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  • Light-driven manipulation tools such as optical tweezers have opened new ways to control and study matter. We push the boundaries of their scale, versatility, and strength. Nature offers powerful inspiration: wind, ocean currents, and volcanic eruptions all show how heat and temperature gradients can drive motion on vast scales. Drawing from these forces, we created optothermal manipulation, a strategy that uses light-induced heating and cooling to precisely control the motion, interaction, structure, and composition of matter. By further integrating chemical, electrical, and acoustic effects, we envision a broadly adaptable platform for manipulating matter with precision.

  • We integrate innovations in both manipulation by light and manipulation of light with AI to advance spectroscopy, microscopy, and mechanoscopy. Using standard optical microscopy, we achieve high-efficiency volumetric imaging and accurate classification of cells and organisms. Our mechanoscopy tools, including adhesion frequency assays, quantify dynamic cell-cell interactions, cell-substrate adhesion, receptor-ligand binding forces, and other mechanical properties at the single-molecule and cellular level. In addition, we develop chiroptical spectroscopy systems for label-free, highly sensitive enantiodiscrimination.

  • We design architected materials such as photonic crystals and metamaterials to precisely control light and unlock new regimes of light-matter interaction. Our designs are often inspired by nature and increasingly guided by AI, accelerating discovery and enabling unprecedented functionality. In parallel, our light-driven manipulation strategies provide sustainable, on-demand fabrication of complex architectures across scales, from nanoscale features to large-area platforms. Advanced characterization tools link structure to function, revealing both single-nanostructure behavior and collective emergent phenomena.

About

Our research in optics and photonics is guided by three core goals:

  • Explore new regimes of light-matter interactions
  • Innovate optical manipulation and measurement as enabling technologies
  • Translate these innovations into new materials, devices, and systems for broad impact

 Group Leader:

 Yuebing Zheng
 Walker Department of Mechanical Engineering
 Materials Science and Engineering Program
 Texas Materials Institute
 The University of Texas at Austin
 Austin, TX 78712, United States
 Phone: 1 (512) 471-0228
 Email: zheng@austin.utexas.edu

 Other affiliations:
 Chandra Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
 Department of Biomedical Engineering
 Center for Electrochemistry
 Center for Planetary Systems Habitability

Recent Publications

Featured Publications

Thermal Photonics with Machine Learning [Nature 2025]

Optically Transforming Waste to Treasure [Nat. Commun. 2024]

Bioinspired Swarms of Optical Robots [Sci. Adv. 2024]

Book: Nanophotonics and Machine Learning [Springer 2023]

Optical Nanomotors on Solid Substrates [ACS Nano 2022]

Opto-Refrigerative Tweezers [Science Advances 2021]

Opto-Thermoelectric Nanotweezers [Nature Photonics 2018]

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