Haptic Manipulation of Microspheres Using Optical Tweezers Under the Guidance of Artificial Force Fields
Ibrahim Bukusoglu, Cagatay Basdogan, Alper Kiraz, Adnan Kurt

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a novel integration of haptic feedback with optical tweezers to enhance the manipulation and assembly of microspheres for microresonator construction, improving precision and efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a combined haptic and optical tweezers system for microsphere manipulation, enabling real-time force feedback and virtual fixtures to assist assembly tasks.
Findings
Haptic feedback reduces task completion time.
Haptic feedback decreases collision incidents.
Haptic feedback improves positional accuracy.
Abstract
Using optical tweezers and a haptic device, microspheres having diameters ranging from 3 to 4 um (floating in a fluid solution) are manipulated in order to form patterns of coupled optical microresonators by assembling the spheres via chemical binding. For this purpose, biotin-coated microspheres trapped by a laser beam are steered and chemically attached to an immobilized streptavidin-coated sphere (i.e. anchor sphere) one by one using an XYZ piezo scanner controlled by a haptic device. The positions of all spheres in the scene are detected using a CCD camera and a collision-free path for each manipulated sphere is generated using the potential field approach. The forces acting on the manipulated particle due to the viscosity of the fluid and the artificial potential field are scaled and displayed to the user through the haptic device for better guidance and control during steering. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrowetting and Microfluidic Technologies · Photonic and Optical Devices · Orbital Angular Momentum in Optics
