Abstract
There is an ongoing need to develop ultrasensitive nanomechanical instrumentation that has high spatial and force resolution, as well as an ability to operate in various biological environments. Here, we present a compact nanofiber optic force transducer (NOFT) with sub-piconewton force sensitivity and a nanoscale footprint that paves the way to the probing of complex mechanical phenomena inside biomolecular systems. The NOFT platform comprises a SnO2 nanofiber optic equipped with a thin, compressible polymer cladding layer studded with plasmonic nanoparticles (NPs). This combination allows angstrom-level movements of the NPs to be quantified by tracking the optical scattering of the NPs as they interact with the near-field of the fiber. The distance-dependent optical signals can be converted to force once the mechanical properties of the compressible cladding are fully characterized. In this protocol, the details of the synthesis, characterization, and calibration of the NOFT system are described. The overall protocol, from the synthesis of the nanofiber optic devices to acquisition of nanomechanical data, takes ~72 h.
Published Version
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