| Literature DB >> 27279540 |
Silvio Bianchi1, Riccardo Pruner1, Gaszton Vizsnyiczai1, Claudio Maggi1, Roberto Di Leonardo1,2.
Abstract
Colloidal particles immersed in a dynamic speckle pattern experience an optical force that fluctuates both in space and time. The resulting dynamics presents many interesting analogies with a broad class of non-equilibrium systems like: active colloids, self propelled microorganisms, transport in dynamical intracellular environments. Here we show that the use of a spatial light modulator allows to generate light fields that fluctuate with controllable space and time correlations and a prescribed average intensity profile. In particular we generate ring-shaped random patterns that can confine a colloidal particle over a quasi one-dimensional random energy landscape. We find a mean square displacement that is diffusive at both short and long times, while a superdiffusive or subdiffusive behavior is observed at intermediate times depending on the value of the speckles correlation time. We propose two alternative models for the mean square displacement in the two limiting cases of a short or long speckles correlation time. A simple interpolation formula is shown to account for the full phenomenology observed in the mean square displacement across the entire range from fast to slow fluctuating speckles.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27279540 PMCID: PMC4899747 DOI: 10.1038/srep27681
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Optical setup: the laser beam is expanded and modulated by an SLM placed in the Fourier plane of the objective. The phase modulation applied on the SLM produces on the objective focal plane a speckle pattern with desired profile. (b) Experimental realization of an individual ring-shaped speckle pattern obtained applying the phase mask shown in the top-left corner of (a). (c) Average intensity profile obtained by projecting sequentially 103 patterns. (d) Potential seen by a 2 μm bead estimated as described in the text. (e) Potential profile sampled along the entire circle shown as a red dashed line in (d). (f) Potential profile sampled along the radial coordinate (blue dashed line in (d)). Scale bars in (b–d) are 1 μm.
Figure 2(a) A set of evolving patterns with small τ. (b) A set of evolving patterns with large τ changes slower than in (a). (c) Measured time autocorrelation function of the intensity, lines are fits with exponential decay. The correlation time τ can be tuned as explained in the text. (d) Probability distribution of the force acting on a microbead subjected to a static speckle field (circles). Dashed line is a fit to a Gaussian while the dashed-dotted line is a fit to an exponential. Gray solid line plots the distribution obtained by taking the gradient of the potential which estimated as explained in the text. Inset depicts a 2 μm silica bead trapped by the speckle pattern, scale bar is 1 μm. (e) Mean square displacement, along the ring curvilinear coordinate, of the minima of the potential corresponding to an evolving speckle pattern. Error bars correspond to ±2 standard deviations. Inset shows a profile of an evolving potential at two distinct times (separated by τ); the position of a minimum is highlighted by vertical dashed lines.
Figure 3(a) Mean square displacements of a 2 μm silica bead in dynamic speckle patterns with correlation times ranging from 15 ms to 5 s. Lines are fits with Eq. (5). (b) Same as (a) in a double log-scale. Dashed line plots the MSD of the potential minima corresponding to an evolving pattern with τ = 5 s. (c) Diffusion coefficient as function of the speckle correlation time (circles), the vertical line indicates the relaxation time of the bead in the speckle pattern. The thick solid red line represent a fit with Eq. (7). Horizontal dashed line indicates the thermal diffusion coefficient. (d) Crossover time between the non-diffusive regime and the diffusive one as a function of speckle correlation time (circles). Solid red line plots Eq. (8).