Stand-Alone Three-Dimensional Optical Tweezers Based on Fibred Bowtie Nanoaperture

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Abstract

We study optical trapping of small particles based on the use of a bowtie nanoaperture antenna (BNA) engraved at the end of a metal-coated near-field optical microscope tip. Within the obtained light confinement, a 3-D trapping of latex nanoparticles is studied and quantified as a function of the incident light power. Good agreement between experimental and numerical results is obtained for a BNA operating in water at λ = 1064 nm that faithfully traps 250-nm-radius latex particles. Further numerical investigations are performed to study the dynamic of the trapping process in comparison with experimental results. In addition, numerical results for R = 100 nm and R = 30 nm-radii latex particles are presented and show that such a configuration has the potential to trap latex particles as small as 30 nm in radius.

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Hameed, N. M., El Eter, A., Grosjean, T., & Baida, F. I. (2014). Stand-Alone Three-Dimensional Optical Tweezers Based on Fibred Bowtie Nanoaperture. IEEE Photonics Journal, 6(4). https://doi.org/10.1109/JPHOT.2014.2341011

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