THERMALLY IMPACTING FLUID AND SAMPLE SEPARATION UNIT INDEPENDENTLY
20210394081 · 2021-12-23
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01D15/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B04B15/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A thermal impact assembly for a sample separation apparatus for separating a fluidic sample in a mobile phase by a sample separation unit includes a thermal impact device configured for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and the sample separation unit, and a control unit configured for controlling the thermal impact device for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase on the one hand and for thermally impacting the sample separation unit on the other hand independently from each other.
Claims
1. A thermal impact assembly for a sample separation apparatus for separating a fluidic sample in a mobile phase by a sample separation unit, the thermal impact assembly comprising: a thermal impact device configured to thermally impact the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and the sample separation unit; and a control unit configured to control the thermal impact device for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase on the one hand and for thermally impacting the sample separation unit on the other hand independently from each other.
2. The thermal impact assembly according to claim 1, wherein the thermal impact device comprises a first thermal impact unit configured to thermally impact the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and comprises a second thermal impact unit configured to thermally impact the sample separation unit.
3. The thermal impact assembly according to claim 2, comprising at least one of the following features: wherein the first thermal impact unit is thermally and/or functionally decoupled from the second thermal impact unit; wherein the control unit is configured to control the first thermal impact unit and the second thermal impact unit separately by separate control signals.
4. The thermal impact assembly according to claim 2, wherein the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase is controlled to be tempered by the first thermal impact unit and additionally by the second thermal impact unit.
5. The thermal impact assembly according to claim 4, comprising at least one of the following features: wherein the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase is arranged to be tempered directly by the first thermal impact unit and indirectly by the second thermal impact unit; wherein the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase is arranged to be heated by the second thermal impact unit and selectively further heated or cooled by the first thermal impact unit.
6. The thermal impact assembly according to claim 2, comprising at least one of the following features: wherein the sample separation unit is arranged to be tempered by the second thermal impact unit only; wherein the first thermal impact unit is arranged upstream of the second thermal impact unit; wherein the first thermal impact unit and the second thermal impact unit are arranged in a spatially overlapping manner; wherein the first thermal impact unit is arranged within the second thermal impact unit; wherein at least one of the first thermal impact unit or the second thermal impact unit comprises at least one selected from the group consisting of: a heatable or coolable bulk body; a Peltier element; and a plasma heater; wherein the second thermal impact unit is configured for thermally impacting the sample separation unit without gas convection acting directly on the sample separation unit.
7. The thermal impact assembly according to claim 2, wherein the second thermal impact unit is configured for thermally impacting the sample separation unit with gas convection acting indirectly on the sample separation unit by providing: a convection mechanism for creating the gas convection for promoting thermal coupling of the sample separation unit; and an at least partially thermally conductive shielding structure shielding the gas convection (94) from the sample separation unit; wherein the at least partially thermally conductive shielding structure comprises a heat exchanger configured for promoting heat exchange between the gas convection and the sample separation unit.
8. The thermal impact assembly according to claim 1, wherein the control unit is configured to control the thermal impact device so that operation of the sample separation apparatus emulates operation of another sample separation apparatus, in terms of thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and in terms of thermally impacting the sample separation unit, wherein the control unit is configured to emulate operation of the other sample separation apparatus based on a transfer function determined so that the sample separation apparatus behaves, in terms of thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and in terms of thermally impacting the sample separation unit, like the other sample separation apparatus when carrying out a separation method developed for the other sample separation apparatus on the sample separation apparatus.
9. The thermal impact assembly according to claim 1, wherein the thermal impact device is configured for heating, cooling, or selectively heating or cooling the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and/or the sample separation unit.
10. A sample separation apparatus for separating a fluidic sample, the sample separation apparatus comprising: a fluid drive unit configured for driving a mobile phase and the fluidic sample injected in the mobile phase; a sample separation unit configured for separating the fluidic sample in the mobile phase; and a thermal impact assembly according to claim 1 for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase on the one hand and the sample separation unit on the other hand independently from each other.
11. The sample separation apparatus according to claim 10, comprising a thermal impact compartment in which the sample separation unit is arranged.
12. The sample separation apparatus according to claim 11, wherein a first thermal impact unit configured for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase is arranged upstream of the thermal impact compartment.
13. The sample separation apparatus according to claim 10, comprising at least one further sample separation unit connected in parallel to the sample separation unit and comprising a selection valve configured for selecting one of the sample separation units.
14. The sample separation apparatus according to claim 12, comprising one of the following features: wherein the first thermal impact unit is integrated in the selection valve; wherein the first thermal impact unit comprises a Metal-Micro-Fluidic structure integrated in the selection valve; wherein the first thermal impact unit is arranged between the selection valve (86) and the thermal impact compartment; wherein the first thermal impact unit is arranged upstream of the selection valve.
15. The sample separation apparatus according to claim 11, wherein a first thermal impact unit configured for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase is arranged at least partially inside of the thermal impact compartment and is thermally coupled to a head portion of the sample separation unit.
16. The sample separation apparatus according to claim 10, comprising a pre-treating assembly for thermally pre-treating the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase upstream of the sample separation unit, wherein a first thermal impact unit configured for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase is thermally coupled with the pre-treating assembly.
17. The sample separation apparatus according to claim 11, wherein a second thermal impact unit configured for thermally impacting the sample separation unit is arranged at least partially inside of the thermal impact compartment.
18. The sample separation apparatus according to claim 10, further comprising at least one of the following features: the sample separation apparatus is configured as a chromatography sample separation apparatus; an injector configured to inject the fluidic sample into the mobile phase; a detector configured to detect the separated fluidic sample; a fractioner unit configured to collect the separated fluidic sample; a degassing apparatus for degassing at least part of the mobile phase.
19. A process of adjusting a temperature of a fluidic sample and/or a mobile phase and of a sample separation unit in a sample separation apparatus, the process comprising: thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and the sample separation unit; and controlling the thermally impacting so as to thermally impact the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase on the one hand and to thermally impact the sample separation unit on the other hand independently from each other.
20. The process according to claim 19, comprising at least one of the following features: wherein the method comprises controlling a first thermal impact unit for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase independently of thermally impacting the sample separation unit, and separately controlling a second thermal impact unit for thermally impacting the sample separation unit independently of thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase; wherein the method comprises controlling the thermally impacting for simulating execution of a separation method of another sample separation apparatus by the sample separation apparatus so that the sample separation apparatus behaves like the other sample separation apparatus, in terms of thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and in terms of thermally impacting the sample separation unit; wherein the method comprises thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase by adjusting a temperature of the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and/or comprises thermally impacting the sample separation unit by adjusting a temperature of the sample separation unit.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0060] Other objects and many of the attendant advantages of embodiments of the present invention will be readily appreciated and become better understood by reference to the following more detailed description of embodiments in connection with the accompanying drawings. Features that are substantially or functionally equal or similar will be referred to by the same reference signs.
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[0071] The illustration in the drawing is schematic.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0072] Before, referring to the figures, exemplary embodiments will be explained in further detail, some basic considerations will be explained based on which exemplary embodiments have been developed.
[0073] According to an exemplary embodiment of the invention, a thermal impact assembly (such as a sample-in-mobile-phase and separation column preheater) for a sample separation apparatus (such as a liquid chromatography apparatus) is provided which enables a separate tempering (in particular temperature control or temperature adjustment) of a fluidic sample to be separated and/or a mobile phase for carrying the fluidic sample on the one hand and a sample separation unit (such as a chromatographic separation column) on the other hand. In other words, preheating sample/mobile phase may be accomplished independently of preheating the sample separation unit for separating the sample. A gist of an exemplary embodiment is thus to use independent heating sources for heating the mobile phase (which may be performed in a preheater) on the one hand and for heating the separation column on the other hand.
[0074] Conventionally, a preheater and a separation column may be tempered together, for instance via a common heat block and by implementing one or more heat exchangers. According to an exemplary embodiment, separation of heating sources for the mobile phase and the sample with respect to the sample separation unit may be advantageous. In particular, it may be advantageous that by separating the heating sources other column-oven types (or more generally other thermal impact compartments) can be emulated or simulated. By this active concept with two thermally impacting sources it may thus become possible to simulate another column oven with a passive concept with only one heating source. Descriptively speaking, the functional and logic separation between mobile phase tempering and tempering of the sample separation unit in a sample separation apparatus provides an additional degree of freedom which may be used as design parameter for emulating the operation of another sample separation apparatus by enabling thermally impacting mobile phase/fluidic sample and sample separation unit(s) independently from each other. For instance, operation of the independently adjustable tempering mechanisms of the sample separation apparatus according to an exemplary embodiment of the invention may be set for mimicking, emulating or simulating the functionality of another sample separation apparatus in terms of preheating.
[0075] In an advantageous embodiment, a thermal impact compartment (which may also be denoted as a column compartment) for thermally impacting one or more sample separation units may be conditioned by two independently controlled thermal impact units (which may be heaters and/or coolers), one dedicated to condition the liquid temperature of the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase, and the other to condition the temperature inside the thermal impact compartment (and thereby adjusting the temperature of the one or more sample separation units in the thermal impact compartment).
[0076] When designing column compartments according to an exemplary embodiment of the invention, it may be advantageous to achieve reproducible operation conditions for the column(s), keeping backwards compatibility with existing separation methods run in other instruments (for instance legacy instruments). Keeping backwards compatibility may have an impact on the improvement of the performance of new models. Conventionally, it may be a shortcoming that when separation methods developed for one sample separation apparatus run on another sample separation apparatus may not show the same performance under the same operation conditions (such as flow rate and/or temperature of mobile phase and fluidic sample, gradient relating to varying solvent composition of mobile phase, etc.) in the new sample separation apparatus. In order to overcome such shortcomings, an exemplary embodiment of the invention may use two independently controlled thermal impact units (such as heaters and/or coolers) for conditioning a thermal impact compartment (in particular a chromatographic column compartment). In such a scenario, one thermal impact unit may be dedicated to condition the liquid temperature of mobile phase and/or fluidic sample, the other thermal impact unit may be provided to condition the temperature inside the thermal impact compartment. Advantageously, such an embodiment may ensure backwards compatibility and may improve the separation performance.
[0077] Hence, the independent or separate control of thermally impacting of mobile phase and fluidic sample on the one hand and one or more sample separation units of the sample separation apparatus on the other hand may render the sample separation apparatus backwards compatible and adjustable to legacy separation methods. Furthermore, taking this measure may allow to design sample separation apparatuses achieving significant improvement in terms of performance. Moreover, the use of an independent thermal impact unit (which may involve an independently controllable heating and/or cooling unit) for liquid (i.e. mobile phase and fluidic sample) may reduce the number of pre-column heaters to one reducing the hardware effort. The provision of a separate or independent thermal impact unit for mobile phase and fluidic sample may thus increase flexibility of operation. For instance, it may be possible to integrate such an independently controllable thermal impact unit (i.e. a pre-column heater and/or cooler) into a selection valve, for example using one or more Peltier coolers and/or one or more plasma heaters. Such a selection valve may be configured for selecting one of a plurality of parallel connected sample separation units, for instance in accordance with the requirements of a specific application. Since such a selection valve may be arranged directly upstream of the sample separation units and thus directly upstream of a thermal impact compartment, the independent control or adjustment of the temperature of the mobile phase and the fluidic sample may be spatially very close to an adjustment of the temperature of the sample separation units in the thermal impact compartment. Consequently, undesired temperature equilibrium processes may be kept small without compromising on the independent adjustability of the tempering characteristics of fluid and sample separation units.
[0078] Hence, an exemplary embodiment of the invention may make it possible to thermally condition the liquid before it gets inside the thermal impact compartment with the sample separation unit(s) which may avoid condensation issues and temperature instabilities inside.
[0079] An exemplary embodiment of the invention may introduce a first thermal impact unit (which may be a heater and/or cooler) that brings the temperature of the liquid (i.e. mobile phase and fluidic sample) to a set point. A second thermal impact unit (which may be a heater and/or a cooler as well) may be provided to control the temperature of the thermal impact compartment (including the one or more sample separation units) independently, for instance with a control logic to achieve the best performance of the separation, as a separate degree of freedom which may be used for developing a separation method. Furthermore, this may make it possible to make the thermal impact compartment backwards compatible to legacy sample separation methods and/or to legacy sample separation apparatuses. For example, a pre-column conditioner in form of the independently controllable first thermal impact unit can be located inside or outside of the section where the one or more chromatographic separation columns are allocated and where thermally impacting by a second thermal impact unit may occur.
[0080] A further aspect of an exemplary embodiment of the invention is an HPLC column oven having a hybrid configuration in terms of gas convection, i.e. a hybrid configuration with and without air circulation. In particular, a column compartment may be provided which is conditioned by an airflow conducted around the column area. In conventional HPLC column compartments either no active air flow is provided at all (leading to a more adiabatic environment), or the compartment may be provided with forced air flow (leading to a more isothermal environment). In contrast to such approaches, a column compartment according to an exemplary embodiment of the invention may be provided with a forced air flow around the area where the columns are positioned, while a forced air flow at the location of the columns itself may be reliably prevented, for instance by shielding. It has turned out that a compartment with low (i.e. no forced) air flow around the column may allow to obtain better chromatographic results. A forced, fast air flow may result in better temperature stability, better suppression of ambient phenomena and faster equilibration. According to exemplary embodiments of the invention, a forced air flow may be directed around—but preferably not up to—the column location by a flow diverter shield. The area around the columns may have significantly reduced air flow due to smaller temperature differences. This may result in higher temperature stability, may reduce the need for thick isolation and may retain good chromatographic results.
[0081] Referring now in greater detail to the drawings,
[0082] A pump or fluid drive unit 20 receives a mobile phase from a solvent supply 25, typically via a degasser 27, which degases and thus reduces the amount of dissolved gases in the mobile phase. The fluid drive unit 20 drives the mobile phase through a sample separation unit 30 (such as a chromatographic column) comprising a stationary phase. A sampling unit or injector 40 can be provided between the fluid drive unit 20 and the sample separation unit 30 in order to subject or add (often referred to as sample introduction) a sample fluid or fluidic sample into the mobile phase. The stationary phase of the sample separation unit 30 is configured for separating compounds of the sample liquid. A detector 50 is provided for detecting separated compounds of the sample fluid. A fractionating unit 60 can be provided for outputting separated compounds of sample fluid. It is also possible that separated compounds of sample fluid as well as mobile phase are conveyed into a waste line (not shown).
[0083] While the mobile phase can be comprised of one solvent only, it may also be mixed from plural solvents. Such mixing might be a low pressure mixing and provided upstream of the fluid drive unit 20, so that the fluid drive unit 20 already receives and pumps the mixed solvents as the mobile phase. Alternatively, the fluid drive unit 20 may be composed of plural individual pumping units, with plural of the pumping units each receiving and pumping a different solvent or mixture, so that the mixing of the mobile phase (as received by the sample separation unit 30) occurs at high pressure and downstream of the fluid drive unit 20 (or as part thereof). The composition (mixture) of the mobile phase may be kept constant over time, the so called isocratic mode, or varied over time, the so called gradient mode.
[0084] A data processing unit or control unit 70, which can be a personal computer or workstation, may be coupled (as indicated by the dotted arrows) to one or more of the devices in the sample separation apparatus 10 in order to receive information and/or control operation. For example, the control unit 70 may control operation of the fluid drive unit 20 (e.g. setting control parameters) and receive therefrom information regarding the actual working conditions (such as output pressure, flow rate, etc. at an outlet of the pump 20). The control unit 70 may also control operation of the solvent supply 25 (e.g. setting the solvent/s or solvent mixture to be supplied) and/or the degasser 27 (e.g. setting control parameters such as vacuum level) and may receive therefrom information regarding the actual working conditions (such as solvent composition supplied over time, flow rate, vacuum level, etc.). The control unit 70 may further control operation of the sampling unit or injector 40 (e.g. controlling sample injection or synchronization of sample injection with operating conditions of the fluid drive unit 20). The sample separation unit 30 may also be controlled by the control unit 70 (e.g. selecting a specific flow path or column, setting operation temperature, etc.), and send—in return—information (e.g. operating conditions) to the control unit 70. Accordingly, the detector 50 may be controlled by the control unit 70 (e.g. with respect to spectral or wavelength settings, setting time constants, start/stop data acquisition), and send information (e.g. about the detected sample compounds) to the control unit 70. The control unit 70 may also control operation of the fractionating unit 60 (e.g. in conjunction with data received from the detector 50) and provide data back.
[0085] Moreover, a thermal impact assembly 100 is arranged in the sample separation apparatus 10 downstream of the injector 40 and upstream of the detector 50. The thermal impact assembly 100 is configured to adjust the temperature of the mobile phase and the fluidic sample as well as to adjust—independently or separately thereof—the temperature of the sample separation unit 30. The thermal impact assembly 100 comprises a thermal impact device, which is here composed of a controllable first thermal impact unit 80 and an independently controllable second thermal impact unit 82. Control of each of the thermal impact units 80, 82 may be carried out by control unit 70 which supplies individual and different control signals to the thermal impact units 80, 82. The first thermal impact unit 80 is configured for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase flowing through a conduit surrounded in a thermally conductive way by a pre-treating assembly 90. The second thermal impact unit 82 is configured for thermally impacting a thermal impact compartment 84 accommodating the sample separation unit 30. Thus, the second thermal impact unit 82 will also control temperature of the sample separation unit 30. The above-mentioned control unit 70 may be configured for controlling the thermal impact units 80, 82 for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and for separately thermally impacting the sample separation unit 30 independently from each other. Highly advantageously, thermal impact assembly 100 may thus be configured for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase on the one hand and the sample separation unit 30 on the other hand individually and, if desired, differently. This introduces a further degree of freedom or design parameter which can be used for refining temperature adjustment. For instance, another target temperature may be set for the fluidic sample and the mobile phase as compared to the sample separation unit 30. In particular, thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase may be carried out by adjusting (for instance regulating) a temperature of the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase. Independently thereof, thermally impacting the sample separation unit 30 may be accomplished by adjusting (for example regulating) a temperature of the sample separation unit 30.
[0086] Additionally or alternatively, this additional degree of freedom may be used for emulating execution of a sample separation method developed for another sample separation apparatus (not shown in
[0087] It should be mentioned that, in the shown embodiment, the control unit 70 for controlling the thermal impact units 80, 82 may be the same control unit 70 which also controls overall operation of sample separation apparatus 10, as described above. In other embodiments, it is alternatively possible that the control unit 70 for controlling overall operation of the sample separation apparatus 10 may be another controller than control unit 70 controlling the thermal impact units 80, 82 independently from each other.
[0088] Detailed construction of temperature adjustment assemblies 100 according to exemplary embodiments of the invention, which may be implemented in a sample separation apparatus 10 as the one shown in
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[0090] The thermal impact assembly 100 according to
[0091] The control unit 70, which may for instance be a correspondingly programmed or programmable processor, may be configured for controlling each of the thermal impact units 80, 82 separately and individually for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase or for thermally impacting the sample separation units 30, respectively, independently from each other. In particular, the first thermal impact device 80 in combination with the control unit 70 may be configured for setting another target temperature or temperature profile for the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase as compared to a target temperature or temperature profile of the sample separation units 30 which may be defined by the second thermal impact unit 82 in collaboration with control unit 70. Thus, the control unit 70 may be configured for controlling the first thermal impact unit 80 and the second thermal impact unit 82 separately. For this purpose, the control unit 70 may apply different control signals 71, 73 to the first thermal impact unit 80 compared to the second thermal impact unit 82.
[0092] For instance, any of the first thermal impact unit 80 and the second thermal impact unit 82 may be a heated or cooled bulk body (such as a heating or cooling block, for instance a heating or cooling plate), for instance heated or cooled by heating or cooling fluids (such as a hot or cool gas or liquid). It is also possible that any of the first thermal impact unit 80 and the second thermal impact unit 82 may be heated by an electric current, in terms of ohmic heating. When configured as a Peltier element, the first thermal impact unit 80 and the second thermal impact unit 82 may selectively cool or heat depending on the flowing direction of a current applied to the Peltier element. Thus, the thermal impact units 80, 82 may be configured for heating, cooling, or selectively heating or cooling the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and/or the sample separation unit 30.
[0093] For example, the first thermal impact unit 80 may be thermally decoupled from the second thermal impact unit 82. This may promote an independent control of the thermal impact units 80, 82. Such a thermal decoupling may for instance be achieved by a sufficient spatial distance between the first thermal impact unit 80 and the second thermal impact unit 82 and/or by arranging a thermally insulating structure (not shown) between the first thermal impact unit 80 and the second thermal impact unit 82.
[0094] As shown, three sample separation units 30 (for instance three different types of chromatographic separation columns) may be connected in parallel in an interior of the thermal impact compartment 84 (such as a column oven). According to
[0095] Furthermore, the first thermal impact unit 80 configured for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase is arranged upstream of the thermal impact compartment 84. As shown in
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[0097] The embodiment of
[0098] In this embodiment, the first thermal impact unit 80 configured for thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase is thermally coupled to a head portion of the sample separation units 30. The fluidic sample and the mobile phase flow into a respective sample separation unit 30 at the head portion. In other words, the first thermal impact unit 80 heats or cools the mobile phase or fluidic sample when flowing through the column head of the sample separation units 30. It may be advantageous that the first thermal impact unit 80 is arranged as close as possible to the column head in order to precisely control the sample temperature during separation. Thus, the sample temperature is particularly critical at the head portion of the sample separation units 30, since the actual separation process (absorption and desorption) occurs at this position.
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[0100] The embodiment of
[0101] In the configuration according to
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[0103] The embodiment of
[0104] This configuration has the advantage that the first thermal impact unit 80 may be constructed in a highly compact way since its acts on the mobile phase or the fluidic sample before splitting the flow path into multiple parallel paths by the selection valve 86.
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[0106] In the embodiment of
[0107] Downstream of the thermal pre-treating assemblies 90 and therefore downstream of the first thermal impact unit 80, the second thermal impact unit 82 being thermally coupled with the parallel arranged sample separation units 30 is arranged, also accommodated within thermal impact compartment 84.
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[0109] According to
[0110] In the embodiment of
[0111] As shown in
[0112] Pre-treating assembly 90, through which a mobile phase and/or a fluidic sample may flow, may be indirectly thermally coupled with the second thermal impact unit 82 (which may be embodied as a heated block). As shown, the first thermal impact unit 80 (in particular a Peltier element) may be arranged sandwiched between the second thermal impact unit 82 and the pre-treating assembly 90. As a result, a majority of the thermal energy for thermally impacting pre-treating assembly 90 may be provided by the second thermal impact unit 82, whereas the fine-tuning of the thermally impacting of the pre-treating assembly 90 may be accomplished by the first thermal impact unit 80. For instance, the latter may increase or decrease the temperature of the pre-treating assembly 90 by correspondingly controlling a Peltier element. Thereby, the described configuration and independent controllability of the thermal impact units 80, 82 may allow for an efficient temperature control with high flexibility.
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[0114] According to
[0115] Therefore, the embodiment of
[0116] As shown, isolation walls of the thermal impact compartment 84 (which may also be denoted as column compartment) are provided as an exterior casing. Reference sign 92 denotes the heat exchanger, heater, cooler of the system.
[0117] Advantageously, shielding structure 88 may be mechanically coupled with a door (not shown) of thermal impact compartment 84 so that opening such a door by a user may automatically expose the sample separation units 30 without the need to disassemble shield structure 88 separately. This ensures a user-friendly operation.
[0118] The embodiment of
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[0120] For instance, the sample separation apparatus 10 may be constructed as described above referring to
[0121] The other sample separation apparatus 110 may be constructed with a single common thermal impact device 199 in an interior of a column oven 184. By a column selection valve 186, one of three parallel fluidic paths may be selected, each fluidic path comprising a serial connection of a pre-heater assembly 190 and an assigned chromatographic separation column 130. Thermal impact device 199 tempers the fluidic sample and the mobile phase flowing through a respective pre-heater assembly 190 and tempers as well the sample separation units 30. The sample separation apparatus 110 may be configured for carrying out a chromatographic separation method fulfilling a very specific separation task and being configured specifically in accordance with the particularities of the sample separation apparatus 110. Such a chromatographic method may be stored in a database 99.
[0122] It may be desired under specific circumstances to carry out the chromatographic separation method developed specifically for the sample separation apparatus 110 using the other sample separation apparatus 10. However, in view of the different particularities of the sample separation apparatuses 10, 110, carrying out the chromatographic separation method developed for the sample separation apparatus 110 may yield another separation result (in particular another chromatogram) when executed on the sample separation device 110.
[0123] By specifically configuring the sample separation apparatus 10 and in particular thermal impact assembly 100 thereof, execution of the mentioned chromatographic separation method may be rendered backward compatible. Descriptively speaking, properly controlling the thermal impact units 80, 82 of sample separation apparatus 10 by control unit 70 may allow for a configuration of the sample separation apparatus 10 so as to behave—in terms of temperature adjustment—like the sample separation apparatus 110 upon executing the chromatographic separation method. In other words, what concerns pre-heating, the additional degree of freedom of adjusting thermal impact units 80, 82 separately or independently in sample separation apparatus 10 allows to operate the sample separation apparatus 10 for carrying out the chromatographic separation method developed for sample separation apparatus 110 for emulating the behavior of the sample separation apparatus 110.
[0124] For this purpose, the control unit 70 may be configured for controlling each of the thermal impact units 80, 82 individually so that execution of the separation method on the sample separation apparatus 10 emulates operation of the other sample separation apparatus 110 what concerns thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and of the sample separation units 30. For controlling thermal impact units 80, 82, the control unit 70 may determine and apply a transfer function describing operation of thermal impact units 80, 82 so as to behave like thermal impact device 199 of sample separation apparatus 110 in terms of temperature control. Thus, the control unit 70 may be configured for emulating operation of the other sample separation apparatus 110 based on the transfer function determined so that the sample separation apparatus 10 behaves, in particular in terms of thermally impacting the fluidic sample and/or the mobile phase and of the sample separation unit 30, like the other sample separation apparatus 110 when carrying out the separation method (which has been initially developed for the other sample separation apparatus 110) on the sample separation apparatus 10. The additional degree of freedom or design parameter in form of the independently controllable second thermal impact unit 82 in addition to the independently controllable first thermal impact unit 80 may be advantageously used for providing the described emulation function.
[0125] Further advantageously, emulating the temperature control behavior of sample separation apparatus 110 by correspondingly controlling sample separation apparatus 10 may be synergistically combined with an emulation of the time dependence of a solvent composition of the mobile phase (in particular in terms of a gradient run) of sample separation apparatus 110 when executing the developed separation method on sample separation apparatus 10. For this purpose, a target time dependence of the solvent composition according to the chromatographic separation method developed for sample separation apparatus 110 may be transferred into a modified time dependence (by correspondingly modifying operation of fluid drive unit 20 in combination with solvent supply 25) so that sample separation apparatus 10, when carrying out the modified or adapted separation method, behaves as sample separation apparatus 110 also in terms of the time dependence of the solvent composition of the mobile phase. By taking this measure, method transfer from sample separation system 110 to sample separation system 10 may be rendered highly accurate.
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[0127] The mentioned thermal impact unit 80 can comprise a plurality of metal structures connected by thermal bonding at high pressure and high temperature and made for example from stainless steel foils. More specifically, the illustrated thermal impact unit 80 is an annular structure 160 of interconnected metal foils, comprising an MMF heater 162 and an MMF cooler 164 and having a central through hole 166. Heating or cooling the channel selection valve 86 may be carried out by the annular structure 160 as a pre-column liquid conditioner.
[0128] Conventional column compartments need a solvent heater/cooler per column, this impacts the efforts for manufacturing the instrumentation. Those conventional devices are also located inside the compartment impacting the temperature stability of the environment surrounding the columns.
[0129] In contrast to such conventional approaches, the embodiment of
[0130] It should be noted that the term “comprising” does not exclude other elements or features and the term “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality. Also elements described in association with different embodiments may be combined. It should also be noted that reference signs in the claims shall not be construed as limiting the scope of the claims.