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Trapping colloidal dielectric microparticles with overlapping evanescent optical waves
Authors:R Khakimov  A Shevchenko  A Havukainen  K Lindfors  M Kaivola
Institution:1. The College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou, PR China;2. Department of Applied Physics, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin, PR China;1. College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Zhengzhou University, Henan, 450001, China;2. Zhengzhou Food and Drug Inspection Institute, Henan, 450001, China;3. Department of Applied Physics, Harbin Institute of Technology, Heilongjiang, 150001, China;1. Department of Physics, FBAS International Islamic University Islamabad, Pakistan;2. Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Department of Physics, Riphah International University I-14 Campus Islamabad, Pakistan;1. Department of Electronic Engineering, School of IoT Engineering, Jiangnan University, Wuxi 214122, China;2. Institute of Advanced Magnetic Materials, Hangzhou Dianzi University, Hangzhou 310038, China
Abstract:We experimentally demonstrate the creation of a stable surface trap for colloidal microparticles in a high-intensity evanescent optical field that is produced by total internal reflection of two counter-propagating and mutually incoherent laser beams. While the particles confined in the trap undergo fast Brownian motion, they never “stick” to the surface – not even at high optical powers – but rather levitate above the surface. If many particles are stored in the trap, they tend to form a well ordered self-organized array. We apply a numerical model based on the general energy-momentum tensor formalism to evaluate the overall optical force acting on a trapped particle. The optical-field parameters are calculated using the finite element method. The simulations show that for small particles a sharp repulsive potential at the surface – required for the levitation – can have neither optical nor light-induced thermal origin. Among the possible non-optical forces, electrostatic double-layer repulsion is often considered to be the origin of the levitation. We find, however, that the experimentally observed levitation of small particles in a high-intensity evanescent-wave trap cannot be explained by this effect.
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