Elastomer-based whispering gallery mode microlasers with low Young's modulus for biosensing applications
Melisa A. Bayrak, David Ripp, Joseph S. Hill, Marcel Schubert

TL;DR
This paper presents the development of elastomer-based whispering gallery mode microlasers with low Young's modulus for sensitive biosensing of biological forces, demonstrating their stability and potential for intracellular force measurement.
Contribution
The authors synthesized elastomer microbead lasers with multimode lasing thresholds and demonstrated their application in measuring forces comparable to cellular stiffness.
Findings
Laser mode width is proportional to external force.
Young's modulus of the elastomer is 36 kPa, similar to soft tissues.
Elastomer microlasers are stable in cell culture conditions for days.
Abstract
Sensing biological forces with microscopic lasers is an emerging technique that offers significant advantages over conventional fluorescent probes and imaging-based techniques. However, the limited availability of suitable deformable or elastic microlaser materials is restricting the scale of forces that can be detected which strongly narrows their overall applicability. Here, we describe the synthesis of spherical whispering gallery mode microbead lasers from a commercially available elastomer material in a microfluidic system with high viscosity. Upon doping with an organic dye, the microbeads show multimode lasing with thresholds in the range of 2-11 nJ. Measurements of the mechanical properties reveal that the width of the laser modes is directly proportional to the applied external force. The measured mean Young's modulus is 36 kPa, comparable to the stiffness of single cells and…
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