Laser-guided acoustic tweezers

arXiv (Cornell University)(2022)

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Abstract
Acoustic tweezers can manipulate microscopic objects and cells independently of the optical, magnetic and electrical properties of the objects or their medium. However, because ultrasonic waves are attenuated within few millimeters, existing devices must synthesize intricate and powerful acoustic fields in a very narrow footprint immediately close to the manipulated object. Here we show that the design of microscale acoustic tweezers can be considerably simplified by taking advantage of the nonlinear nature of the acoustic trapping force. In our experiment, a featureless piezoelectric crystal coated with a photoacoustic conversion layer is hit by an electric pulse and a spatially modulated laser pulse to generate synchronized electro- and photo- acoustic waves. Interference between these waves creates a hybrid acoustic trapping force 30 times stronger than the laser pulse alone but with the same spatial information. By disentangling the tradeoff between spatial resolution and trapping force that has long held back the development of acoustic tweezers, this field hybridization strategy opens new avenues for cell manipulation in organ on chip and organ printing.
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Key words
acoustic tweezers,laser-guided
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