MICROTOME AND METHOD FOR CONTROLLING AND MANUFACTURING THE SAME
20220120641 · 2022-04-21
Inventors
- Shih-Chi Chen (Hong Kong, CN)
- Xinlei Fu (Pinghu City, CN)
- Dapeng Zhang (Hong Kong, CN)
- Jialong Chen (Yiwu City, CN)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A microtome comprises a support assembly; an actuator, mounted to the support assembly; a pair of oscillating flexure assemblies, held by the support assembly and each of which being located on one side of the actuator and oscillated by the actuator; and a blade assembly, mounted to each of the oscillating flexure assemblies so as to move in a direction same as the oscillating flexure assemblies.
Claims
1. A microtome, comprising: a support assembly; an actuator, mounted to the support assembly; a pair of oscillating flexure assemblies, held by the support assembly and each of which being located on one side of the actuator and oscillated by the actuator; and a blade assembly, mounted to each of the oscillating flexure assemblies so as to move in a direction same as the oscillating flexure assemblies.
2. The microtome according to claim 1, wherein the support assembly comprises a base and a frame for mounting the actuator and the pair of oscillating flexure assemblies.
3. The microtome according to one of claim 1, wherein the base is a custom-made cast iron.
4. The microtome according to one of claim 1, wherein the oscillating flexure assembly comprise two flexure beams with both ends connected to the support assembly and a holder connected to the flexure beams for holding the blade assembly between the flexure beams.
5. The microtome according to one of claim 1, wherein the actuator comprises a pair of symmetric linear actuators.
6. The microtome according to one of claim 1, wherein the blade assembly comprises a blade and a blade holder holding the blade.
7. The microtome according to claim 6, wherein the blade assembly further comprises a dummy structure on a side of the blade assembly opposite to the blade and the blade holder.
8. The microtome according to claim 7, wherein the dummy structure adjusts a natural frequency of the oscillating flexure assembly and the blade assembly as well as a center of mass of the oscillating flexure assembly.
9. The microtome according to one of claim 1, further comprising a vibration control assembly mounted to the support assembly for adjusting the actuator, wherein the vibration control assembly comprises: a sensor, measuring motions and forces of each of the oscillating flexure assemblies on both sides and generating a signal about the motions and the forces; a vibration controller, receiving the signal from the sensor, and estimating a unbalanced dynamic force/torque and determining a desired driving force that the actuator should generate based on a control algorithm in response to the signal; and a power amplifier, adjusting the actuator according to the desired driving force.
10. The microtome according to claim 9, wherein the sensor comprises a strain gauge and a laser interferometer.
11. The microtome according to claim 9, wherein the power amplifier adjusts the amplitude and phase of generated excitation forces in the actuator.
12. The microtome according to one of claim 1, wherein the blade assemblies are arranged symmetrically in relative to the support assembly.
13. A method for manufacturing a microtome, comprising: providing a support assembly; mounting an actuator to the support assembly; holding a pair of oscillating flexure assemblies by the support assembly, and locating each of the pair of oscillating flexure assemblies on one side of the actuator, and oscillating the pair of oscillating flexure assemblies using the actuator; and mounting a blade assembly to each of the oscillating flexure assemblies so as to move the blade assembly in a direction same as the oscillating flexure assemblies.
14. The method according to claim 12, wherein the support assembly comprises a base and a frame for mounting the actuator and the pair of oscillating flexure assemblies.
15. The method according to one of claim 12, wherein the base is a custom-made cast iron.
16. The method according to one of claim 12, wherein the oscillating flexure assembly comprise two flexure beams with both ends connected to the support assembly and a holder connected to the flexure beams for holding the blade assembly between the flexure beams.
17. The method according to one of claim 12, wherein the actuator comprises a pair of linear actuators.
18. The method according to one of claim 12, wherein the blade assembly comprises a blade and a blade holder holding the blade.
19. The method according to claim 18, wherein the blade assembly further comprises a dummy structure on a side of the blade assembly opposite to the blade and the blade holder.
20. The method according to one of claim 12, wherein the blade assemblies are arranged symmetrically in relative to the support assembly.
21. The method according to claim 19, wherein the dummy structure adjusts a natural frequency of the oscillating flexure assembly and the blade assembly as well as a center of mass of the oscillating flexure assembly.
22. A method for controlling a microtome, comprising: mounting a vibration control assembly to a support assembly of a microtome, wherein the microtome comprises: an actuator, mounted to the support assembly; a pair of oscillating flexure assemblies, held by the support assembly and each of which being located on one side of the actuator and oscillated by the actuator; and a blade assembly, mounted to each of the oscillating flexure assemblies so as to move in a direction same as the oscillating flexure assemblies, measuring, with a sensor, motions and forces of each of the oscillating flexure assemblies on both sides and generating a signal about the motions and the forces; receiving, with a vibration controller, the signal from the sensor, and estimating an unbalanced dynamic force/torque and determining a desired driving force that the actuator should generate based on a control algorithm in response to the signal; and adjusting, with a power amplifier, the actuator according to the desired driving force.
23. The method according to claim 22, wherein the sensor comprises a strain gauge and a laser interferometer.
24. The method according to claim 22, wherein the power amplifier adjusts the amplitude and phase of generated excitation forces in the actuator.
25. The method according to one of claims 22-24, wherein the control algorithm is to make the motions in the two oscillating flexure assemblies on both sides have the same amplitude and phase, or have specific different in either amplitude or phase or both, and to make the unbalanced dynamic force/torque minimized.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0008] Embodiments of the invention are illustrated by way of example and not limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings in which like references indicate similar elements.
[0009]
[0010]
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[0021]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0022] Reference will now be made in detail to some specific embodiments of the application including the best modes contemplated by the inventors for carrying out the invention. Examples of these specific embodiments are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. While the application is described in conjunction with these specific embodiments, it will be understood that it is not intended to limit the application to the described embodiments. On the contrary, it is intended to cover alternatives, modifications, and equivalents as may be included within the spirit and scope of the application as defined by the appended claims. In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present application. The present application may be practiced without some of these specific details. In other instances, well-known process operations have not been described in detail in order not to unnecessarily obscure the present application.
[0023] Reference in the specification to “an embodiment” or “an embodiment” means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in conjunction with the embodiment can be included in at least an embodiment of the invention. The appearances of the phrase “in an embodiment” in various places in the specification do not necessarily all refer to the same embodiment.
[0024]
[0025] When an oscillating blade microtome is in operation, the sample is fed to the blade in a direction, i.e., cutting direction, transverse to the oscillating direction of the blade. The parasitic blade motions, i.e., motions transverse to the blade oscillation direction should be suppressed to within 1 micron to improve the sectioning results by locally stiffening the tissues with a fast oscillating blade.
[0026] The design of new oscillating blade microtome is inspired by the fundamental understanding of soft tissue cutting mechanism. Soft tissues have intrinsic viscoelasticity that the tissue stiffness increases with increasing excitation frequency. The viscoelastic property could be utilized to minimize the global deformation by self-stiffening the tissues during high-frequency cutting. As a result, optimal sectioning results can be achieved with a fast oscillating blade. Our analytical and experimental study shows that when the blade frequency goes beyond 200 Hz, the sectioning results (flatness, section thickness etc.) can be effectively improved. In addition, higher blade oscillation frequency can further improve the tissue cutting results. The new microtome therefore targets to have an operating range of 5-500 Hz that none of the existing system can realize.
[0027]
[0028] When the microtome is in operation, as illustrated in
[0029] By theoretical and experimental investigation, the unbalanced dynamic force is the main source of parasitic blade motion in z-axis. The clamping ends exert large reaction force to the oscillating flexure assembly; at the same time, the excitation force is also acting on the oscillating flexure assembly. As such, the resultant force is unbalanced, which exerts alternating dynamic force to the oscillating blade and leads to parasitic blade motions. As predicted by the model, the unbalanced dynamic force increases quadratically with the blade oscillation frequency:
F(t)=kMω.sup.2Y.sub.ae.sup.jωt
[0030] where ω is working frequency, M is mass of oscillating structure and Y.sub.ae.sup.jωt is oscillation amplitude.
[0031] As illustrated in
[0032]
[0033] According to an embodiment of the present application, a microtome 4 may comprises a support assembly 5; an actuator 6, such as a pair of linear actuators, mounted to the support assembly 5; a pair of oscillating flexure assemblies 1, held by the support assembly 5 and each of which being located on one side of the actuator 6 and oscillated by the actuator 6; and a blade assembly 8, mounted to each of the oscillating flexure assemblies so as to move in a direction same as the oscillating flexure assemblies. Details of the microtome 4 will be discussed below with reference to
[0034]
[0035] As illustrated in
[0036] The symmetric design means two synchronized microtome 4 need to operate in parallel, where the blades 12 oscillate in opposite directions. This arrangement of blade motion symmetry cancels out vibrations during high speed operations and doubles the throughput of tissue sectioning. The blade holder 13 is supported by two sets of parallel flexure beams 2 to confine the blade motion in the x-axis. By adjusting the length and aspect ratio of the beams 2, the in-plane and out-of-plane stiffness of the mechanism can be optimized. The blade motion is generated by the actuator 6, such as two opposing voice-coil motors (VCMs), which are selected based on their high force density and precision. One way to increase the resonance frequency is to remove the redundant mass on the mechanism and to use materials of high stiffness and low density. In this embodiment, considering cost and flexing capability, the monolithic mechanism is made from a 1″ thick aluminum 7075 plate. To ensure the actuator 6 can generate sufficient oscillation amplitudes in the target operation frequency (i.e., 5-500 Hz), the resonance frequency of the mechanism is designed to 200 Hz. Based on this constraint, the supporting flexure beams 2 are designed to be 1 mm thick, 85 mm long and distanced by 45 mm.
[0037] A shown in
In this embodiment, the dummy structures 14 are added to the top of the blade holders 13 to bring the center of mass to the mechanism plane, where the forces of the VCMs are applied to. This arrangement eliminates the unwanted torques generated in dynamic operations.
[0038] As shown in
[0039]
[0040] The concept of vibration cancellation is to cancel out the excitation source of the parasitic motions by adopting a multi-symmetry design.
[0041] The concept of vibration cancellation is also exploited in the x-z plane, as shown in
[0042] Although the concept of passive vibration cancellation effectively enables the high-frequency operation of the ultrafast microtome 4 with minimal parasitic blade motion, the assembly errors (e.g., alignment of VCMs) and fabrication errors (e.g., dimensions of the beams, mass of the dummy structures 14 and blade holders 13) can compromise the symmetry of dynamic forces and dynamic torques, leading to compromised vibration cancellation performance. To address the issue, active vibration control can be applied. The concept of active vibration control is to actively generate the dynamic force and torque for cancellation based on the sensing of flexure motion and unbalanced force. As illustrated in
[0043] As illustrated in
[0044] Except for the flexure, other components in the microtome 4 are designed to have high stiffness. The mounting base 9 provides weight and is stiff and rigidly mounted to the table. The blade holder 13 is configured to hold the blade 12 horizontally and allows fine adjustments of the cutting angle.
[0045] In an embodiment, the ultrafast microtome 4 has demonstrated error motion suppression capability with a wide frequency tuning range (i.e., 5-500 Hz) and an oscillation amplitude of ˜200 μm, achieving the design goals. The sample sectioning diameter is up to 80 mm.
[0046] Table 1 summarizes the performance of the ultrafast microtome 4.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Specifications for the flexure-based microtome Feed rate 0-10 mm/s Vibration frequency 5-500 Hz Vibration amplitude 0-0.2 mm Section thickness 10-500 μm Section diameter <80 mm Parasitic z-motion <1 μm
[0047] According to an embodiment of the present application, a method 800 for manufacturing the microtome 4 as described above is also provided. A flowchart of the method is shown in
[0048] According to another embodiment of the present application, a method 900 for controlling the microtome 4 as described above is also provided. A flowchart of the method is shown in
[0049] As illustrated in
[0050]
[0051] As can be seen from
[0052] As illustrated in
[0053] Although some embodiments of the present application have been described, those skilled in the art can make variations or modifications to these embodiments upon knowing the basic inventive concept. Although details of the embodiments are described, it is understood that it is not necessary to include all elements in the described embodiments. Instead, some elements in the embodiments could be omitted or altered, without departing from the invention. The appended claims are intended to be considered as comprising the described embodiments and all the variations or modifications fell into the scope of the present application.