Topological Encoded Vector Beams for Monitoring Amyloid-Lipid Interactions in Microcavity

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Abstract

Lasers are the pillars of modern photonics and sensing. Recent advances in microlasers have demonstrated its extraordinary lasing characteristics suitable for biosensing. However, most lasers utilized lasing spectrum as a detection signal, which can hardly detect or characterize nanoscale structural changes in microcavity. Here the concept of amplified structured light-molecule interactions is introduced to monitor tiny bio-structural changes in a microcavity. Biomimetic liquid crystal droplets with self-assembled lipid monolayers are sandwiched in a Fabry–Pérot cavity, where subtle protein-lipid membrane interactions trigger the topological transformation of output vector beams. By exploiting Amyloid β (Aβ)-lipid membrane interactions as a proof-of-concept, it is demonstrated that vector laser beams can be viewed as a topology of complex laser modes and polarization states. The concept of topological-encoded laser barcodes is therefore developed to reveal dynamic changes of laser modes and Aβ-lipid interactions with different Aβ assembly structures. The findings demonstrate that the topology of vector beams represents significant features of intracavity nano-structural dynamics resulted from structured light-molecule interactions.

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APA

Gong, C., Qiao, Z., Yuan, Z., Huang, S. H., Wang, W., Wu, P. C., & Chen, Y. C. (2021). Topological Encoded Vector Beams for Monitoring Amyloid-Lipid Interactions in Microcavity. Advanced Science, 8(12). https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202100096

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