On-Axis Optical Trapping with Vortex Beams: The Role of the Multipolar Decomposition
Abstract
Optical trapping is a wellestablished, decades old technology with applications in several fields of research. The most common scenario deals with particles that tend to be centered on the brightest part of the optical trap. Consequently, the optical forces keep the particle away from the dark zones of the beam. However, this is not the case when a focused doughnutshaped beam generates onaxis trapping. In this system, the particle is centered on the intensity minima of the laser beam and the bright annular part lies on the periphery of the particle. Researchers have shown great interest in this phenomenon due to its advantage of reducing light interaction with trapped particles and the intriguing increase in the trapping strength. This work presents experimental and theoretical results that extend the analysis of onaxis trapping with light vortex beams. Specifically, in our experiments, we trap micronsized spherical silica (SiO2) particles in water and we measure, through the power spectrum density method, the trap stiffness constant appa generated by vortex beams with different topological charge orders. The optical forces are calculated from the exact solutions of the electromagnetic fields provided by the generalized LorentzMie theory. We show a remarkable agreement between the theoretical prediction and the experimental measurements of appa. Moreover, our numerical model gives us information about the electromagnetic fields inside the particle, offering valuable insights into the influence of the electromagnetic fields present in the vortex beam trapping scenario.
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