Plasmonic nanoapertures generate strong field gradients enabling efficient optical trapping of nanoobjects. However, because the infrared laser used for trapping is also partly absorbed into the metal leading to Joule heating, plasmonic nano-optical tweezers face the issue of local temperature increase.Here, we develop three independent methods based on molecular fluorescence to quantify the temperature increase induced by a 1064 nm trapping beam focused on single and double nanoholes milled in gold films. We show that the temperature in the nanohole can be increased by 10°C even at the moderate intensities of 2 mW/µm² used for nano-optical trapping. The temperature gain is found to be largely governed by the Ohmic losses into the metal layer, independently of the aperture size, double-nanohole gap or laser polarization. The techniques developed therein can be readily extended to other structures to improve our understanding of nano-optical tweezers and explore heatcontrolled chemical reactions in nanoapertures.
Plasmonic nano-tweezers use intense electric field gradients to generate optical forces able to trap nano-objects in liquids. However, part of the incident light is absorbed into the metal, and a supplementary thermophoretic force acting on the nano-object arises from the resulting temperature gradient. Plasmonic nano-tweezers thus face the challenge of disentangling the intricate contributions of the optical and thermophoretic forces. Here, we show that commonly added surfactants can unexpectedly impact the trap performance by acting on the thermophilic or thermophobic response of the nano-object. Using different surfactants in double nanohole plasmonic trapping experiments, we measure and compare the contributions of the thermophoretic and the optical forces, evidencing a trap stiffness 20× higher using sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) as compared to Triton X-100. This work uncovers an important mechanism in plasmonic nano-tweezers and provides guidelines to control and optimize the trap performance for different plasmonic designs.
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