4.8 Article

Lipid Bilayer-Integrated Optoelectronic Tweezers for Nanoparticle Manipulations

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages 2766-2770

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nl400999f

Keywords

Optical imaging; optoelectronics; supported lipid bilayer; nanoparticle; Brownian motion; soft-condensed matter physics

Funding

  1. U.S. Army Research Office (ARO) MURI program [W911NF-09-1-0539]
  2. U.S. National Science Foundation [NSF CMMI-1120724]
  3. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn
  4. Directorate For Engineering [1120724] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Remotely manipulating a large number of microscopic objects is important to soft-condensed matter physics, biophysics, and nanotechnology. Optical tweezers and optoelectronic tweezers have been widely used for this purpose but face critical challenges when applied to nanoscale objects, including severe photoinduced damages, undesired ionic convections, or irreversible particle immobilization on surfaces. We report here the first demonstration of a lipid bilayer-integrated optoelectronic tweezers system for simultaneous manipulation of hundreds of 60 nm gold nanoparticles in an arbitrary pattern. We use a fluid lipid bilayer membrane with a similar to 5 nm thickness supported by a photoconductive electrode to confine the diffusion of chemically tethered nanoparticles in a two-dimensional space. Application of an external a.c. voltage together with patterned light selectively activates the photoconducting electrode that creates strong electric field localized near the surface. The field strength changes most significantly at the activated electrode surface where the particles tethered to the membrane thus experience the strongest dielectrophoretic forces. This design allows us to efficiently achieve dynamic, reversible, and parallel manipulation of many nanoparticles. Our approach to integrate biomolecular structures with optoelectronic devices offers a new platform enabling the study of thermodynamics in many particle systems and the selective transport of nanoscale objects for broad applications in biosensing and cellular mechanotransductions.

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