employs phase gradients in a light field to create a new category of optical traps which provide additional features compared to conventional intensity gradient traps (optical tweezers).
Optical tweezers have demonstrated substantial value in various commercial applications, such as for example, separation of particles of different characteristics and dynamic manipulation of small objects for numerous, commercial, manufacturing and processing applications. However, optical tweezers do have substantial limitations on the degrees of freedom that can be created, thereby limiting the types and efficiency of forces and manipulations that can be used for demanding commercial applications.
A method and system have been developed for a new category of optical force by using phrase gradients in place of, or in concert with, light intensity gradients. This new category of optical force enables redirection of electromagnetic radiation pressure to create optical forces transverse to an optical axis. This new type of optical force can be used alone or in combination with conventional longitudinal forces and other intensity gradient profiles to create a useful and versatile tool. These optical forces can establish a highly flexible means to apply virtually any type of force vector to perform commercially important processes, some of which could not previously be accomplished without the advantages of this new type of optical force phase based gradient.
Various aspects of the invention are described hereinafter; and these and other improvements are described in greater detail below, including the drawings described in the following section.
FIG. 4A(1) illustrates a phase gradient barrier for two 1.5 μm diameter silica spheres (the scale bar is 5 μm); FIG. 4A(2) illustrates a phase gradient well in a uniformly bright line trap for the two 1.5 μm diameter silica spheres; FIG. 4B(1) illustrates the phase gradient barrier for uniform in-plane intensity of the focused line; FIG. 4B(2) illustrates the phase gradient well with uniform in-plane intensity of the focused line; FIG. 4C(1) illustrates the phase gradient barrier in an axial section through the measured intensity sharing the intensity divergence due to the phase profile; FIG. 4C(2) illustrates the phase gradient well in a uniformly bright line trap for convergence due to the phase profile; FIG. 4D(1) illustrates the associated designed phase gradient for the configuration of FIG. 4A(1) featuring the desired parabolic profile and off-line phase variations designed to minimize intensity variations and FIG. 4D(2) shows the associated designed phase gradient for the configuration of FIG. 4A(2); and
A holographic optical trapping system for performing shape phase holography is shown at 10 in
The phase gradients generated by the method described herein can redirect radiation pressure to create optical force fields transverse to the optical axis 20. Photon orbital angular momentum (OAM) is one experimentally realized example of this phenomenon. Phase-gradient forces can be applied by combining them with intensity gradients in holographically projected light fields to create a new category of extended optical traps with tailored force profiles.
The vector potential describing a beam of light of frequency ω and polarization {circumflex over (ε)}(r) can be written as
A(r,t)=u(r)eiΦ(r)e−ωt{circumflex over (ε)}(r) (1)
where u(r) is the real-valued amplitude and Φ(r) is the real-valued phase. We assume for simplicity that the light is linearly polarized so that {circumflex over (ε)}(r) is real. For a plane wave propagating in the {circumflex over (z)} direction, Φ(r)=kz, where k=nmω/c is the light's wavenumber, c is the speed of light in vacuum, and nm, is the refractive index of the medium. Imposing a transverse phase profile φ(r) on the wavefronts of such a beam yields,
Φ(r)=kz(r)z+φ(r), (2)
where {circumflex over (z)}·∇φ=0. The direction of the wavevector, k(r)=kz(r) {circumflex over (z)}+∇φ, now varies with position, subject to the constraint k2=|k|2=kz2+|∇φ|2, which applies in the paraxial limit, k>>|∇φ|. The associated electric and magnetic fields are given in the Lorenz gauge by,
where μ is the magnetic permeability of the medium, which we assume to be homogeneous and isotropic. Following the well known Abraham's formulation, the momentum flux carried by the beam is,
where I(r)=|u(r)|2 is the light's intensity, and where we have employed the gauge condition, ∇·A=0.
The momentum flux separates into an axial component gz(r)=kkzI(r)(nmμc)−1{circumflex over (z)} and
transverse to the optical axis 20, which is responsible for transverse forces.
It has been recognized that the helical phase profile, φ(r)=lθ, imbues a beam of light with an OAM flux, r×g⊥, amounting to l per photon. Here, θ is the azimuthal angle around the optical axis, and l is an integer describing the wavefronts' helical pitch. This OAM is distinct from the photons' intrinsic spin angular momentum. Through it, even linearly polarized light can exert a torque around the optical axis. Equation (5) reveals this to be a manifestation of the more general class of transverse forces arising from phase gradients.
Intensity gradients also exert forces on illuminated objects. In this case, the dipole moment induced in the object responds to gradients in the field, yielding a force proportional to the gradient of the intensity, which therefore is manifestly conservative. For a small sphere of radius α, the intensity-gradient force has the form,
where m=np/nm, is the ratio of the particle's refractive index, np, to the medium's, nm. Unlike g, F∇ can be directed up the optical axis. The resulting axial restoring force is the basis of single-beam optical traps.
Because beams of light have gradients in both the intensity and the phase, the total optical force is not conservative. This is evident because,
does not vanish in general. Although it is known that optical traps exert non-conservative forces, subsequent reports have treated optical tweezers as (conservative) potential energy wells.
Phase-gradient forces can thus be created using a new class of extended optical traps created through shape-phase holography. The system 10 shown schematically in
The holograms designed for this study bring the laser light 60 to a focus along one-dimensional curves, C, embedded in the three-dimensional focal volume of the objective lens 40. Each hologram also encodes a designated intensity profile I(s) and phase profile φ(s) along the arclength s of C. This is accomplished by numerically back-projecting the desired field along C onto the plane of the SLM 30 to obtain the ideal complex-valued hologram, ψ(r)=|b(r)|exp(ip(r)). An appropriate shape-phase algorithm assigns the phase shifts p(r) to the SLM's pixels with a probability proportional to |b(r)|. An alternate phase pattern imprinted on the unassigned pixels diverts excess light away from C.
The images in
In the case of the line trap, we first subjected the trapped particle to linear phase gradients, ∇φ=q x, over the range q=±12 radians/μm. The insets to
The line trap was projected into an aqueous dispersion of colloidal silica spheres 2α=1.53 μm in diameter sealed into the 40 μm thick gap between a glass microscope slide and a #1 glass coverslip. Focusing the trap near the sample's midplane avoids reflections from the glass-water interface and minimizes hydrodynamic coupling to the walls. Equation (5) and the Stokes mobility law for a colloidal sphere then suggest that a trapped particle's speed, v, should be proportional to q.
To test this prediction, we measured the time required for a single sphere to travel the length, L=5 μm, of a 100 mW trap as the sign of q was flipped 20 times for each value of |q|. The observed root-mean-square off-line excursions of roughly 200 nm suggest axial and lateral trap stiffnesses comparable to those of a point-like optical tweezer powered by 1 mW. Under these conditions, the trapped sphere traveled along the line at speeds up to 2 μm/s when subjected to the largest phase gradients. Results obtained by systematically varying q are plotted in
More complicated phase gradients give rise to more interesting physical effects demonstrating the versatility of the use of phase gradients. The particles shown in FIGS. 4A(1) and 4A(2) also are trapped along a uniformly bright line trap of length L=10 μm. This line, however, has a parabolic phase profile, φ(x)=±(qx)2, that is predicted to force objects either out to the ends of the line or toward its center depending on the sign. The images in FIG. 4A(1)-4D(2) demonstrate both effects for a pair of trapped colloidal spheres. Axial sections in FIGS. 4C(1) and 4C(2) through the three-dimensional intensity distribution show that the phase-gradient barrier results from light diverging along the line's length, while the well results from the projection of converging rays. FIGS. 4D(1) and 4D(2) show the designed phase gradient conditions featuring the designed parabolic profile and off-line phase variations so as to minimize intensity variations (FIG. 4D(1) is correlated to FIG. 4A(1) and FIG. 4D(2) correlated to FIG. 4A(2)). So long as the particles are rigidly confined to the uniformly bright focal line, Eq. (7) suggests that the phase-gradient force approximates a conservative potential energy landscape.
Like holographic line traps, holographic ring traps, such as the example in
A ring trap with a uniform azimuthal phase gradient exerts a torque about its axis. We demonstrated this by tracking a colloidal silica sphere circulating around a holographic ring trap of radius R=2.6 μm projected into the midplane of a 40 μm thick sample. The trapped particle was subjected to azimuthal phase gradients in the range l=±50, and its peak speed was measured to within 10% for each value of the helicity. The results are plotted in
Like optical vortices, holographic ring traps carrying orbital angular momentum are subject to l-fold and 2 l-fold azimuthal intensity variations due to non-ideal phase scaling that trap the particle for |l|<lc. For |l|>lc, however, the particle's peak speed increases linearly with |l|, consistent with the predictions of Eq. (5). Intermittent circulation near |l|=lc gives rise to large velocity fluctuations characterized by giant enhancement of the particle's effective diffusion coefficient. Disorder in the effective force landscape also gives rise to interesting collective dynamics for multiple particles trapped on the ring, including transitions among periodic, chaotic and weakly chaotic steady states. Phase-gradient forces in holographic ring traps therefore provide useful model systems for studying fundamental problems in nonequilibrium statistical mechanics. They also can provide numerous practical applications as the basis for microscopic pumps, mixers, and optomechanical micromachines. Azimuthal phase gradients also can be used to endow a holographic ring trap with more complicated force profiles, even if the ring's intensity is uniform.
Phase gradients in a beam of light can thus give rise to forces transverse to the optical axis, and these forces can be harnessed for a new type of optical trap. Tuning optical traps' force profiles with phase gradients will be useful for manipulating microscopic objects, and will greatly facilitate rapid measurements of colloidal interactions, for example. Although phase-gradient forces generally are non-conservative, they can act as conservative force fields on appropriately restricted manifolds. More generally, optical forces' non-conservativity can engender useful attributes in illuminated particles' dynamics, including departures from Boltzmann statistics for systems nominally in equilibrium. Phase gradients can also give rise to spatial variations in the polarization. Although optically isotropic materials are not influenced by polarization gradients, anisotropic materials can be. Phase-directed polarization gradients can be tailored and therefore should provide additional independent avenues for controlling microscopic systems.
The foregoing description of embodiments of the present invention have been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the present invention to the precise form disclosed, and modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings or may be acquired from practice of the present invention. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to explain the principles of the present invention and its practical application to enable one skilled in the art to utilize the present invention in various embodiments, and with various modifications, as are suited to the particular use contemplated.
The United States Government has certain rights in this invention pursuant to a grant from the National Service Foundation through Grant Number DMR-0606415.