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World's Smallest Wrench Puts a New Twist on Microscopic Manipulation
WASHINGTON --(Business Wire)--
Harnessing laser light's ability to gently push and pull microscopic
particles, researchers have created the fiber-optic equivalent of the
world's smallest wrench. This virtual tool can precisely twist and turn
the tiniest of particles, from living cells and DNA to microscopic
motors and dynamos used in biological and physical research.
This new twist on controlling the incredibly small, developed by
physicists at The University of Texas at Arlington, will give scientists
the ability to skillfully manipulate single cells for cancer research,
twist and untwist individual strands of DNA, and perform many other
functions where microscopic precision is essential. The authors describe
their new technique, which they dub a fiber-optic spanner (the British
term for a wrench), in a paper published today in the Optical Society's (OSA)
journal Optics
Letters.
The innovation that distinguishes this technique from other optical
tools is that it can, for the first time, spin or twist microscale
objects in any direction and along any axis without moving any optical
component. It's able to do this because it uses flexible optical fibers
rather than stationary lasers to do the work. This has the added benefit
that the optical fibers can be positioned inside the human body, where
they can manipulate and help study specific cells or potentially guide
neurons in the spinal cord.
Rather than an actual physical device that wraps around a cell or other
microscopic particle to apply rotational force, or torque, the
fiber-optic spanner is created when two beams of laser light - emitted
by a pair of optical fibers - strike opposite sides of the microscopic
object.
Individual photons impart a virtually imperceptible bit of force when
they strike an object, but an intense beam of laser light can create
just enough power to gently rotate microscopic particles. "When photons
of light strike and then get reflected back from an object, they give it
a small push from an effect called scattering forces," explains
Samarendra Mohanty, assistant professor of physics at The University of
Texas at Arlington and lead author of the study. This techniue is
already used to perform optical "tweezing," which can move an object
forward and backward along a straight line. "Optical tweezing is useful
for biomedical and microfluidic research," said Mohanty. "But it lacks
the control and versatility of our fiber optic spanner, especially when
it comes to working deep inside."
In the team's new optical spanner, the optical fibers use laser beams to
first trap an object and then hold it in place. By slightly offsetting
the optical fibers, the beams are able to impart a small twisting force,
which causes the object to rotate in place. Depending on the positioning
of the fibers, it is possible to create rotation along any axis and in
any direction. This greatly enhances researchers' ability to study and
image cells and groups of cells for biological research and medical
analysis.
In their research, Mohanty and graduate student Bryan Black used their
new technique to rotate and shift human smooth muscle cells without
damaging them. Demonstrating that the technique may have both clinical
and laboratory uses.
For example, the spanner could rotate cells in a microfluidic analysis,
image them with tomography, and then move them aside to allow the
analysis of subsequent cells in the flow.
The technique could also be used to rotate single cells to determine by
their spin if they are normal or cancerous. It could also help examine
embryos to aid in in-vitro fertilization. It could mix or pump the
fluids in lab-on-a-chip devices, or move and rotate micro-spheres
attached to the opposite ends of a DNA strand to stretch and uncoil the
molecule, allowing it to be sequenced more efficiently. In a follow-up
paper to be published in Applied Physics Letters, Mohanty
describes how this method can be used to rotate and fluorescently scan
an object, which would reveal details about its chemical properties.
Non-medical macroscopic uses for the tool are also possible. "I envision
applications in the direct conversion of solar energy to mechanical
energy, rotating large, macroscopic objects using this technique,"
Mohanty says. This would "simulate an environment in which photons
radiated from the Sun could propel the reflective motors in solar sails,
a promising future technology for deep-space travel."
Paper: "Fiber-Optic
Spanner," Optics Letters, Vol. 37, Issue 24, pp. 5030-5032
(2012)
EDITOR'S NOTE: Images and a video clip are available to members of the
media upon request. Contact Angela Stark, astark@osa.org.
About Optics Letters
Published by the Optical Society (OSA), Optics Letters offers
rapid dissemination of new results in all areas of optics with short,
original, peer-reviewed communications. Optics Letters covers the
latest research in optical science, including optical measurements,
optical components and devices, atmospheric optics, biomedical optics,
Fourier optics, integrated optics, optical processing, optoelectronics,
lasers, nonlinear optics, optical storage and holography, optical
coherence, polarization, quantum electronics, ultrafast optical
phenomena, photonic crystals, and fiber optics. This journal, edited by
Alan E. Willner of the University of Southern California and published
twice each month, is where readers look for the latest discoveries in
optics. Visit www.OpticsInfoBase.org/OL.
About OSA
Uniting more than 180,000 professionals from 175 countries, the Optical
Society (OSA) brings together the global optics community through its
programs and initiatives. Since 1916 OSA has worked to advance the
common interests of the field, providing educational resources to the
scientists, engineers and business leaders who work in the field by
promoting the science of light and the advanced technologies made
possible by optics and photonics. OSA publications, events, technical
groups and programs foster optics knowledge and scientific collaboration
among all those with an interest in optics and photonics. For more
information, visit www.osa.org.

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