TY - JOUR
T1 - 1 nm-Resolution Sorting of Sub-10 nm Nanoparticles Using a Dielectric Metasurface with Toroidal Responses
AU - Luo, Hong
AU - Fang, Xiang
AU - Li, Chengfeng
AU - Dai, Xinhua
AU - Ru, Ning
AU - You, Minmin
AU - He, Tao
AU - Wu, Pin Chieh
AU - Wang, Zhanshan
AU - Shi, Yuzhi
AU - Cheng, Xinbin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Small Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2023/9
Y1 - 2023/9
N2 - Sorting nanoparticles is of paramount importance in numerous physical, chemical, and biomedical applications. Current technologies for sorting dielectric nanoparticles have a common size limit and resolution approximately of 20 and 10 nm, respectively. It remains a grand challenge to push the limit. Herein, the new physics that deploys toroidal and multipole responses in a dielectric metasurface to exert strong and distinguishable optical forces on sub-10 nm nanoparticles is unravelled. The electric toroidal dipole, electric dipole, and quadrupole emerge with distinct light and force patterns, which can be leveraged to promise unprecedented high-precision manipulations, such as sorting sub-10 nm polystyrene nanoparticles at 1 nm resolution, sorting 20 nm proteins/exsomes at 3 nm resolution, conveying, and concentrating 100 nm gold nanoparticles. Remarkably, the design can also be employed to screen out medium-sized nanoparticles from a mixture of nanoparticles with over three sizes. This optofluidic manipulation platform opens the new way to explore intriguing optical modes for the powerful manipulation of nanoparticles with nanometer precisions and low laser powers.
AB - Sorting nanoparticles is of paramount importance in numerous physical, chemical, and biomedical applications. Current technologies for sorting dielectric nanoparticles have a common size limit and resolution approximately of 20 and 10 nm, respectively. It remains a grand challenge to push the limit. Herein, the new physics that deploys toroidal and multipole responses in a dielectric metasurface to exert strong and distinguishable optical forces on sub-10 nm nanoparticles is unravelled. The electric toroidal dipole, electric dipole, and quadrupole emerge with distinct light and force patterns, which can be leveraged to promise unprecedented high-precision manipulations, such as sorting sub-10 nm polystyrene nanoparticles at 1 nm resolution, sorting 20 nm proteins/exsomes at 3 nm resolution, conveying, and concentrating 100 nm gold nanoparticles. Remarkably, the design can also be employed to screen out medium-sized nanoparticles from a mixture of nanoparticles with over three sizes. This optofluidic manipulation platform opens the new way to explore intriguing optical modes for the powerful manipulation of nanoparticles with nanometer precisions and low laser powers.
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U2 - 10.1002/smsc.202300100
DO - 10.1002/smsc.202300100
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85168276921
SN - 2688-4046
VL - 3
JO - Small Science
JF - Small Science
IS - 9
M1 - 2300100
ER -