In advanced biomedicine and microfluidics, there is a strong desire to sort and manipulate various cells and bacteria based on miniaturized microfluidic chips. Here, by integrating fiber tweezers into a T-type microfluidic channel, we report an optofluidic chip to selectively trap Escherichia coli in human blood solution based on different sizes and shapes. Furthermore, we simulate the trapping and pushing regions of other cells and bacteria, including rod-shaped bacteria, sphere-shaped bacteria, and cancer cells based on finite-difference analysis. With the advantages of controllability, low optical power, and compact construction, the strategy may be possibly applied in the fields of optical separation, cell transportation, and water quality analysis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OL.44.001868 | DOI Listing |
Sci Adv
November 2024
Centre for Nano Optics, University of Southern Denmark, Campusvej 55, Odense M DK-5230, Denmark.
Compared to conventional lasers limited to generating static modes, mode-switchable lasers equipped with adjustable optics significantly enhance the flexibility and versatility of coherent light sources. However, most current approaches to achieving mode-switchable lasers depend on conventional, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
November 2024
Photonics Lab, Division of Natural and Applied Sciences, Duke Kunshan University, 8 Duke Ave, Kunshan, 215316, Jiangsu Province, China.
Microplastics up to 20 μm are recognized as having the highest potential to cause significant impacts on aquatic environments. Current methods face challenges in detecting and chemically characterizing small microplastics in freshwater systems. In this study, using an optical confocal micro-Raman tweezer technique, the composition of particles trapped in lake aggregates collected from surface water around Yangcheng Lake in Suzhou, China, has been identified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn efficient method allowing the flexible generation of the azimuthally/radially polarized (AP/RP) beam and the hybrid polarized vortex (HPV) beam has been proposed and experimentally demonstrated by using a thinned helical fiber grating (T-HFG) with an intermediate period. This is the first time, to the best of our knowledge, that such three kinds of cylindrical vector beams can be flexibly generated by using only one fiber component. The proposed method provides the potential application of the HFG to not only the laser processing but also the optical manipulator and the optical tweezer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Mater
November 2024
Department of Physics and Astronomy and LaserLaB, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
During mitosis in eukaryotic cells, mechanical forces generated by the mitotic spindle pull the sister chromatids into the nascent daughter cells. How do mitotic chromosomes achieve the necessary mechanical stiffness and stability to maintain their integrity under these forces? Here we use optical tweezers to show that ions involved in physiological chromosome condensation are crucial for chromosomal stability, stiffness and viscous dissipation. We combine these experiments with high-salt histone depletion and theory to show that chromosomal elasticity originates from the chromatin fibre behaving as a flexible polymer, whereas energy dissipation can be explained by modelling chromatin loops as an entangled polymer solution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Nanotechnol
October 2024
Stratingh Institute for Chemistry, University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
Biomolecular polymerization motors are biochemical systems that use supramolecular (de-)polymerization to convert chemical potential into useful mechanical work. With the intent to explore new chemomechanical transduction strategies, here we show a synthetic molecular system that can generate forces via the controlled disassembly of self-organized molecules in a crystal lattice, as they are freely suspended in a fluid. An amphiphilic monomer self-assembles into rigid, high-aspect-ratio microcrystalline fibres.
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