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Saturday, March 5, 2011

Optical Tweezers

http://www.cobolt.se/opticaltweezers.html

Optical tweezers (originally called "single-beam gradient force trap") are a bioanalytical instrument that makes use of a highly-focused laser beam to provide an attractive or repulsive force, depending on the refractive index mismatch to physically hold and move microscopic dielectric objects. Optical tweezers have become a well known and successful tool in studying a variety of biological systems.

The narrowest point of the focused beam, known as the beam waist, contains a very strong electric field gradient. It turns out that dielectric particles are attracted along the gradient to the region of strongest electric field, which is the center of the beam. The laser light also tends to apply a force on particles in the beam along the direction of beam propagation. By utilising this force it is possible to manipulate biological cells and even move them from one position to another.

A basic optical tweezer setup includes:

a laser, a beam expander, some optics used to steer the beam location in the sample plane, a microscope objective
and condenser to create t
he trap in the sample plane, a position detector (e.g. quadrant photodiode) to measure beam displacements and a microscope illumination source coupled to a CCD camera (see Fig.1 on the right).

Extremely important properties of a laser used for optical tweezers are excellent beam quality and very low noise.


Read more about Cobolt Rumba ™ 1064 nm for optical tweezers. 


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