SYSTEMS AND RELATED METHODS FOR RAPIDLY MOVING MATERIALS INTO AND OUT OF A CRYOGENIC ENVIRONMENT
20170269180 · 2017-09-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01R33/282
PHYSICS
A61B2576/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B5/748
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G01R33/36
PHYSICS
G01R33/3607
PHYSICS
G01R33/5601
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
Disclosed herein is a device defining a generally closed volume therein, henceforth known as a “shuttle”, not permanently fixed to a probe or other surface inside the cryostat, into which gas and/or liquid—most preferably helium gas or liquid—can pass into or out of in a controlled and predictable manner. The passage of gas or liquid into the shuttle is preferably via a porous barrier so that sterile conditions can be maintained in the interior of the shuttle.
Claims
1. A device for rapidly moving materials into or out from a cryogenic environment, said device including a peripheral wall defining an interior volume made from a solid material including a porous portion made from a different material, the porous portion being porous to liquid or gas.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein the interior volume is cylindrical.
3. The device of claim 1, wherein the porous portion is porous to helium gas.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein the peripheral wall is made from high thermal conductivity plastic.
5. The device of claim 1, wherein the peripheral wall is made from low thermal conductivity plastic.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein the peripheral wall is made from PTFE.
7. The device of claim 1, wherein the porous portion is made from Porex® material.
8. The device of claim 1, wherein the interior volume maintains its sterility when passing through or into a non-sterile environment.
9. A method of conducting a NMR/MRI/MRS study using material hyperpolarized using the device of claim 1.
10. The device of claim 1, further comprising hyperpolarized material disposed within the interior volume of the device.
11. The device of claim 10, wherein the hyperpolarized material includes 1-13 C pyruvic acid.
12. The device of claim 10, wherein the hyperpolarized material includes frozen 1-13 C pyruvic acid disposed in a high surface area format.
13. The device of claim 1, wherein an exterior portion of the device permits the transmission of visible light therethrough.
14. The method of claim 9, wherein material inside the device is cooled to T<100 K during the method.
15. The method of claim 9, wherein material inside the device is cooled to T<10 K during the method.
16. The method of claim 9, wherein material inside the device is cooled to T<1 K during the method.
17. The method of claim 9, wherein the device is expelled from a cryogenic environment at a speed>0.1 m/s.
18. The method of claim 9, wherein the device is expelled from a cryogenic environment at a speed>1.0 m/s.
19. The method of claim 9, wherein the device is expelled from a cryogenic environment at a speed>10.0 m/s.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0016]
[0017]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0018] Disclosed herein to address the aforementioned deficiencies in the art is a device defining a generally closed volume therein, henceforth known as a “shuttle”, not permanently fixed to a probe or other surface inside the cryostat, into which gas and/or liquid—most preferably helium gas or liquid—can pass into or out of in a controlled and predictable manner. The passage of gas or liquid into the shuttle is preferably via a porous barrier so that sterile conditions can be maintained in the interior of the shuttle at all times. Ideally the barrier is porous enough to permit easy passage of liquid or gas but can also prevent bacteria, microbes or other undesirable materials from entering the shuttle. In the case where the contents of the shuttle are to be used in a medical application, this will allow sterility to be maintained while the shuttle and its contents are either being cooled in the cryostat or ejected from it.
[0019] To accomplish this Applicant describes herein a closed shuttle wherein at least some portion of the surface of the shuttle is made from a porous material. In a preferred embodiment the material is Porex® material (from Porex Corporation, Fairburn, Ga., USA) or some other kind of porous plastic material wherein the pore size is engineered to have a desired average diameter. For example, plastic materials such as Ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE), high-density polyethylene (HDPE), polypropylene (PP), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), and polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), Ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA), polyethersulfone (PES), polyurethane (PU) and PE/PP co-polymers can be used. The Porex® material is thus designed to serve as a sterile barrier.
[0020] The shuttle can be made from a wide variety of materials, depending on its desired thermal characteristics. In a preferred embodiment, the shuttle is machined from a thermally conducting plastic that is magnetically inert. Examples of such materials can be found in the literature.
[0021] In some embodiments, the porous material defines pores therein having an average diameter between about 800 nm and about 50 nm, or any increment therebetween of about 10 nm. In another embodiment, the porous material defines pores therein having an average diameter between about 300 nm and about 100 nm, or any increment therebetween of about 10 nm. In some embodiments the porous material defines pores therein having an average diameter between about 250 nm and about 200 nm, or any increment therebetween of about 5 nm, such as 220 nm.
[0022] In a further preferred embodiment, the gas or liquid passing through the porous barrier is helium. Helium has two main isotopes, .sup.4He and .sup.3He. For purposes of this teaching the word “helium” is meant to describe pure .sup.4He, pure .sup.3He, or some combination of the two. Note liquid 3 He and liquid 4 He are miscible below approximately 867 mK.
[0023] In a further preferred embodiment, the material inside the shuttle is arranged to have a high surface area. High surface areas facilitate thermal relaxation, particularly in ultra low temperature environments where Kapitza resistance can be significant. Kapitza resistance arises due to “phonon mismatch” between a given material and liquid helium and can result in greatly increased thermal relaxation times. As is well described in the literature, the easiest route to overcoming Kapitza resistance is to configure the material in a high surface area format.
[0024] In a further preferred embodiment, the material inside the shuttle is suitable for use in a hyperpolarized NMR/MRI/MRS study. In a further preferred embodiment, the material in the shuttle is liquid 1-13 C pyruvic acid, where 1-13 C refers to the pyruvic acid being isotopically enhanced in the carbonyl atom position.
[0025] In a further preferred embodiment, the shuttle is exposed to a combination of very low temperatures and high magnetic fields suitable for producing high nuclear polarization in the material contained in it. Since after polarization the shuttle will be expelled from the LTE as rapidly as possible, it is desirable to make it out of a magnetically inert material. Various plastics or metals such as copper, brass etc are suitable for this.
[0026] Using such a shuttle, samples can be exposed to extremely low temperatures, well below T˜4 K, and still achieve rapid cooling if helium gas is used to provide thermal contact. Methods of producing temperatures down to 1 millikelvin or below are well known in the literature. In a preferred embodiment, a dilution refrigerator (DR) is used to produce temperatures down to T<10 mK with cooling powers ˜1 microwatt or more.
[0027] In U.S. Pat. No. 6,651,459, Applicant has separately taught a proprietary method of using .sup.3He to enhance surface relaxation rates of a powder in a high B/T environment. In this method, .sup.3He is allowed to condense onto the surface of the frozen powder. At temperatures below 3 K, and down to absolute zero, .sup.3He is a liquid at normal pressures and will wet virtually any surface with which it comes into contact. Experiments on a wide range of nuclei and molecules have shown that as little as one monolayer of .sup.3He on the surface of a material will cause nearby nuclei to relax to equilibrium at a highly enhanced rate. This phenomenon occurs because .sup.3He atoms in the monolayer are continually exchanging sites with one another, even at temperatures approaching absolute zero. Dipolar coupling between the spin ½ .sup.3He atoms and nuclei in the surface layers cause rapid relaxation of those nuclei to equilibrium polarization; the remainder of the sample relaxes via spin diffusion. In a preferred embodiment, .sup.3He is allowed to pass through the Porex barrier and provide both enhanced thermal and magnetic relaxation to equilibrium.
[0028] The shuttle containing the material to be cooled is introduced into the LTE produced by a DR. In a preferred embodiment, this is done by allowing the shuttle to be let down an evacuated tube running between room temperature and the cold stage of the DR. The DR is also used to cool a prearranged amount of helium to a desired temperature. Once the shuttle is in the cold stage of the DR, helium is allowed into the tube and passes through the porous barrier in the shuttle. This provides thermal contact between the contents in the interior of the shuttle and the cold stage of the DR.
[0029] As is well described in the literature, helium can be used to provide good thermal contact between a material and the cold stage of a DR. This is because under its own vapour pressure helium remains a liquid even down to absolute zero. Also, the molar heat capacity of helium at T<4 K generally greatly exceeds the molar heat capacity of any other material. This makes it an excellent refrigerant for cooling materials to ultra low temperatures providing the material can be configured in a high surface area format to overcome Kapitza resistance.
[0030]
[0031] Samples can be loaded into the shuttle in a number of ways. If the sample includes materials that are gases or liquids at room temperature, they may be flowed through the barrier. The Porex® barrier is removable and resealable using epoxy, so solids can be loaded into the interior and then the Porex® (or other suitable) barrier can be sealed across the opening.
[0032] In a preferred embodiment, the shuttle is cylindrical in shape, but it can have any desired three-dimensional shape. The body of the shuttle can be made from a wide variety of materials. Also, if desired, a window can be fitted into the body of the shuttle—for example, if laser excitation of the sample within is desired. Windows can be made from quartz, aluminum, beryllium or other materials and secured to the body of the shuttle using well understood cryogenic engineering techniques.
[0033] Various hyperpolarization techniques can be used to hyperpolarize the material within the shuttle, including brute force hyperpolarization and hyperpolarization using a quantum relaxation switch, as described in detail in patents and patent applications incorporated by reference herein.
[0034] The methods, systems, and devices of the present disclosure, as described above and shown in the drawings, among other things, provide for improved magnetic resonance methods, systems and machine readable programs for carrying out the same. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the devices, methods, and devices of the present disclosure without departing from the spirit or scope of the disclosure. Thus, it is intended that the present disclosure include modifications and variations that are within the scope of the subject disclosure and equivalents.