scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of femtosecond laser nanosurgery of cells and tissues

TLDR
In this article, the working mechanisms of femtosecond laser nanoprocessing in biomaterials with oscillator pulses of 80-MHz repetition rate and with amplified pulses of 1-kHz repetition rate were investigated.
Abstract
We review recent advances in laser cell surgery, and investigate the working mechanisms of femtosecond laser nanoprocessing in biomaterials with oscillator pulses of 80-MHz repetition rate and with amplified pulses of 1-kHz repetition rate. Plasma formation in water, the evolution of the temperature distribution, thermoelastic stress generation, and stress-induced bubble formation are numerically simulated for NA=1.3, and the outcome is compared to experimental results. Mechanisms and the spatial resolution of femtosecond laser surgery are then compared to the features of continuous-wave (cw) microbeams. We find that free electrons are produced in a fairly large irradiance range below the optical breakdown threshold, with a deterministic relationship between free-electron density and irradiance. This provides a large ‘tuning range’ for the creation of spatially extremely confined chemical, thermal, and mechanical effects via free-electron generation. Dissection at 80-MHz repetition rate is performed in the low-density plasma regime at pulse energies well below the optical breakdown threshold and only slightly higher than used for nonlinear imaging. It is mediated by free-electron-induced chemical decomposition (bond breaking) in conjunction with multiphoton-induced chemistry, and hardly related to heating or thermoelastic stresses. When the energy is raised, accumulative heating occurs and long-lasting bubbles are produced by tissue dissociation into volatile fragments, which is usually unwanted. By contrast, dissection at 1-kHz repetition rate is performed using more than 10-fold larger pulse energies and relies on thermoelastically induced formation of minute transient cavities with lifetimes <100 ns. Both modes of femtosecond laser nanoprocessing can achieve a 2–3 fold better precision than cell surgery using cw irradiation, and enable manipulation at arbitrary locations.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Femtosecond laser micromachining in transparent materials

TL;DR: In this article, the physical mechanisms and the main experimental parameters involved in femtosecond laser micromachining of transparent materials, and important emerging applications of the technology are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermo‐plasmonics: using metallic nanostructures as nano‐sources of heat

TL;DR: In this paper, the physics of heat generation in metal nanoparticles is described, under both continuous and pulsed illumination, and numerical and experimental methods that have been developed to further understand and engineer plasmonic-assisted heating processes on the nanoscale.
Journal ArticleDOI

In vitro and ex vivo strategies for intracellular delivery.

TL;DR: In vitro and ex vivo intracellular delivery approaches are reviewed with a focus on membrane-disruption-based delivery methods and the transformative role of nanotechnology, microfluidics and laboratory-on-chip technology in advancing the field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gold Nanorods Mediate Tumor Cell Death by Compromising Membrane Integrity

TL;DR: Light-activated therapies can be used to eradicate diseased cells and tissues in a noninvasive manner by employing exogenous agents with large absorption cross sections, confining damage to areas of interest with minimal collateral effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ablation-cooled material removal with ultrafast bursts of pulses

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that extremely high repetition rates, which make ablation cooling possible, reduce the laser pulse energies needed for ablation and increase the efficiency of the removal process by an order of magnitude over previously used laser parameters.
References
More filters
Book

Principles of Optics

Max Born, +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss various topics about optics, such as geometrical theories, image forming instruments, and optics of metals and crystals, including interference, interferometers, and diffraction.

Principles of Optics

Max Born, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss various topics about optics, such as geometrical theories, image forming instruments, and optics of metals and crystals, including interference, interferometers, and diffraction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Primer-directed enzymatic amplification of DNA with a thermostable DNA polymerase

TL;DR: A thermostable DNA polymerase was used in an in vitro DNA amplification procedure, the polymerase chain reaction, which significantly improves the specificity, yield, sensitivity, and length of products that can be amplified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Two-Photon Laser Scanning Fluorescence Microscopy

TL;DR: The fluorescence emission increased quadratically with the excitation intensity so that fluorescence and photo-bleaching were confined to the vicinity of the focal plane as expected for cooperative two-photon excitation.
Book

The Principles of Nonlinear Optics

Y. R. Shen
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a general description of wave propagation in nonlinear media, including high-resolution nonlinear optical spectroscopy, and four-wave mixing and mixing.
Related Papers (5)