Improvements In and Relating to Polymer Membranes
20210346846 · 2021-11-11
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01D2323/32
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2323/42
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D69/125
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D67/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/124
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D71/40
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D67/0032
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D67/0023
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2323/50
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01D67/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Disclosed is a method for the production of a porous polymer membrane suitable for liquid filtration or analyte capture, comprising the steps of: providing a flowable composition (100) on a substrate (220) the composition including at least: photo-activatable monomer molecules, photo activation initiator molecules and photo-activation quencher molecules; providing one or more pulses (L) of laser light at at least one focal point in the composition of sufficient energy to locally polymerise the composition; moving the or each focal point relative to the previously polymerised composition in a continuous or stepwise predetermined manner to a multiplicity of further positions; and repeating the pulse(s) at those further positions such that a three dimensional matrix of the composition is polymerised leaving unpolymerized areas of a size equivalent to conventional polymer membrane pores.
Claims
1. A method for the production of a porous polymer membrane suitable for liquid filtration or analyte capture, comprising the following steps: providing a flowable composition on a substrate the composition including at least: photo-activatable monomer molecules, photo activation initiator molecules and photo-activation quencher molecules; providing one or more pulses of laser light at least one focal point in the composition of sufficient energy to locally polymerise the composition; moving the or each focal point relative to the previously polymerised composition in a continuous or stepwise predetermined manner to a multiplicity of further positions; and repeating the pulse(s) at those further positions such that a three dimensional matrix of the composition is polymerised leaving unpolymerized areas of a size equivalent to conventional polymer membrane pores.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the substrate is immersed in the solution, for example a bath of the solution, or is repeatedly replenished by an amount of the solution.
3. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the pulses of laser light are supplied by a laser via an objective lens for focusing the light to the focal point or points along a Z axis which axis is generally parallel to the direction of propagation of the laser light passing through the lens, and via further optical elements capable of moving the or each focal point laterally to said Z axis, for example along an X axis perpendicular to said Z axis and/or in a Y axis perpendicular to the Z and X axes, wherein control of the laser and optical elements provides at least a portion of said multiplicity of positions at a first region.
4. The method as claimed in claim 3, wherein the substrate and any polymerised composition are repositioned at least in said X, Y axes relative to said lens, to expose a second region to said laser light pulses.
5. The method as claimed in claim 1 employing a laser pulse having a short length and providing about 2 photon absorption per pulse.
6. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one focal point is a plurality of focal points, derived from a split laser beam and/or plural laser light sources.
7. The method as claimed in claim 6, wherein the focal points are in a linear array or a two dimensional array and spaced by the pitch of the desired pore spacing or a multiple of that pitch.
8. The method as claimed in claim 7, wherein the linear or two dimensional array of focal points is moveable together optically to maintain their spacing.
9. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the polymerisation is performed only at locations intended to be pore walls, wherein all or a majority of the interspace between polymerised pore walls is left unpolymerized, and wherein the method then further includes removing the unpolymerized composition from the areas equivalent to the membrane pores, and then further wider area photopolymerising the unpolymerized interspace by means of a polymerising light applied over the whole or a substantial part of the membrane, or sequential regions thereof, and the method optionally including polymerising the top and bottom of the membrane prior to said further wide area photopolymerising.
10. The method as claimed in claim 9 wherein said interspace includes polymerised features acting to brace one pore wall with another for example adjacent pore walls.
11. A method for the production of a porous polymer membrane suitable for liquid filtration or analyte capture, comprising the following steps: providing a flowable composition on a substrate the composition including at least: photo-activatable monomer molecules, photo activation initiator molecules and photo-activation quencher molecules; providing one or more pulses of laser light at least one focal point in the composition of sufficient energy to locally polymerise the monomer; moving the or each focal point relative to the composition in a continuous or stepwise predetermined manner to a multiplicity of positions and repeating the pulse(s) at those positions such that three dimensional pillars are formed of a size equivalent to membrane pores, the method further comprising the steps of: removing unpolymerized composition, infilling the regions around said pillars with a membrane material, and then removing the pillars from the membrane material, to leave open pores in the membrane material.
12. Apparatus for producing a porous membrane, the apparatus being operable to performing the method of claim 11.
13. The apparatus of claim 12, including a roll for accepting finished filter membrane.
14. A porous polymer membrane suitable for liquid filtration or analyte capture comprising photopolymerised membrane material and a multiplicity of open pores each extending in a fluid path from one side of the membrane to the other, produced according to claim 1.
15. The porous polymer membrane as claimed in claim 14 wherein said fluid path is non-linear.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0029] The invention can be put into effect in numerous ways, illustrative embodiments of which are described below with reference to the drawings, wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0036] The invention, together with its objects and the advantages thereof, may be understood better by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals, or reference numerals with the same last two digits, identify like elements.
[0037] Referring to
[0038] Referring to
[0039]
[0040] Referring to
[0041] In
[0042]
[0043] For convenience the pore areas 112 have been shown as a simple vertical pore path, but it is just as simple to produce other shaped pore paths, for example a spiralling pore, a zig-zag pore, a pseudo random path, or the like, which in practice may be a better shape to retain or capture analytes of interest for example large molecules such as proteins, or cells, whilst allowing other matter to pass through the membrane. Such a circuitous path provided for depth filtering as described above.
[0044] It should be understood that
[0045] The pore diameter may be less than 5 μm or larger, with typical pore path lengths (not necessarily membrane thickness) of 5, 10, 20, 50 or 100 times the pore diameter. If the pore edge 120 only is to be polymerised, leaving the area 118′ still liquid, then for tall pores which have relatively small diameter, that then tall hollow structure will be weak once the liquid in the pore area 112 has been washed out. It is possible to strengthen those solidified edges 120 by polymerising a brace 121, joining, say, adjacent edges 120 of adjacent pore areas 112. Multiple braces between pores edges 120 could be employed for increased strength and rigidity, for example cross braces 121 shown in
[0046]
[0047] Whilst the above equipment will provide adequately fast production, faster production is desirable, and so the use of multiple laser beams L as shown in
[0048] In order to mitigate heat build-up, the laser beam L (
[0049] Irrespective of which method of polymerisation is used, the successive layering of polymerised material can lead to reduced transparency and diffraction issues. To mitigate those issues, the laser light system may take advantage of modelling the exact underlying 3D structure by evaluating and optimizing the dose, angle etc of the localized light and energy application to account for non-uniformity in the structure, diffraction patterns etc.
[0050] Another membrane manufacturing technique is shown in
[0051] An example of the composition 100 and manufacturing protocol follow:
[0052] The flowable composition 100 in one example comprises a transparent photo-activatable acrylate monomer resin, with the addition of up to 3% of a photo activation initiator, such as an acylphosphine oxide such as 2,4,6-trimethylbenzoyldiphenylphosphine oxide molecules, or a benzophenone, a xanthone, or a quinone, or a combination of these molecules, and a photo-activation quencher such as tertiary amine molecules. The Laser can be an exciplex laser (also known as a excimer laser) having at output wavelength of about 800 nm with a pulse length of 10 to 100 femtoseconds (fs), although about 40 to 60 fs, for example 50 fs is preferred, and a repetition rate of about 5 MHz is possible.
[0053] Where it is the pores that are of principal dimensional interest, the interspace between the pores could be filed-in with lower resolution, for example by using higher energy laser light where possible to photopolymerize a larger area more quickly, and thereby speeding up the manufacturing process, or by the introduction of material by jetting, i.e. liquid thermoplastic introduction, which need not be the same material that surrounds the pore.
[0054] The energy required to induce local polymerisation is provide by a focused laser pulse at at least one focal point in the composition 100 by means of two-photon absorption polymerisations, i.e. two or more photons are simultaneously absorbed by the above photo activation initiator (photoinitiators) to create the active species that start polymerisation of the monomer resin. Under these conditions, multiphoton absorption occurs only in the region where light intensity is at a maximum. That confines polymerization within the volume of the focused laser beam (known as a voxel). Slightly overlapping, for example 25% overlapping bits of polymerised material are thus produced. The quenching molecules provide fluorescence quenching to inhibit or halt the dendritic spread of polymer branches, which in turn provides a more consolidated and defined polymerisation volume. The membrane is revealed by washing away the unsolidified part of the resin using an organic solvent.
[0055] The results of the above mentioned techniques and materials used, provide a suitable equivalent to conventional laminar nitrocellulose membranes and to Trak Etch membranes, including their thickness and pore density. However, it is envisaged that variants could be produced to enhance the properties of the membranes made according to the invention. For example, as shown in
[0056] The substrate support 220 mentioned, is intended in the examples above to be a removable surface on which to form the membrane. In addition, the substrate's 220 surface may be employed to mount one or more micro-sensors 400 (
[0057] The embodiments shown, provide a flat membrane, but membranes can be useful in other shapes, for example tubular membranes which act as hollow fibres, in hollow fibre filtration. Thus, the term membrane used herein is intended to cover sheet like materials and other thin materials which are not necessarily flat.
[0058] Although numerous embodiments have been described and illustrated, it will be apparent to the skilled addressee that additions, omissions and modifications are possible to those embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention claimed.
[0059] The techniques described above can be used to achieve said asymmetric features in a single membrane layer, may even have multiple asymmetries in physical properties (for example wider, then narrower, then wider pores) and/or contoured surface characteristics to promote surface or depth filtering, such as a funnel pore opening or narrowed pore opening.
[0060] Chemical ligands or anchors for subsequent ligand attachment may be printed, allowing controlled placement and subsequent modifications of non-isotropic, asymmetric character for improved function and/or more efficiency use of (expensive) ligands.
[0061] The techniques described above require a relatively small optical head scanning distance for producing polymerised areas of a small dimension, then moving the optical head on to another region to be polymerised, or moving the material to be polymerised relative to the head. In that case it is desirable to match the pore pattern at each region, but it is not essential. It is also possible to have discontinuities in pores, folds or pleats at boundaries between regions. Then folded parts of the membrane can be adhered to relatively rigid parts to form filter cassettes or cartridges.
[0062] Above in relation to
[0063] Further, in an embodiment it is possible to light conduits or light guides. Such light guides may provide for a secondary polymerization step, for example inside a structure with poor transparency. Where the lights have terminal light diffusers or lenses, then light guided into the part-polymerised membrane into the structure can be used to fully polymerise the membrane.
[0064] Discrete sheet membrane production has been described and illustrated, but it will be apparent that other techniques could be employed, for example a continuous manufacturing technique could be used, for example the finished membrane could be peeled off its support 220, washed to produce the pores and then rolled onto a roll.
[0065] Single or multiple laser light polymerisation is envisaged above, although multiple light paths could be produced using a holographic system, or beam splitters and multiple lenses. The polymerised material can be chosen to be sterilisable, from example by gamma radiation. As well as, or alternatively, sterilisation could be achieved by producing the membrane under sterile closed conditions, and using pre-sterilised materials. Sterilised finished membranes would then be suitable for single use applications and, if biocompatible materials are employed, these can become part of a Good Manufacturing Process (GMP) process, suitable for medical applications, such as cell and gene therapies.