Spatially selective manipulation of cells with single-beam acoustical tweezers

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Abstract

Acoustical tweezers open major prospects in microbiology for cells and microorganisms contactless manipulation, organization and mechanical properties testing since they are biocompatible, label-free and have the potential to exert forces several orders of magnitude larger than their optical counterpart at equivalent power. Yet, these perspectives have so far been hindered by the absence of spatial selectivity of existing acoustical tweezers - i.e., the ability to select and move objects individually - and/or their limited resolution restricting their use to large particle manipulation only and/or finally the limited forces that they could apply. Here, we report precise selective manipulation and positioning of individual human cells in a standard microscopy environment with trapping forces up to ~200 pN without altering their viability. These results are obtained with miniaturized acoustical tweezers combining holography with active materials to synthesize specific wavefields called focused acoustical vortices designed to produce stiff localized traps with reduced acoustic power.

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Baudoin, M., Thomas, J. L., Sahely, R. A., Gerbedoen, J. C., Gong, Z., Sivery, A., … Vlandas, A. (2020). Spatially selective manipulation of cells with single-beam acoustical tweezers. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-18000-y

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