Transverse optical gradient force in untethered rotating metaspinners
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2025

Nanostructured dielectric metasurfaces offer unprecedented opportunities to control light-matter momentum exchange, and thereby the forces and torques that light can exert on matter. Here we introduce optical metasurfaces as components of ultracompact untethered microscopic metaspinners capable of efficient light-induced rotation in a liquid environment. Illuminated by weakly focused light, a metaspinner generates torque via photon recoil through the metasurfaces’ ability to bend light towards high angles despite their sub-wavelength thickness, thereby creating orbital angular momentum. We find that a metaspinner is subject to an anomalous transverse lateral optical gradient force that acts in concert with the classical gradient force. Consequently, when two or more metaspinners are trapped together in a laser beam, they collectively orbit the optical axis in the opposite direction to their spinning motion, in stark contrast to rotors coupled through hydrodynamic or mechanical interactions. The metaspinners delineated herein not only serve to illustrate the vast possibilities of utilizing optical metasurfaces for fundamental exploration of optical torques, but they also represent potential building-blocks of artificial active matter systems, light-driven micromachinery, and general-purpose optomechanical devices.

Författare

Einstom Engay

Chalmers, Fysik, Nano- och biofysik

Mohammad Mahdi Shanei

Chalmers, Fysik, Nano- och biofysik

Vasilii Mylnikov

Chalmers, Fysik, Nano- och biofysik

Gan Wang

Göteborgs universitet

P. Johansson

Örebro universitet

Giovanni Volpe

Göteborgs universitet

Mikael Käll

Chalmers, Fysik, Nano- och biofysik

Light: Science and Applications

20955545 (ISSN) 20477538 (eISSN)

Vol. 14 1 38

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Atom- och molekylfysik och optik

Den kondenserade materiens fysik

Annan fysik

Infrastruktur

Nanotekniklaboratoriet

DOI

10.1038/s41377-024-01720-x

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2025-01-16