Rapid mass determination of airborne microparticles based on release and recapture from a free-space optical dipole force trap
ORAL
Abstract
We describe a method for the rapid determination of the mass of particles confined in an optical dipole force trap.* The technique relies on direct imaging of drop-and-restore experiments in a free-space environment. In these experiments, the trapping light is rapidly shuttered with an acousto-optic modulator, releasing and subsequently recapturing the particle using the trapping force. Both the fall and restoration trajectories, imaged using a high-speed CMOS sensor, are combined to determine the particle mass. We corroborate these measurements using an analysis of position autocorrelation functions and the mean-square displacement of the trapped particles. We report a statistical uncertainty of less than 2% for masses on the order of 5×10-14 kg in approximately 90 s of data acquisition.
*Carlse et al. Phys. Rev Appl. 14, 024017 (2020)
*Carlse et al. Phys. Rev Appl. 14, 024017 (2020)
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Publication: Technique for Rapid Mass Determination of Airborne Microparticles Based on Release and Recapture from an Optical Dipole Force Trap, G. Carlse, K. B. Borsos, H. C. Beica, T. Vacheresse, A. Pouliot, J. Perez-Garcia, A. Vorozcovs, B. Barron, S. Jackson, L. Marmet and A. Kumarakrishnan, Physical Review Applied 14, 024017 (2020).
Presenters
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Gehrig M Carlse
York University
Authors
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Gehrig M Carlse
York University
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Kevin B Borsos
York University
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Hermina C Beica
York University
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Thomas Vaccheresse
York University
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Alexander Pouliot
York University
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Jorge Perez-Garcia
York University
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Andrew Vorozcovs
York University
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Boris Barron
York University, Cornell University
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Shira Jackson
York University
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Louis Marmet
York University
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A Kumarakrishnan
York University