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Home NEWS Science News Technology

Electric Fields Enhance Optical Tweezers for Precision Nanowire Calligraphy

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
May 20, 2026
in Technology
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Electric Fields Enhance Optical Tweezers for Precision Nanowire Calligraphy — Technology and Engineering
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In a groundbreaking advance that promises to redefine the manipulation of nanoscale structures, researchers at the Beijing Institute of Technology have pioneered an innovative technique combining holographic optical tweezers with alternating current (AC) electric fields. This hybrid method overcomes persistent challenges in handling one-dimensional nanowires—tiny rod-shaped entities whose unique mechanical and electronic properties are key to emerging quantum devices, next-generation electronics, and biosensors. By electrically pre-aligning the nanowires before trapping, this approach dramatically enhances both the stability and precision of manipulation, setting the stage for scalable, lithography-free nanomanufacturing.

Manipulating nanowires has long been hampered by their high aspect ratios and complex optical interactions. Traditional optical tweezers, which harness tightly focused laser beams to trap and maneuver microscopic particles, encounter difficulty with these slender structures. The elongated geometry causes strong light scattering forces that tend to dislodge the nanowires from the optical trap, while heating and surface adhesion effects degrade positional control. On the other hand, exclusive reliance on electric fields provides alignment but lacks the spatial finesse necessary for intricate patterning or assembly, limiting practical application.

The research team addressed these limitations by integrating AC electric fields with holographic optical tweezers (HOT). The AC electric fields selectively rotate the nanowires, aligning them vertically to present their minimal cross-section to the incoming laser beam. This orientation significantly mitigates disruptive scattering forces, allowing the gradient forces generated by the tweezers—responsible for stable trapping—to dominate. Once aligned, the nanowires can be trapped and translated with unprecedented consistency and minimal laser power. This synergistic interaction between electric and optical forces marks a conceptual leap in nanoscale manipulation strategies.

Experimental validation demonstrated notable performance improvements. The success rate for trapping nanowires increased by 38%, showcasing increased reliability. Concurrently, the laser power needed for stable trapping plummeted by 50%, reducing the average power from 15 milliwatts to a mere 7 milliwatts. This power reduction is particularly pivotal: it decreases photothermal damage to delicate nanoscale materials and biological samples, broadening the utility of optical manipulation in sensitive contexts. Furthermore, the top velocity at which nanowires could be moved without escaping the trap rose by 39%, enabling faster and more efficient nanowire positioning and patterning.

Central to the mechanism is the electric field’s capability to combat the random tumbling motion inherent to nanoscale rods in fluidic environments. By inducing a controlled torque, the AC fields coax nanowires to “stand up straight,” aligning along the axis of laser propagation. This orientation minimizes lateral scattering and keeps the nanowire firmly in the stable focal region of the laser beam. The research team likened this to giving the nanowires a gentle “nudge” to position them optimally before capturing their motion with light—a deceptively simple step with profound implications.

In a bold demonstration, the researchers showcased “nano-calligraphy,” employing a single nanowire as a pen to inscribe microscopic letters and intricate dragon motifs. The precision and control exhibited by this method herald new possibilities in nanoscale fabrication and design. Even more impressively, the system allows multiplexed control, simultaneously manipulating up to seven nanowires with independent trajectories, highlighting scalability potential for more complex nanostructured assemblies and devices.

The versatility of this optical electro-aligning manipulation (OEM) extends beyond metallic and semiconductor nanowires; it successfully adapts to biological nanorods such as rod-shaped bacteria. This compatibility with living organisms opens avenues for bio-nano interfaces, single-cell analysis, and nanoscale biosensor construction. The gentle trapping conditions ensured by reduced laser power mitigate damage, thereby preserving cellular viability and function during manipulation.

This lithography-free platform marks a considerable advance for bottom-up nanofabrication. Traditional lithography methods necessitate expensive equipment, vacuum chambers, and cleanroom infrastructures to create nanoscale patterns. In contrast, this OEM technique enables maskless, programmable construction of nano-electro-mechanical systems (NEMS), quantum photonic circuits, and neuromorphic computing nodes through direct, contactless positioning of nanowires. Such a paradigm shift allows researchers and engineers to reduce costs while enhancing customization and rapid prototyping capabilities.

Moreover, by minimizing the required optical power, the system substantially shrinks the risk of heating-induced artifacts and sample degradation. This attribute is invaluable when manipulating thermally sensitive materials or live biological specimens, expanding the method’s applicability into biomedical research and clinical diagnostics. The enhanced maximum manipulation speed further accelerates assembly processes, which is a critical bottleneck in mass production and high-throughput experimentation.

Fundamentally, this work bridges the gap between intricate laboratory-scale demonstrations of nanowire control and practical, scalable manufacturing methods. The robustness and programmability of their hybrid setup afford unprecedented control over the orientation, position, and organization of individual nanowires in real time. By harnessing the complementary strengths of electric and optical fields, the researchers have created a versatile toolkit poised to drive the next wave of innovation in nanosystem engineering.

The implications of this research stretch beyond improved nanowire handling. It provides a versatile platform for exploring fundamental physics in nanoscale systems, controlling quantum states by precise wire placement, and engineering complex biohybrid constructs with cellular-level precision. As nanotechnology pushes the frontiers of what is possible, the ability to reliably and gently manipulate components with nanoscale accuracy is indispensable—and this hybrid OEM system is a compelling leap forward.

The collaborative effort was bolstered by extensive funding from Chinese national and municipal science programs, underscoring the strategic importance of advancing nanofabrication technologies domestically and globally. The research was thoroughly peer-reviewed and published in the journal Microsystems & Nanoengineering, signaling the rigor and innovation of the approach and fostering anticipation for further developments.

In sum, this hybrid optical and electrical nanomanipulation technique epitomizes the synergy of multidisciplinary innovation. By melding optical physics, microfluidics, and precision nanotechnology, it promises not only to enhance our ability to control matter at the smallest scales but also to accelerate the integration of nanowires into functional devices. Its implications resonate across fields from quantum computing to bioengineering, heralding an era where nanoscale construction is no longer an elusive dream but a practical reality.

Subject of Research: Not applicable

Article Title: Nano calligraphy via optical electro-aligning manipulation

News Publication Date: 8-Apr-2026

Web References:

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41378-026-01225-0
https://www.nature.com/micronano/journal-information

References:
DOI: 10.1038/s41378-026-01225-0

Image Credits: Microsystems & Nanoengineering

Keywords

Nanotechnology, nanowire manipulation, optical tweezers, AC electric field, holographic optical tweezers, nanoscale fabrication, nano-calligraphy, nano-electro-mechanical systems, hybrid opto-electric system, nanomanufacturing, quantum devices, biological nanowires

Tags: AC electric field nanowire alignmentbiosensor nanowire positioningelectric fields in optical tweezershigh aspect ratio nanowire handlingholographic optical tweezers for nanowireshybrid optical-electric nanomanipulationlithography-free nanomanufacturingnanoscale optical trapping techniquesnanowire calligraphy methodnext-generation nanoscale assemblyprecision manipulation of nanowiresquantum device nanowire fabrication

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