WORLD-TO-CHIP AUTOMATED INTERFACE FOR CENTRIFUGAL MICROFLUIDIC PLATFORMS
20220008924 · 2022-01-13
Assignee
Inventors
- Liviu CLIME (Longueuil, CA)
- Keith MORTON (St-Bruno, CA)
- Daniel BRASSARD (Longueuil, CA)
- Mathias GEISSLER (Boucherville, CA)
- Jamal DAOUD (Montreal, CA)
- Harold HEBERT (Longueuil, CA)
- Teodor VERES (Montreal, CA)
Cpc classification
B01L3/502707
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L3/502753
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/0864
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2400/0487
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L3/502715
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/069
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/0816
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01N35/00069
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A centrifugal microfluidic platform is combined with a stationary liquid pumping system which pumps liquids into microfluidic chips by dripping through a stationary dispensing nozzle without any physical contact or coupling between the nozzles and the microfluidic chips.
Claims
1. A system for delivering liquid to a microfluidic chip, the system comprising: a centrifugal microfluidic platform including a rotatable rotor configured to receive at least one microfluidic chip on a top surface of said rotor; and a stationary liquid pumping system positioned adjacent to said centrifugal microfluidic platform, said liquid pumping system comprising at least one stationary nozzle positioned above said rotor top surface for dripping liquid into said microfluidic chip when mounted on said rotor top surface, without any physical contact or coupling between said at least one nozzle and said microfluidic chip, the centrifugal microfluidic platform comprising an articulated centrifugal platform.
2. (canceled)
3. A system according to claim 1, wherein said centrifugal microfluidic platform comprises a powered centrifugal platform.
4. A system according to claim 1, wherein said liquid pumping system comprises: a peristaltic pump; a pneumatic pump; a syringe pump; or a piezoelectric pump.
5.-7. (canceled)
8. A microfluidic lab-on-chip comprising: a chip body; a loading chamber formed in the chip body; a large diameter loading port formed in the top of the loading chamber which exposes the loading chamber to the exterior of the chip body; and at least one fluidic channel formed in the chip body in fluid communication between the loading chamber and the exterior of the chip body, the loading chamber has a floor coated with a hydrophilic, microstructured or/and nanostructured material to enable droplet spreading.
9. A microfluidic lab-on-chip according to claim 8, wherein the loading port has a diameter of at least D+2E, were D is the diameter of a liquid drop to be loaded into said loading chamber and E is the imprecision in angular positioning of a microfluidic platform upon which said lab-on-chip is to be positioned.
10.-11. (canceled)
12. A microfluidic lab-on-chip according to claim 11, wherein said nanostructured material is embossed on the floor of the loading chamber.
13. A microfluidic lab-on-chip according to claim 11, wherein said hydrophilic material comprises a sheet of absorbent paper or an absorbent membrane.
14. A microfluidic lab-on-chip according to claim 8, wherein said chip body is disc-shaped.
15. A microfluidic lab-on-chip according to claim 8, further comprising a metering channel formed in said chip body fluidly connecting said loading chamber to the exterior of said chip body, said metering channel adapted to meter precise amounts of liquids before transferring out of said loading chamber.
16. A microfluidic lab-on-chip according to claim 8, further comprising: a reaction chamber formed in said chip body; a fluid channel formed in said chip body directly fluidly connecting said loading chamber to said reaction chamber; and an exit channel formed in said chip body directly fluidly connecting said reaction chamber to the exterior of said chip body.
17. A microfluidic lab-on-chip according to claim 8, further comprising an exit channel formed in said chip body directly fluidly connecting said loading chamber to the exterior of said chip body.
18. A method of delivering liquid to two or more ports on one or more microfluidic chips mounted to an articulated microfluidic platform with two degrees of freedom, the method comprising: while retaining said chip on said platform, rotating said platform about a primary axis thereof, and rotating at least one chip about a secondary axis thereof, the secondary azis offset from said primary azis, until at least one first loading port is respectively aligned with at least one stationary liquid dispensing nozzle of a liquid pumping system; operating the liquid pumping system to dispense respective liquids to the first loading port or ports; rotating said platform about the primary axis, and said at least one chip about said secondary axis to change an orientation of said chip until a second loading port is aligned with at least one second loading port is respectively aligned with the at least one stationary liquid dispensing nozzle of said system; and operating the liquid pumping system to dispense respective liquids to the second loading port or ports.
19. A combination comprising the system according to claim 1; a microfluidic chip comprising a loading chamber formed in the chip body, a large diameter loading port formed in the top of the loading chamber which exposes the loading chamber to the exterior of the chip body; and at least one fluidic channel formed in the chip body in fluid communication between the loading chamber and the exterior of the chip body; and a stationary waste collector having a cavity, the waste collector positioned away and separated from the microfluidic chip; wherein the platform comprises a chip holder for retaining said microfluidic chip.
20. A combination according to claim 19, wherein said microfluidic chip is positioned on the chip holder such that the at least one fluidic channel opens toward the waste collector.
21. A combination according to claim 19, wherein said microfluidic chip has channel openings on an edge thereof adjacent to said waste collector only such that, in a first orientation, liquid in said microfluidic chip is indefinitely retained in the microfluidic chip, and in a second orientation, liquid in said microfluidic chip can exit the microfluidic chip towards said waste collector.
22. A combination according to claim 19, further comprising a liquid absorbent material in said waste collector, the absorbent material is: paper based; fabric based; or a porous polymer.
23.-25. (canceled)
26. A combination according to claim 19, wherein said waste collector comprises a 3D design which inhibits liquid from exiting the waste collector.
27. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0059] The invention of the present application will now be described in more detail with reference to exemplary embodiments of the apparatus and method, given only by way of example, and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS
[0087] Referring to the drawing figures, like reference numerals designate identical or corresponding elements throughout the several figures.
[0088] The singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for example, reference to “a solvent” includes reference to one or more of such solvents, and reference to “the dispersant” includes reference to one or more of such dispersants.
[0089] Concentrations, amounts, and other numerical data may be presented herein in a range format. It is to be understood that such range format is used merely for convenience and brevity and should be interpreted flexibly to include not only the numerical values explicitly recited as the limits of the range, but also to include all the individual numerical values or sub-ranges encompassed within that range as if each numerical value and sub-range is explicitly recited.
[0090] For example, a range of 1 to 5 should be interpreted to include not only the explicitly recited limits of 1 and 5, but also to include individual values such as 2, 2.7, 3.6, 4.2, and sub-ranges such as 1-2.5, 1.8-3.2, 2.6-4.9, etc. This interpretation should apply regardless of the breadth of the range or the characteristic being described, and also applies to open-ended ranges reciting only one end point, such as “greater than 25,” or “less than 10.”
[0091] The subject matter described herein provides world-to-chip interface apparatus and methods for centrifugal microfluidic platforms. It can be also used in conjunction with any type of centrifugal microfluidic platforms or lab on a chip instruments, and can be particularly advantageous when implemented with articulated centrifugal platforms as disclosed in WO 2015/181725. An articulated centrifugal microfluidic platform allows the microfluidic chips mounted on it to rotate about a secondary axis while the platform is spinning at high speed, changing in this way the orientation of the microfluidic chip with respect to the centrifugal force.
[0092] In general terms, a world-to-chip interface apparatus as described herein can include a liquid pumping system that transfers metered amounts of biochemical reagents from large stationary reservoirs to chambers on microfluidic chips mounted on centrifugal microfluidic platform, such as an articulated centrifugal platform (see, e.g., WO 2015/181725). The pumping system can make use of any type of liquid actuation principle such as peristaltic, pneumatic, or others for which the amount of liquid transferred to the chip can be accurately controlled. Alternatively, syringe-type pumps, in which the pump chamber and reservoir are integrated together, and a piston and plunger are moved by a suitable linear actuator or motor or the like, can also be used.
[0093] An element that can be very important in many implementations is that the transfer is realized without any physical coupling or contact between the liquid dispensing nozzle and the chips, but is instead achieved by dripping small droplets of liquid from one or more dispensing nozzles. These dispensing nozzles are situated at the end of a feeding tube placed vertically above the rotation plane defined by the microfluidic chips. The microfluidic chips include a special microfluidic chamber capable of receiving liquids from the dispensing nozzle through a designated opening with a diameter larger than the size of individual droplets dripping from the nozzles. The size of the droplets are, in turn, dependent on the liquid being dispensed and the geometry of the nozzle's opening, both of which are known quantities for any particular liquid and dispensing system, and thus the diameter of the opening into the chip's chamber can be mathematically predetermined, or determined empirically.
[0094] In one aspect of the invention, the centrifugal microfluidic platform is operated in three modes: (i) the loading mode, where the rotor is stopped and the microfluidic chips are aligned at predefined positions for liquid transfer from the dispensing nozzles, (ii) the reaction mode, where the platform rotor is either spinning at high speed or stopped at a random position for incubation, where the microfluidic chip is performing various steps of the biochemical assay and, (iii) the unloading mode, where the liquids are extracted from the chip and sent to an external waste chamber.
[0095] In a loading mode, the microfluidic platform stops at predefined angular positions to align the chips with the dispensing nozzle and a metered amount of liquid is transferred from the external stationary reservoirs to specially designed loading chambers on the chips. The loading of these microfluidic chambers on several independent chips can be done in parallel using multiple dispensing nozzles simultaneously aligned with the chambers. However, to minimize the number of nozzles and the complexity of the pumping system, it is preferable that multiple chambers on multiple chips are loaded through the same nozzle. This can be achieved by sequentially aligning the microfluidic chambers of all the chips with the nozzle using the rotation of the platform.
[0096] In a reaction mode, the platform rotor starts spinning at high speed and the liquids are transferred to the appropriate reaction chambers through centrifugation. In the case of the articulated centrifugal microfluidic platform, the orientation of the microfluidic chip can also be changed within certain limits to transfer liquids internally from chamber to chamber or to perform special microfluidic steps such us mixing or enhanced capture. The platform can also be stopped for incubation steps as the design of the chip allows for maintaining liquids in the reaction chamber for a relatively long period of time.
[0097] In an unloading mode, one or more liquids are removed from the microfluidic chips and sent to a waste reservoir. In the case of the articulated centrifugal microfluidic platform, the microfluidic chips are placed in a special orientation with respect to the waste chamber such that one or more liquids from the microfluidic chips are expelled through channels having openings at one of the microfluidic chip edges. This step is performed at high speed only and the design of the chip, as well as its orientation relative to the centrifugal field, are chosen such that efficient transfer of liquid droplets from the microfluidic chip to the waste reservoir is achieved with no liquid loss in between.
[0098] In another variant, the microfluidic devices are replaced by a disc with equivalent microfluidic circuitry having a central liquid receiving chamber with an opening at the center of the disc and on the platform main rotation axis. The dispensing nozzles are placed above the opening of the central reservoir which is large enough to accommodate all required dispensing nozzles directly above the opening. In this embodiment, the liquid loading from the dispensing nozzles can be performed without having to align the microfluidic device or even to stop the rotation of the platform as the opening of the central reservoir remains aligned at all time with the dispensing nozzles during the rotation of the platform. The central reservoir might be part of a single circular disk-like microfluidic device or might be connected to several independent microfluidic devices with tubing. Metering structures can be integrated in the central reservoir to ensure uniform distribution of the dispensed liquid to all the microfluidic devices or to several locations inside a disk-like microfluidic device. An advantage of this embodiment is to reduce the number of operations that must be performed for the dispensing process, which can greatly speed-up the assay when a large number of microfluidic devices must be filled. It also reduces the risk of misaligning the microfluidic devices with the dispensing nozzles following hardware issues. However, in this embodiment, all the liquids must transit through the same centrally located reservoir, which can potentially cause cross contamination issues for some assays.
[0099] From a microfluidic perspective, a potentially important element of the subject matter of this disclosure is the design of waste-free microfluidic chips that enable the transfer of large volume of liquids from the dispensing nozzles to small microfluidic chips and from these chips to the waste after the reaction is done. The new type of microfluidic circuits proposed here includes a chip where at least one channel is opened to the surrounding air, providing a way to empty the microfluidic chips. Although similar approaches have been proposed (see, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 8,444,934 B2), the one described here is different from several points of view. First, in the case of the articulated centrifugal platform, the openings of the microfluidic channels are designed at the proximal edge (with respect to the rotation center) and not at the distal edge of the chip as in U.S. Pat. No. 8,444,934 B2. This is enabled by the additional degree of freedom provided by articulated microfluidic platforms which allow for changing the angle of the chip with respect to the centrifugal force and pointing the channel openings preferentially either toward the waste or away from it. A second difference includes the fact that, instead of a waste which is part of the microfluidic disc and rotates with it, a stationary waste is provided as a part of the instrument case, coupled to an external large reservoir which can accommodate large amounts of liquid waste. A third and last difference lies in the fact that, because the microfluidic chips cannot rotate with respect to a secondary axis, the channels openings described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,444,934 B2 are always pointed toward the waste and the liquids cannot be maintained inside the reaction chambers on the chip indefinitely, as is the case in the devices described herein.
[0100] The waste reservoir is generally decoupled from the microfluidic chip and placed nearby to collect the waste liquids expelled from the microfluidic chip. The waste reservoir can also be placed on the rotating holder close to the microfluidic device instead of being stationary, collecting the liquid dripping from multiple channels/chips at a time. The waste reservoirs typically have a large opening for receiving the liquids from the chip(s) and can be eventually be filled with liquid absorbent material to prevent splashing and undesired liquid displacements.
[0101] While the interruption of microfluidic channels through openings to the surrounding air is typically used as a way to send the reaction products to the waste, it can also be provided more upstream as well. For example, a secondary channel connected to an opening can be used to precisely meter the liquid transferred from a dispensing nozzle by sending excess liquid directly to the waste. This metering process can be performed just after dispensing, before the liquid is transferred and processed in the microfluidic device. This can be used to circumvent the intrinsic imprecision of the droplet-by-droplet dispensing of the dispensing nozzles (i.e., volume transferred cannot be controlled more precisely than the volume of a droplet).
[0102] The implementation of waste reservoirs decoupled from the microfluidic chips can reduce the size of the microfluidic chip drastically, which can be a very interesting advantage for commercialization. The apparatus and methods described herein also enable the use of large amounts of liquids on small microfluidic chips, which is paramount for highly sensitive bioassays such as ELISA, requiring a large volume of wash buffer.
[0103] In this description, the term “articulated centrifugal microfluidic platform” is intended to include centrifugal microfluidic platforms with articulations between chip holders and rotors, that is, the microfluidic chips/holders are provided with an additional degree of freedom in a form of a controlled rotation with respect to a secondary axis. Examples of this type of platforms are described in more detail in WO 2015/181725 and Geissler, M., et. al., “Microfluidic Integration of a Cloth-Based Hybridization Array System (CHAS) for Rapid, Colorimetric Detection of Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) Using an Articulated, Centrifugal Platform”, Anal. Chem., 2015, 87 (20), pp 10565-10572.
[0104] The term “classical microfluidic platform” is intended to include any centrifugal microfluidic apparatus having a simple rotor with holders for a microfluidic disc or chips and where the rotor is coupled to a motor in order to induce rotation of the microfluidic disc or chips with respect to the axis of this motor solely.
[0105] The term “pneumatically actuated centrifugal microfluidic platform” is intended to include centrifugal microfluidic platforms with miniature pumps and valves integrated on the rotor to pneumatically control flows in microfluidic devices. Also, centrifugal platforms where the actuation pressure is transferred to the rotation platform (to the microfluidic devices) through rotary unions are also included. Examples and detailed descriptions of such platforms can be found in WO 2015/132743 and Clime, L., et al. “Active pneumatic control of centrifugal microfluidic flows for lab-on-a-chip applications”, Lab Chip 2015 (The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2015)
[0106] Preferred embodiments of the apparatus and methods are described in greater detail in the following.
[0107] A first preferred embodiment relates to an apparatus for performing automated microfluidic assays and includes a combination of an articulated centrifugal microfluidic platform and a stationary liquid pumping system capable of loading aqueous solutions into microfluidic chips by dripping through dispensing nozzles without any physical contact of coupling between the nozzles and the microfluidic chips.
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[0109] The centrifugal platform includes has a rotor 200 with articulated holders 201 which can accommodate microfluidic chips 300 and can rotate about a secondary axis different from the main rotation axis 103.
[0110] The centrifugal platform also has a stationary waste collection system 400 in a form of a ring that surrounds the edge of the rotor and is coupled with a waste reservoir 403 via a tube 402.
[0111] More specifically, as illustrated in
[0112] According to an exemplary embodiment, the waste collector 400 includes a cavity 401, which is preferably annular, formed in a ring-shaped body 405, and a collection tube 402 for sending the waste liquids to a large external reservoir 403. The microfluidic chips 300 are contained by the centrifuge rotor 200 in special holders 201 which can have a controlled rotation about a secondary axis parallel to, but different from, the main rotation axis of the main motor spindle, as described in greater detail elsewhere herein.
[0113] Although only four holders with one microfluidic chip per holder are illustrated in this
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[0116] As shown in
[0117] The mechanism 204 can be any active mechanism which allows control of angular orientation with desired speed and accuracy such that a step motor, a DC motor with an arc spring, a squiggle motor, and the like. However, in a preferred embodiment the actual mechanism is a passive one and includes a holder with the center of mass M displaced away from the secondary rotation axis 203 as illustrated in
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[0121] Thus, the second preferred embodiment illustrated in
[0122] The hole 302 has a diameter of at least D+2E, were D is the diameter of the liquid drop and E is the imprecision in angular positioning of the microfluidic platform, both of which can be determined empirically for the specific nozzle, liquid, and platform control system.
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[0125] With continued reference to
[0126] The other substrate 311, used for closing the reaction chamber 303, may also be coated directly and/or have a strip/insert 312 coated with functional biochemical material, such as an antibody.
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[0128] The microfluidic chips in
[0129] After a specific reagent liquid has been consumed or used in the reaction, the holders 201 are oriented at 180 degrees with the openings 306 and openings 202 pointing toward the waste and the platform starts spinning at a specific angular speed in order to push the liquids towards the openings 306 and transfer the liquid into a waste reservoir 400.
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[0131] In a first exemplary embodiment, the waste reservoir is part of the instrument case, as a stationary ring with a cavity to collect the waste and direct it to the hole 402 and a collection tube 403 (e.g.,
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[0134] Thus, cross-sectional views of the complete assembly of the platform, including the rotor 200 with holders 201, the microfluidic chip 300, and the stationary waste 400, are illustrated in
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[0136] After the introduction of liquid 601 through the hole 302, the liquid is found in an indeterminate configuration in the loading chamber 301. When the platform starts spinning, the liquid 601 is transferred through the channel 307 (
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[0140] It can be particularly advantageous to use an embodiment in which each liquid necessary for the performed assay is pumped into the chip by using individual liquid pumping units, as illustrated in
[0141] In another embodiment, the pumping system can be provided with one or more valving mechanisms which selectively direct all the inlets to one single outlet 503, as illustrated in
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[0143] Thus, in this exemplary embodiment, the pumping system is mounted directly on the lid 700 of the platform 10, and the tubing 701 connecting the dispensing nozzle to the liquid reservoir 502 is coupled through an electromechanical valve 702. The cover lid 700 slides up and down using one of several sliders 703 to allow access to the platform rotor. The liquid can be transferred from the liquid reservoir(s) 502 to the dispensing nozzle by gravitational action.
[0144] In another embodiment, the liquid pumping system is based on pneumatic actuation, where the liquid is extracted and transferred to the microfluidic chips by pressurizing the reservoirs 502. An electromechanical valving 702 system controlled by the electronic control unit 102 can be used to synchronize the valves with the pneumatic actuation protocol and the assay performed on the microfluidic chip. In this pneumatically driven embodiment, one or more gas lines is (are) connected to the reservoir(s) 502, which introduce air or another gas into the open headspace of the reservoir, thus pressurizing the reservoir; upon opening of the valve 702, the fluid in the reservoir 502 is driven into the tube 701 and into the chip, as described elsewhere herein. While air is a preferred gas to use in this embodiment, other gases or mixtures of gases can be selected, particularly those which do not react with the liquid being delivered to the chip.
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[0146] In accordance with yet another embodiment, microfluidic chips can be constructed with more than one, that is, several loading chambers, as depicted in
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[0150] More specifically, in the embodiment of
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[0152] To increase throughput, rotors with multiple holders can be constructed, as illustrated in
[0153] In yet another exemplary embodiment, the waste cavities 711 on the microfluidic chip holders include multiple interconnected chambers and channels or multilevel three-dimensional structures to take advantage of both centrifugal force and gravity and send liquids irreversibly into a waste collection reservoir.
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[0155] The loading chamber 801 is positioned at the center on the rotation axis 104. The liquid can be transferred while the disc 800 is either at rest or rotating at high speed. The disc 800 can also contain several microfluidic circuits that are fed with necessary reagent liquids from the same chamber 801, as illustrated in
[0156] Any of numerous types of pumps can be used in the numerous embodiments herein, including, but not limited to, piezoelectric pumping.
[0157] While the invention has been described in detail with reference to exemplary embodiments thereof, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that various changes can be made, and equivalents employed, without departing from the scope of the invention. The foregoing description of the preferred embodiments of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings or may be acquired from practice of the invention. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to explain the principles of the invention and its practical application to enable one skilled in the art to utilize the invention in various embodiments as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto, and their equivalents. The entirety of each of the aforementioned documents is incorporated by reference herein.