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Autores principales: Ali, Alaa M., Ulliac, Gwenn, Gerena, Edison, Mohand-Ousaid, Abdenbi, Haliyo, Sinan, Bolopion, Aude, Kadic, Muamer
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2026
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.02756
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author Ali, Alaa M.
Ulliac, Gwenn
Gerena, Edison
Mohand-Ousaid, Abdenbi
Haliyo, Sinan
Bolopion, Aude
Kadic, Muamer
author_facet Ali, Alaa M.
Ulliac, Gwenn
Gerena, Edison
Mohand-Ousaid, Abdenbi
Haliyo, Sinan
Bolopion, Aude
Kadic, Muamer
contents The miniaturization of mechanical mechanisms is crucial to enable the development of compact, high-performance micromachines. However, the downscaling actuation of conventional gears and micromotors has remained limited by the inherent challenges of implementing mechanical/electrical powering. Here, we present the design, fabrication, and characterization of an optomechanical, gear-driven micromachine realized through two-photon polymerization 3D printing. The actuation is achieved using optical tweezers. The device integrates a microgear transmission system with an optically actuated part, enabling light-controlled micromachines. When illuminated by a highly focused laser source, the first gear generates rotational torque within the gear assembly, converting optical energy into directional mechanical work that can be transmitted to the coupled gear. We demonstrate the fabrication of micromachines using two-photon polymerization (2PP) laser writing, enabling the fabrication of spur gear trains and bevel gears that can produce out-of-plane rotations, which is not achievable with traditional micromachining fabrication techniques. The micromachines are composed of a single gear or a train of two or three gears without any unwanted adhesion between the components, leading to functioning systems. Experimentally, the fabricated micromachines were actuated using optical tweezers, demonstrating continuous gear rotation, effective motion transmission in gear trains, out-of-plane rotations, and the ability to amplify velocity or torque. Optical-tweezer actuation broadens the potential applications of these micromachines, particularly in biomedical and lab-on-a-chip systems, where precise, minimally invasive control at the microscale is essential.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2602_02756
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Gear-based 3D-printed Micromachines Actuated by Optical Tweezers
Ali, Alaa M.
Ulliac, Gwenn
Gerena, Edison
Mohand-Ousaid, Abdenbi
Haliyo, Sinan
Bolopion, Aude
Kadic, Muamer
Optics
Materials Science
The miniaturization of mechanical mechanisms is crucial to enable the development of compact, high-performance micromachines. However, the downscaling actuation of conventional gears and micromotors has remained limited by the inherent challenges of implementing mechanical/electrical powering. Here, we present the design, fabrication, and characterization of an optomechanical, gear-driven micromachine realized through two-photon polymerization 3D printing. The actuation is achieved using optical tweezers. The device integrates a microgear transmission system with an optically actuated part, enabling light-controlled micromachines. When illuminated by a highly focused laser source, the first gear generates rotational torque within the gear assembly, converting optical energy into directional mechanical work that can be transmitted to the coupled gear. We demonstrate the fabrication of micromachines using two-photon polymerization (2PP) laser writing, enabling the fabrication of spur gear trains and bevel gears that can produce out-of-plane rotations, which is not achievable with traditional micromachining fabrication techniques. The micromachines are composed of a single gear or a train of two or three gears without any unwanted adhesion between the components, leading to functioning systems. Experimentally, the fabricated micromachines were actuated using optical tweezers, demonstrating continuous gear rotation, effective motion transmission in gear trains, out-of-plane rotations, and the ability to amplify velocity or torque. Optical-tweezer actuation broadens the potential applications of these micromachines, particularly in biomedical and lab-on-a-chip systems, where precise, minimally invasive control at the microscale is essential.
title Gear-based 3D-printed Micromachines Actuated by Optical Tweezers
topic Optics
Materials Science
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.02756