2011
DOI: 10.1021/nl201780y
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Opto-Mechanical Force Mapping of Deep Subwavelength Plasmonic Modes

Abstract: We present spatial mapping of optical force generated near the hot spot of a metal-dielectric-metal bowtie nanoantenna at a wavelength of 1550 nm. Maxwell's stress tensor method has been used to simulate the optical force and it agrees well with the experimental data. This method could potentially produce field intensity and optical force mapping simultaneously with a high spatial resolution. Detailed mapping of the optical force is crucial for understanding and designing plasmonic-based optical trapping for e… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…Consequently, the averaged surface-induced force is relatively small because the surface forces depend strongly on the tip-sample separation. Thus, in these conditions the magnitudes of OIF become comparable to the surface forces present in typical experimental conditions [11,56,58,59].…”
Section: Effect Of Optically Induced Forcesmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Consequently, the averaged surface-induced force is relatively small because the surface forces depend strongly on the tip-sample separation. Thus, in these conditions the magnitudes of OIF become comparable to the surface forces present in typical experimental conditions [11,56,58,59].…”
Section: Effect Of Optically Induced Forcesmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…This is of the same order or even slightly larger than in typical optomechanical experiment. 37 We can take much smaller nanoparticle with a 5 nm and obtain much larger force. …”
Section: A Parameter Estimatesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dielectric and metallic particles in the sub 100-nm range have been trapped with plasmonic nano-antennas, [9][10][11] and by optical pulling in fishnet metamaterial modeling; 12 also by double nano-holes 13 that have shown ability to trap single proteins. 14 The necessity to manipulate substances down to single molecule leaves open the interesting problem to trap and position such tiny object with full control and unobstructed light access: optical trapping ability of nanometric objects is limited as the object is reduced to 50 nm size or less, as trapping force is too weak to give stable trapping under Brownian motion.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%