4.6 Article

3D calibration of microsphere position in optical tweezers using the back-focal-plane interferometry method

期刊

OPTICS EXPRESS
卷 29, 期 20, 页码 32271-32284

出版社

OPTICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1364/OE.435592

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资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11304282, 61601405]
  2. Major Scientific Project of Zhejiang Laboratory [501100017530, 2019MB0AD01]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2016XZZX004-01, 2018XZZX001-08]
  4. Joint Fund of Ministry of Education [6141A02011604]

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This study introduces a method to directly calibrate the position of a trapped micro-sphere in optical tweezers using its interference pattern formed at the back focal plane. Through simulations and experiments, the feasibility of this method was verified, showing that the calibration factor can be deduced from simulation without the need for intermediate calculations.
This paper presents a method to directly calibrate the position of a trapped micro-sphere in optical tweezers utilizing its interference pattern formed at the back focal plane (BFP). Through finite difference time domain (FDTD) and scalar diffraction theorem, the scattering field complex amplitude of the near and far fields can be simulated after interference between the trapped sphere and focus Gaussian beam. The position of the trapped sphere can be recovered and calibrated based on a back focal plane interferometry (BFPI) algorithm. Theoretical results demonstrate that optical tweezers with a larger numerical aperture (NA) Gaussian beam will yield a better detection sensitivity but with a smaller linear range. These results were experimentally validated by trapping a microsphere in a single beam optical tweezer. We used an extra focused laser to manipulate the trapped sphere and then compared its position in the images and that obtained using the BFP method. The interference pattern from simulation and experiments showed good agreement, implying that the calibration factor can be deduced from simulation and requires no intermediate calculation process. These results provide a pathway to obtain the calibration factor, enable a faster and direct measurement of the sphere position, and show possibilities for adjusting the crosstalk and nonlinearity inside an optical trap. (C) 2021 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement

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