Optical forces and torques on eccentric nanoscale core-shell particles
Qiang Sun, Kishan Dholakia, Andrew D Greentree

TL;DR
This paper models eccentric nanoscale core-shell particles to demonstrate they can be optically rotated at high speeds, enabling nanoscale microrheology and biophotonics applications previously limited by particle size.
Contribution
It introduces a new approach using eccentric core-shell nanoparticles to generate significant optical torques at much smaller sizes than traditional birefringent particles.
Findings
Achieves rotation rates exceeding 800 Hz for 90-180 nm particles
Demonstrates rotation of particles nearly an order of magnitude smaller than previous methods
Provides a new tool for nanoscale biophotonics and rheology
Abstract
The optical trapping and manipulation of small particles is an important tool for probing fluid properties at the microscale. In particular, microrheology exploits the manipulation and rotation of micron-scale particles to probe local viscosity, especially where these properties may be perturbed as a function of their local environment, for example in the vicinity of cells. To this end, birefringent particles are useful as they can be readily controlled using optically induced forces and torques, and thereby used to probe their local environment. However the magnitude of optical torques that can be induced in birefringent particles is small, and a function of the particle diameter, meaning that rotational flow cannot readily be probed on length scales much small than the micron level. Here we show modelling that demonstrates that eccentric spherical core-shell nanoparticles can be used…
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