Light Seminars
March 12, 2014
L4H Seminar CORNELIA DENZ 'Optical Tweezer-Assisted Assembly in the Micro- and Nanoworld: From Particles to Droplets and Bio-Hybrid Robots'
L4H Seminar CORNELIA DENZ 'Optical Tweezer-Assisted Assembly in the Micro- and Nanoworld: From Particles to Droplets and Bio-Hybrid Robots'
CORNELIA DENZ
Institut für Angewandte Physik
Westfälische Wilh
Wednesday, March 12, 2014, 10:30. Seminar Room
CORNELIA DENZ
Institut für Angewandte Physik
Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, GERMANY
CORNELIA DENZ
Institut für Angewandte Physik
Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, GERMANY
Holographic optical beam shaping techniques have advanced optical tweezers in the past years, because the
allow complex trapping configurations to overcome current challenges in applications in fluidic and biomedical systems.
Holographically generated higher-order light modes, for example, can induce highly structured and ordered three-dimensional optical potential landscapes to create assemblies of nanocontainers or biohybrid nano robots, and can be used as a tool to explore the inner cell, paving the way to optically-assisted analysis of diseases. Tailored light fields can also be implemented to induce non-optical forces. Optoelectronic tweezers take advantage of dielectrophoretic forces to trap microstructures in a massively parallel way. Photophoretic trapping makes use of thermal forces and by this means is perfectly suited for trapping absorbing particles in dynamic light cages or to guide droplets.
Therefore, the combination of holographically tailored light fields with complementary dielectrophoretic and photophoretic trapping provides a holistic approach to novel optical nano- and microassembly scenarios of bio-hybrid or fluidic matter.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014, 10:30. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Niek van Hulst
Holographically generated higher-order light modes, for example, can induce highly structured and ordered three-dimensional optical potential landscapes to create assemblies of nanocontainers or biohybrid nano robots, and can be used as a tool to explore the inner cell, paving the way to optically-assisted analysis of diseases. Tailored light fields can also be implemented to induce non-optical forces. Optoelectronic tweezers take advantage of dielectrophoretic forces to trap microstructures in a massively parallel way. Photophoretic trapping makes use of thermal forces and by this means is perfectly suited for trapping absorbing particles in dynamic light cages or to guide droplets.
Therefore, the combination of holographically tailored light fields with complementary dielectrophoretic and photophoretic trapping provides a holistic approach to novel optical nano- and microassembly scenarios of bio-hybrid or fluidic matter.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014, 10:30. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Niek van Hulst
Light Seminars
March 12, 2014
L4H Seminar CORNELIA DENZ 'Optical Tweezer-Assisted Assembly in the Micro- and Nanoworld: From Particles to Droplets and Bio-Hybrid Robots'
L4H Seminar CORNELIA DENZ 'Optical Tweezer-Assisted Assembly in the Micro- and Nanoworld: From Particles to Droplets and Bio-Hybrid Robots'
CORNELIA DENZ
Institut für Angewandte Physik
Westfälische Wilh
Wednesday, March 12, 2014, 10:30. Seminar Room
CORNELIA DENZ
Institut für Angewandte Physik
Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, GERMANY
CORNELIA DENZ
Institut für Angewandte Physik
Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, GERMANY
Holographic optical beam shaping techniques have advanced optical tweezers in the past years, because the
allow complex trapping configurations to overcome current challenges in applications in fluidic and biomedical systems.
Holographically generated higher-order light modes, for example, can induce highly structured and ordered three-dimensional optical potential landscapes to create assemblies of nanocontainers or biohybrid nano robots, and can be used as a tool to explore the inner cell, paving the way to optically-assisted analysis of diseases. Tailored light fields can also be implemented to induce non-optical forces. Optoelectronic tweezers take advantage of dielectrophoretic forces to trap microstructures in a massively parallel way. Photophoretic trapping makes use of thermal forces and by this means is perfectly suited for trapping absorbing particles in dynamic light cages or to guide droplets.
Therefore, the combination of holographically tailored light fields with complementary dielectrophoretic and photophoretic trapping provides a holistic approach to novel optical nano- and microassembly scenarios of bio-hybrid or fluidic matter.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014, 10:30. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Niek van Hulst
Holographically generated higher-order light modes, for example, can induce highly structured and ordered three-dimensional optical potential landscapes to create assemblies of nanocontainers or biohybrid nano robots, and can be used as a tool to explore the inner cell, paving the way to optically-assisted analysis of diseases. Tailored light fields can also be implemented to induce non-optical forces. Optoelectronic tweezers take advantage of dielectrophoretic forces to trap microstructures in a massively parallel way. Photophoretic trapping makes use of thermal forces and by this means is perfectly suited for trapping absorbing particles in dynamic light cages or to guide droplets.
Therefore, the combination of holographically tailored light fields with complementary dielectrophoretic and photophoretic trapping provides a holistic approach to novel optical nano- and microassembly scenarios of bio-hybrid or fluidic matter.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014, 10:30. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Niek van Hulst
All Insight Seminars
Light Seminars
November 19, 2014
L4H Seminar VIVEK MALHOTRA 'Remodelling Secretory Compartments to Generate Transport Carriers for Collagen Export'
Light Seminars
October 29, 2014
L4H Seminar TOM SLEZAK 'Trends in Molecular Diagnostics: from Home-Use to High-Throughput'
Light Seminars
October 8, 2014
L4H Seminar JAMES CHAN 'Label-Free Spectroscopic and Imaging Techniques for Studying Single Living Cells''
Light Seminars
September 15, 2014
L4H SEMINAR LESZEK KACZMAREK 'Watch the Mind'
Light Seminars
July 30, 2014
L4H Seminar AHMET YILDIZ 'The Mechanism of Cytoplasmic Dynein Motility'
Light Seminars
June 26, 2014
L4H Seminar CHAO ZHOU 'Optical Biopsy using Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) and Microscopy (OCM)'
Light Seminars
June 11, 2014
L4H Seminar JEROME WENGER 'Photonic Antennas to Enhance the Detection of Single Fluorescent Molecules in Solution'
Light Seminars
June 11, 2014
Light Seminars
June 4, 2014
B·Debate: Life, an instruction manual ANTONIO ACÍN 'B·Debate: Towards ultra-secure communications'
Light Seminars
May 7, 2014
L4H Seminar YVES REZUS 'Nonlinear infrared spectroscopy: from biomolecules to nanoantenna'
Light Seminars
April 8, 2014
L4H Seminar CHRISTINE K. PAYNE 'Fluorescent Nanoparticles for Live Cell Imaging: Unraveling Nanoparticle-Cell Interactions'
Light Seminars
From March 31, 2014 to April 4, 2014
Light Seminars
March 26, 2014
L4H Seminar SUSANA MARCOS 'Imaging to understand and improve vision'
Light Seminars
March 19, 2014
L4H Seminar FELIX RITORT 'Single Molecules: From Force Spectroscopy to Molecular Evolution'
Light Seminars
February 26, 2014
L4H Seminar XAVIER TREPAT 'Forces, Waves, and Collective Cell Dynamics'
Light Seminars
February 5, 2014
L4H Seminar XAVIER TREPAT 'Forces, Waves, and Collective Cell Dynamics'
Light Seminars
January 29, 2014
L4H Seminar CRISTINA FLORS 'New directions in nanoscale imaging of DNA'
Light Seminars
January 15, 2014
L4H Seminar VOLKER DECKERT 'Molecular Spectroscopy on a Molecular Length Scale - Structure Investigation of Biomolecule Surfaces'