The 68th JSAP Spring Meeting 2021

Presentation information

Oral presentation

3 Optics and Photonics » 3.1 Basic optics and frontier of optics

[16a-Z09-1~7] 3.1 Basic optics and frontier of optics

Tue. Mar 16, 2021 10:00 AM - 11:45 AM Z09 (Z09)

Kenichi Yuyama(Osaka City Univ.)

11:15 AM - 11:30 AM

[16a-Z09-6] Optically and Photo-physically Lifting Up Polystyrene Microparticles to Form a Large Two-Dimensional Assembly at Solution Surface

〇(M2)Yu Chia Chang1, Tetsuhiro Kudo2, Shuichi Toyouchi1, Hiroshi Masuhara1 (1.Department of Applied Chemistry, College of Science, National Chiao Tung Univ. Taiwan, 2.Lase Science Laboratory, Toyota Technological Institute, Japan)

Keywords:laser trapping, photoexcitation, solution surface

We have reported that the scattering and propagation of focused laser through the gathered polystyrene (PS) microparticles (MPs) expand the optical potential to a few ten micrometers outside the focus, leading to new phenomena of horn- [1], necklace-like arrangements [2], and ejection [3]. We call them as “Optically Evolved Assembling of Particles” at solution interfaces [4]. In this work, we change the optical configuration from the focused irradiation to wide field illumination, and find for the first time that plenty of PS MPs are collected to solution surface forming unorganized and organized arrangement.
Bare PS (BPS) and dye-doped PS (DPS) MPs with the size of 2 μm were irradiated by 488 nm wide field illumination (0.05 mW/μm2). In the case of BPS MPs (Fig. 1 a), upon turning on 488 nm wide field illumination, several BPS MPs slowly moved to the irradiated area and an unorganized assembly was formed in 10 s. On the other hand, DPS MPs rapidly moved to the irradiated area and prepared hexagonal structure, which can be ascribed to optical of the 488 nm laser resonance to the dye absorption (Fig. 1 b). This result suggests that the photoexcitation provides mechanical forces for lifting up them and mediates mutual interaction between MPs. In addition, by magnifying the irradiated area, the intensity became smaller (0.01 mW/μm2), the hexagonal structure formation was more widely achieved (Fig. 1 c). By moving the stage manually to the red direction, the hexagonal structure could be formed immediately at the new irradiated area as well. We compare this wider two-dimensional assembly formation with “Optically Evolved Assembling of Particles” in laser trapping and consider its mechanism and application.