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1.
Opt Express ; 19(20): 19613-26, 2011 Sep 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21996903

ABSTRACT

It is generally accepted that the interaction between particles mediated by the scattered light (called optical binding) is very weak. Therefore, the optical binding is usually neglected in a multi-particle trapping in distinct optical traps. Here we show that even the presence of only two dielectric particles confined in the standing wave leads to their significantly different behavior comparing to the case of a single trapped particle. We obtained persuading coincidence between our experimental records and the results of the deterministic and stochastic theoretical simulations based on the coupled dipole method.


Subject(s)
Lasers , Light , Micromanipulation/instrumentation , Models, Theoretical , Optical Tweezers , Optics and Photonics , Particle Size , Equipment Design
2.
Opt Express ; 17(13): 10472-88, 2009 Jun 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19550443

ABSTRACT

Standing wave optical trapping offers many useful advantages in comparison to single beam trapping, especially for submicrometer size particles. It provides axial force stronger by several orders of magnitude, much higher axial trap stiffness, and spatial confinement of particles with higher refractive index. Mainly spherical particles are nowadays considered theoretically and trapped experimentally. In this paper we consider prolate objects of cylindrical symmetry with radius periodically modulated along the axial direction and we present a theoretical study of optimized objects shapes resulting in up to tenfold enhancement of the axial optical force in comparison with the original unmodulated object shape. We obtain analytical formulas for the axial optical force acting on low refractive index objects where the light scattering by the object is negligible. Numerical results based on the coupled dipole method are presented for objects with higher refractive indices and they support the previous simplified analytical conclusions.

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