Chromatography Column and Method of Assembling the Same
20220018817 · 2022-01-20
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01D15/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01D15/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Disclosed is a chromatographic separation column assembly (100) comprising a column cylinder (120) having a cylinder wall (126) including an inner wall surface (124) partially defining a column volume (50), and a column component (110/130) insertable into to the cylinder (120), wherein at least an edge region (113/133) of the column component is intended to be in contact or adjacent a part of the inner wall surface (124) in use, the edge region and the contacting or adjacent part of inner wall surface each being formed from a compatible heat fusible material or materials, and wherein at least the cylinder wall in the area of the contacting or adjacent part of the inner wall is formed from a material which allows transmission of the light energy needed to cause said fusing of the adapter plate edge region to the inner wall surface.
Claims
1. A chromatographic separation column assembly comprising a column cylinder having a cylinder wall including an inner wall surface partially defining a column volume, and a column component insertable into to the cylinder, wherein at least an edge region of the column component is intended to be in contact or adjacent a part of the inner wall surface in use, the edge region and the contacting or adjacent part of inner wall surface each being formed from a compatible heat fusible material or materials, and wherein at least the cylinder wall in the area of the contacting or adjacent part of the inner wall is formed from a material which allows transmission of the light energy needed to cause said fusing of the adapter plate edge region to the inner wall surface.
2. The column assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein the light energy is supplied by a laser, of sufficient power to cause said heat fusion.
3. The column assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein, the column wall is, at least at the area of the contacting or adjacent part of the inner wall, formed from an amorphous or otherwise generally light transmissive thermoplastic material, which allows at least a portion of light energy to propagate through the wall for causing said heat fusion.
4. The column assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein, the further component is formed, at least at the edge region, from a crystalline, semi crystalline, colored, filled, or coated thermoplastic, having properties which allow absorption of at least a substantial proportion of any light energy transmitted through the wall.
5. The column assembly as claimed in claim 3, wherein the amorphous or otherwise generally light transmissive thermoplastic material of the column cylinder is a PMMA.
6. The column assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein the column cylinder further includes an inner cylinder liner.
7. A method for fusing a component of a chromatography column assembly inside a chromatography column, the method comprising the steps of: a) providing a chromatography column cylinder having a wall including an inner surface, the wall being formed at least partially from thermoplastics material which is at least partially light energy transmissive and heat fusible, and partially defines a column volume; b) providing a component inside the column having an edge region adapted to be in contact with, or adjacent a part of the inner surface, the edge region at least being formed from heat fusible thermoplastics material compatible with the heat fusible thermoplastic material of the wall; c) causing light energy to propagate through the light energy transmissive material of the wall toward the component, the light energy being of sufficient magnitude to heat-fuse the heat fusible material of the component to the heat fusible material of the wall at a melt area where the propagation path of the light meets the edge region; d) moving the propagation path relative to the wall and component; and e) continuing step c) during said movement resulting from step d), or repeating step c) at further locations of the melt area.
8. The method as claimed in claim 7, wherein step e) is continued to provide a continuous seam of heat fused materials around the cylinder, or is repeated to provide intermittently fused material,
7. A The method as claimed in claim 7, wherein the light energy is laser light energy which is supplied either continuously, pulse, repeating pulse.
10. The method as claimed in claim 7, further including the step of at least partially filling the volume with chromatography media, compressing the media with the component and preforming steps c), d) and e) whilst said the compressing is at least partially maintained.
11. The method as claimed in claim 10, wherein the compressing is released once the fusing steps are completed.
12. The pre-packed disposable chromatography column assembly including the features of claim 1.
13. A chromatography column component fusing apparatus comprising a frame including a chromatography column cylinder support table, and a support for a component of the chromatography column insertable within the cylinder, the apparatus further including a laser light generator for providing light energy directable to propagate through a wall of the cylinder toward an edge region of the component, and of sufficient magnitude to cause heat fusing of the edge with an area of the inner wall surface of the cylinder which is contacting or is adjacent to said edge.
14. The assembly as claimed in claim 12, wherein said component is an adapter plate , and the apparatus further including an actuator for manipulating said adapter plate into the cylinder, and for compressing chromatography media disposed within the volume of the cylinder.
15. The apparatus as claimed in claim 13, wherein said support includes a turntable, and wherein the turntable the actuator and laser light source are controlled by a controller to provide continuous or intermittent fusing of the adapter plate to the inner surface of the cylinder around an axis of rotation of the turntable.
Description
DRAWINGS
[0021] The invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the appended drawings, wherein:
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0025]
[0026] The assembly includes a top port 112 and a lower port 132, each shown in a simplified form. In practice these ports may contain multiple inlets, outlets and valves for opening and closing flow paths into and out of a chromatography column volume 50 here of about 10-50 litre capacity defined between an inner wall 124 and the inner faces 114 and 134 of the adapter plate 110 and base 130 respectively. A sliding seal 115 is disposed around the adapter plate as described below. The edge regions 113 and 133 of the adapter plate 110 and base 130 respectively are assembled by heat fusing as described below, to the inner surface 124 of the column cylinder wa11126.
[0027]
[0028]
[0029] In
[0030]
[0031] An alternative column 120′ is shown in
[0032]
[0033] Thus it can be seen that the above provides an effective mechanical fixing between the base 130, the adapter plate 110, or any other component within column cylinder, and the inner surface of tat cylinder, without the need to have access to the inner volume 50 of the cylinder.
[0034] Herein thermoplastic are considered to encompass polymer materials that exhibit plastic properties especially when their temperature is elevated and begin to flow when their temperature is increased further. Thus, it is possible to weld adjacent thermoplastics material together by means of heat fusion. Typically, such heat fusion will take place in a range of about 120-350° C.
[0035] Thermoplastics may be further characterized as amorphous (clear/glassy) or semi crystalline (milky appearance). Semi crystalline plastics have small crystallites surrounded by amorphous material. The crystallites diffuse light, resulting in a milky appearance. That property limits the loss free transmission of laser radiation. If increased absorption of laser light is desired, fillers such as carbon black can be added to the plastics. Plastics such as polyethylene (PE); high density polyethylene (HDPE), polypropylene (PP), nylon (PA), polyetheretherketone (PEEK); polyvinylcholide (PVC); polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) HDPE; PA; PTFE; PET; PEEK are generally formed as a semi-crystalline plastics, while polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA); polycarbonate (PC), and polystyrene (PS) can be readily formed as amorphous plastics. Such plastics can be used in substitution for the plastics mentioned in the embodiments above.
[0036] The laser welding mentioned above relies on the principle that laser light of the correct wavelength can propagate through amorphous plastics with little or no loss, whereas the laser light is rapidly absorbed in semi-crystalline plastics, such that at or close to the semi-crystalline plastics surface, enough laser light energy is absorbed to cause local melting, and a resultant heat fusion of that local plastics. The depth of penetration of the laser light is very much dependent on the laser light wavelength. So, in the embodiments illustrated and described above, it is preferred that the column cylinder 120 is manufactured completely or partially from an amorphous thermoplastic such as the PMMA described above. Alternatively, preferably, the column 120′ as mentioned above is formed as a composite of amorphous thermoplastic 127 for strength, and an inner tube 123 of semi-crystalline thermoplastics such as the PP mentioned above, for better chemical resistance. In the present invention the laser welding technique employed is transmission laser welding, where the beam L is delivered through the outer wall 126/127 of the column 120/120′ and propagates with little loss in energy to the inner surface 124 where heating and melting takes place. The heating is dictated partially by the laser-absorbing properties of the edge region 113.133 to be welded, and/or by additives and/or coatings at the edge region.
[0037] A laser with a wavelength in the 750-1500 nm range provides good results and this may be provided by diode, fibre, and neodymium-doped yttrium aluminium garnet (Nd:YAG) laser. The laser power needed is less then 1000 W, typically about 200 W for reasonably quick welding speeds of several metres per minute. Longer wavelengths provide more energy absorption, until at around 10 μm wavelength most of the energy is absorbed into any plastics including amorphous plastics. Thus a wavelength below 10 μm is required for this process. The degree of energy absorption in this range depends also on the presence of additives in the plastics and whether the plastic is semi-crystalline or amorphous. If no fillers or pigments are present in the thermoplastic, for example the PP liner 123, the laser light at 750-1500 nm wavelength will penetrate a few millimetres into that semi-crystalline plastics and is hardly attenuated at all in amorphous plastics column layer 127. The absorption can be contrived to be maximized at the edge region 111/131 for example by means of additives such as pigments or fillers, especially carbon-black pigment in the edge region 111/131.
[0038] The invention is not to be seen as limited by the embodiments described above, but can be varied within the scope of the appended claims as would be readily apparent to a person skilled in the art. For instance, the thermoplastic materials described could be changed whilst maintaining utility. It will be evident that the thermoplastics material need only be used at relevant areas and different materials, for example metals, fibre filed plastics, thermosetting plastic etc. could be used where heat fusing is not required. The separate base plate 130 could be omitted in which case a cup-shaped column cylinder 120 could be used, and the step of welding the base to the column cylinder could be omitted. As mentioned above any column assembly component could be transmission welded in the manner described above, and such components would include but is not limited to: end plates; internal or external webs or buttresses attached to the end plates; fluid distribution plates; media retaining frits or porous layers; side or end ports formed directly in the column cylinder material; and/or mechanical supports attached to the column cylinder or end plates. Whilst circular column cylinders and illustrated and preferred, other shapes could be used to good effect, such as triangular, square or hexagonal sections. Adjustment of the position of the laser 220 could be made to accommodate non-round cylinders. The embodiments show the laser 220 stationary and the column assembly 100 being rotatable, however other arrangements are possible, for example the laser could orbit the stationary or rotatable column assembly. Alternatively, optics could be employed so that both the laser and the column are stationary, but the optics cause the laser beam L to propagate in a movable beam directed radially inwardly relative to the axis A.
[0039] Other additions, omissions, or variants will be apparent to the skilled addressee. Where appended dependent claims are drafted to encompass multiple features in a single claim for legal conciseness and it is envisaged such features could be combined with other claims, removed or added to, without generalisation.