Abstract

Experiment, theory, and simulation are employed to understand the dispersion of colloidal particles in a periodic array of oscillating harmonic traps generated by optical tweezers. In the presence of trap oscillation, a nonmonotonic and anisotropic dispersion is observed. Surprisingly, the stiffest traps produce the largest dispersion at a critical frequency, and the particles diffuse significantly faster in the direction of oscillation than those undergoing passive Stokes-Einstein-Sutherland diffusion. Theoretical predictions for the effective diffusivity of the particles as a function of trap stiffness and oscillation frequency are developed using generalized Taylor dispersion theory and Brownian dynamics simulations. Both theory and simulation demonstrate excellent agreement with the experiments, and reveal a "slingshot" mechanism that predicts a significant enhancement of colloidal diffusion in dynamic external fields.

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