Holographic optical tweezers combined with back-focal-plane displacement detection

Publication date

2014-04-08T06:56:09Z

2014-04-08T06:56:09Z

2013-12-16

2014-04-08T06:56:10Z

Abstract

A major problem with holographic optical tweezers (HOTs) is their incompatibility with laser-based position detection methods, such as back-focal-plane interferometry (BFPI). The alternatives generally used with HOTs, like high-speed video tracking, do not offer the same spatial and temporal bandwidths. This has limited the use of this technique in precise quantitative experiments. In this paper, we present an optical trap design that combines digital holography and back-focal-plane displacement detection. We show that, with a particularly simple setup, it is possible to generate a set of multiple holographic traps and an additional static non-holographic trap with orthogonal polarizations and that they can be, therefore, easily separated for measuring positions and forces with the high positional and temporal resolutions of laser-based detection. We prove that measurements from both polarizations contain less than 1% crosstalk and that traps in our setup are harmonic within the typical range. We further tested the instrument in a DNA stretching experiment and we discuss an interesting property of this configuration: the small drift of the differential signal between traps.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Optical Society of America

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org./10.1364/OE.21.030282

Optics Express, 2013, vol. 21, num. 25, p. 30282-30294

http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.21.030282

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(c) Optical Society of America, 2013

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