Photophoretic Levitation of Macroscopic Nanocardboard Plates
John Cortes, Christopher Stanczak, Maanav Narula, Mohsen Azadi, Samuel, M. Nicaise, Howard Hu, and Igor Bargatin

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a novel method for levitating millimeter to centimeter-sized plates using photophoresis, enabling potential nanotechnology-based flying vehicles without moving parts at various atmospheric pressures.
Contribution
It introduces a new photophoretic levitation technique for macroscopic plates leveraging micro-channel thermal transpiration, expanding applications beyond microscopic particles.
Findings
Plates hover ~0.5 mm above substrate at atmospheric pressure.
At reduced pressure, plates achieve mid-air levitation with payload capacity.
The method enables contactless propulsion of large structures using light-induced thermal effects.
Abstract
Scaling down miniature rotorcraft and flapping-wing flyers to sub-centimeter dimensions is challenging due to complex electronics requirements, manufacturing limitations, and the increase in viscous damping at low Reynolds numbers. Photophoresis, or light-driven fluid flow, was previously used to levitate solid particles without any moving parts but only at the scale of 1-20 micrometers. Here, we leverage stiff architectured plates with 50-nm thickness to realize photophoretic levitation at the millimeter to centimeter scales. Instead of creating lift through conventional rotors or wings, our levitation occurs due to light-induced thermal transpiration through micro-channels within our plates. At atmospheric pressure, the plates hover above a solid substrate at heights of ~0.5 mm by creating an air cushion beneath the plate. Moreover, at reduced pressures (10-1000 Pa), the increased…
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