论文标题
通过光伏光电镊子操纵,捕获,分裂和合并水和水性生物学
Manipulation, trapping, splitting and merging of water and aqueous bio-droplets by photovoltaic optoelectronic tweezers
论文作者
论文摘要
微型和纳米对象操纵的光电技术和光电技术已成为纳米和生物技术的必不可少的工具。在过去几年中,一种实验强劲发展的一种显着的光电技术是所谓的光伏光电镊。它基于在某些铁电特性(例如Linbo3)中由大量光伏效应产生的光引起的电场。该技术简单且通用,可以成功地操纵各种微型和纳米对象,仅具有光学控制,而无需电极或电源。但是,由于极性液体的电筛选效果,处理该工具的挑战仍然是浸入水溶液中的物体。这阻碍了他们在生物技术和生物医学中的应用,其中大多数过程在水溶液中都会发展。在这项工作中,已经提出并证明了一条新的有效途径来克服此问题。它使用光伏光电镊子操纵水滴,沉浸在非极性油液体中,但悬挂在界面空气油处。在这种奇异的配置中,光伏底物中产生的高电场允许对由光控制的水滴进行简单而柔软的操纵。已经证明了液滴引导,捕获,合并和分裂,并有效地使用水和各种生物滴头(DNA,精子和PBS溶液)。报道的结果克服了这些镊子处理生物材料的主要局限性,并承诺在生物技术和生物化学应用中具有很高的潜力,包括它们在光氟化器件中的实施。
Optical and optoelectronic techniques for micro- and nano-object manipulation are becoming essential tools in nano- and bio-technology. A remarkable optoelectronic technique that has experimented a strong development in the last few years is the so called photovoltaic optoelectronic tweezers. It is based on the light-induced electric fields generated by the bulk photovoltaic effect in certain ferroelectrics such as LiNbO3. The technique is simple and versatile, enabling a successful manipulation of a large variety of micro- and nano-objects with only optical control, without the need of electrodes or power supplies. However, it is still a challenge for this tool, to handle objects immersed in aqueous solution due to the electric screening effects of polar liquids. This has hindered their application in biotechnology and biomedicine where most processes develop in aqueous solution. In this work, a new efficient route to overcome this problem has been proposed and demonstrated. It uses photovoltaic optoelectronic tweezers to manipulate aqueous droplets, immersed in a non-polar oil liquid, but hanging at the interface air-oil. In this singular configuration, the high electric fields generated in the photovoltaic substrate allow a simple and flexible manipulation of aqueous droplets controlled by the light. Droplet guiding, trapping, merging and splitting have been achieved and efficient operation with water and a variety of bio-droplets (DNA, sperm, and PBS solutions) have been demonstrated. The reported results overcome a main limitation of these tweezers to handle bio-materials and promises a high potential for biotechnological and biochemistry applications including their implementation in optofluidic devices.