Vortex lasers can create chiral polymeric reliefs

Optical vortices form submicron chiral polymeric reliefs with metal nanoparticle impurities for chiral plasmonics.
10 March 2015
Takashige Omatsu

Certain chemicals and structures are chiral (handed), that is, they exist in two non-superimposable forms, similar to the way a left hand cannot be superposed on a right hand. Chiral nanostructures are desirable because they offer the possibility of new materials science, such as chiral photonics, plasmonics, and chiral chemical reactors, with selective identification of chiral molecules and composites on the nanoscale. However, chiral nanostructures are difficult to fabricate even by advanced chemical processes.

My colleagues and I have discovered a simple way to construct chiral nanostructures by irradiating a metal with an ‘optical vortex.’1, 2 These carry an annular (i.e., ring-shaped) intensity profile and orbital angular momentum (lℏ, where l is an integer and φ is the azimuthal angle) associated with a helical wavefront in the transverse plane (see Figure 1). (Circularly polarized light also has spin angular momentum, that is, a helical electric field.) The direction (sign) of the orbital angular momentum determines the chilarity (handedness) of the nanostructures.3–5


Figure 1. Optical vortex and its angular momenta. l, s, J: Orbital, spin and total angular momentum, respectively.

Surface relief structures on an azo-polymer film are known to be formed by producing an optical gradient force that physically moves some of the azo-polymer. This, together with additional factors of anisotropic photo-fluidity and cis-trans photo-isomerization, are associated with intensity modulation as well as the polarization of the incident light.6 However, linearly polarized (even circularly polarized) light cannot form a chiral surface relief. We have formed, for the first time, chiral surface relief structures on an azo-polymer film. We achieved this by illuminating the surface with a circularly polarized optical vortex.7

The azo-polymer (a poly-orange tom-1, POT) has a strong absorption band in the 300–550nm wavelength range and exhibits photo-isomerization upon the irradiation of a green laser (see Figure 2). We combined a continuous-wave 532nm green laser with a polymer spiral phase plate (RPC photonics, VPP-1c) and a quarter-wave plate to produce a circularly polarized green optical vortex laser with a total angular momentum of J=2. The spiral plate, produced by a grayscale lithography technique, provides a spiral phase to an incoming wavefront. We used an objective lens (NA∼0.65) to focus the optical vortex on an annular spot 5μm in diameter on a 4μm thick spin-coated azo-polymer film. The exposure time and the laser intensity were fixed at 12s and ∼4 kW/cm2, respectively. The azo-polymer surface relief was observed by an atomic force microscope (AFM; SHIMADZU, SPM-9700) with a lateral spatial resolution of 0.2nm.


Figure 2. (a) The chemical structure of the azo-polymer poly-orange tom-1.

As shown in Figure 3, a clockwise chiral surface relief formed upon irradiation by an optical vortex. It had a height of 1.3μm, a diameter of 4.5μm, and a tip curvature of ∼0.5μm. When the handedness of the optical vortex was inverted, a counter-clockwise chiral surface relief was established. In contrast, linearly polarized optical vortex irradiation did not form a chiral surface relief because the mass transport driving force directs the azo-polymer along the polarization direction of the light. Despite having spin angular momentum, circularly polarized optical vortex irradiation with a total angular momentum of J=0 (l=1, s=−1) was also unsuccessful at forming a chiral surface relief.


Figure 3. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) images of chiral surface reliefs formed by irradiation with an optical vortex with (a) J=2 (l=1, s=1) and (b) J=- 2 (l=-1, s=- 1), respectively. (c) Surface relief by the irradiation of a linearly polarized optical vortex. (d) Surface relief by the irradiation of a circularly polarized optical vortex with J=0(l=1, s=- 1).

The following model supports these experimental results well. Irradiating with an optical vortex induces trans-cis photo-isomerization of the azo-polymer. The trans form of the azo-polymer is solid. Irradiating with the optical vortex transforms it to the softer cis form and the total angular momentum of the circularly polarized optical vortex is then able to make the polymer revolve around its dark core. The cis azo-polymer is also directed toward the dark core of the optical vortex by the mass transport driving force, thereby forming the chiral surface relief. However, if the orbital and spin angular momentum are in different directions, then the spin angular momentum decelerates the orbital motion of the cis azo-polymer and no chiral structure is formed. Thus, the chiral surface relief is formed only by the illumination of circularly polarized vortices with non-zero total angular momentum.

In summary, we have shown that a circularly polarized optical vortex is a simple way to generate chiral polymeric reliefs. These could be doped with functional chemical composites and metal (or semiconductor, magnetic) nanoparticles as impurities to produce planar chiral photonic devices, as well as chiral plasmonic materials. The technique provides the potential to develop new advanced technologies, such as nano-imaging systems, chemical reactors, and biomedical nanoelectromechanical systems. We are now exploring how to use the chiral polymeric relief's selective identification of chiral chemical composites and, when coated by a thin gold film by a sputtering process, as chiral plasmonic holograms.


Takashige Omatsu
Chiba University
Chiba, Japan

Takashige Omatsu received a doctorate in applied physics from the University of Tokyo, Japan, in 1992. He was appointed a professor at Chiba University in 2007. His principal research research interest is optical vortex technologies including optical vortex material processing. He has already published more than 250 journal and conference papers.


References:
1. L. Allen, M. W. Beijersbergen, R. J. C. Spreeuw, J. P. Woerdman, Orbital angular momentum of light and the transformation of Laguerre-Gaussian laser modes, Phys. Rev. A 45, p. 8185-8189, 1992.
2. M. Padgett, J. Courtial, L. Allen, Optical vortices and their propagation, Phys. Today 57, p. 35-40, 2004.
3. T. Omatsu, K. Chujo, K. Miyamoto, M. Okida, K. Nakamura, N. Aoki, R. Morita, Metal microneedle fabrication using twisted light with spin, Opt. Express 18, p. 17967-17973, 2010.
4. K. Toyoda, K. Miyamoto, N. Aoki, R. Morita, T. Omatsu, Using optical vortex to control the chirality of twisted metal nanostructures, Nano Lett. 12, p. 3645-3649, 2012.
5. K. Toyoda, F. Takahashi, S. Takizawa, Y. Tokizane, K. Miyamoto, R. Morita, T. Omatsu, Transfer of light helicity to nanostructures, Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, p. 143603, 2013.
6. N. K. Viswanathan, D. Y. Kim, S. Bian, J. Williams, W. Liu, L. Li, L. Samuelson, J. Kumar, S. K. Tripathy, Surface relief structures on azo polymer films, J. Mater. Chem. 9, p. 1941, 1999.
7. M. Watabe, G. Juman, K. Miyamoto, T. Omatsu, Light induced conch-shaped relief in an azo-polymer film, Sci. Rep. 4, p. 4281, 2014.
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