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25 - 30 January 2025
San Francisco, California, US
Conference 13381 > Paper 13381-4
Paper 13381-4

Fully automated 3D assembly of nanoparticle building blocks using optical tweezers

26 January 2025 • 2:40 PM - 3:00 PM PST | Moscone South, Room 155 (Upper Mezz)

Abstract

Advances in 3D nanofabrication can enable photonic materials and devices that are currently infeasible, including photonic metamaterials, ultra-compact imaging devices, and biosensors. Here we present the 3D assembly of hundreds of nanoscale building blocks using optical positioning and linking (OPAL), which is based on optical tweezers and biotin-avidin chemical linking. A microfluidic chip is used to deliver different building blocks to different loading zones surrounding an assembly zone. A quadrant photodiode signal processed using principal component analysis provides feedback for automatic loading of the optical trap. A computer-controlled translation stage precisely places each building block according to a predefined set of coordinates. We use a combination of the discrete dipole approximation, finite difference time domain, and finite element methods to design arrangements of particles for different applications, including metasurface design, 3D magnetic metamaterial design, and nanostructured microtoroidal optical resonator sensors for toxic gases.

Presenter

Wyant College of Optical Sciences (United States)
Euan McLeod is an Associate Professor in the Wyant College of Optical Sciences at the University of Arizona (UA). He is also an Associate Professor of the UA BIO5 Institute and an Affiliate Member of the UA Cancer Center. Euan is a Senior Member of SPIE and OSA. He won an NSF CAREER award in 2021. He was a postdoc in Electrical Engineering and Bioengineering at UCLA, as well as a postdoc in Applied Physics at Caltech. Euan received his Ph.D. from Princeton University and his B.S. from Caltech. Euan’s background and interests lie at the intersection of optics, nanoscience, and soft bio-materials science. He has published 48 papers on these topics in peer-reviewed journals and has been awarded 7 patents, with major contributions in the areas of high-speed varifocal lenses based on acoustic modulation, lensfree holographic imaging of nanoparticles, viruses, and biomarkers; and the use of optical tweezers in fabricating micro- and nano-structured materials.
Application tracks: 3D Printing
Presenter/Author
Wyant College of Optical Sciences (United States)
Author
Natalie Shultz
Wyant College of Optical Sciences (United States)
Author
Wyant College of Optical Sciences (United States)