STRUCTURES FOR SUPPORTING THE FILLING OF WELLS IN MICROFLUIDIC DEVICES
20220288585 · 2022-09-15
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01L2200/0684
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2200/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29D22/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/0829
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L3/502715
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/161
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/087
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2200/0642
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L3/502723
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
Structures for supporting the filling of wells, in particular in microfluidic devices and provides a microfluidic device, comprising a substrate with at least a first horizontal channel which continues as a first vertical chimney channel into a first well having a greater depth than the first horizontal channel with respect to an upper surface of the substrate, wherein the first vertical channel is half open to the volume of the first well. A method for filling a well of a microfluidic device using the device is also an object of the disclosure.
Claims
1. A microfluidic device, comprising a substrate with at least a first horizontal channel which continues as a first vertical chimney channel branching off with a sharp corner excluding the presence of a tapered region, rounded edges or conically shaped outlet openings into a first well having a greater depth than the first horizontal channel with respect to an upper surface of the substrate, wherein the first substantially vertical channel is half open to the volume of the first well and is connected to the volume of the first well without being part of the volume of the first well.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein a second horizontal channel extends from an upper end of said first well.
3. The device of claim 2, wherein a second horizontal channel extends from the first well and branches off with a sharp corner excluding the presence of a tapered region, rounded edges or conically shaped outlet openings into a second vertical chimney channel into a second well having a greater depth than the second horizontal channel with respect to an upper surface of the substrate, wherein the second substantially vertical chimney channel is half open to the volume of the second well and is connected to the volume of the second well without being part of the volume of the second well.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein channel and well surfaces have a contact angle below 90°.
5. The device of claim 1, wherein a lid has a contact angle that is greater than the contact angle of the channel well surfaces.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein the contact angle between a liquid and the surfaces of the channels and well is less than 90°.
7. The device of claim 1, wherein the surfaces of the channels and well are coated with silicon oxide.
8. A method for filling a well of a microfluidic device, comprising the steps of: filling with a liquid at least a first horizontal channel arranged in a substrate which is a part of the microfluidic device, filling with the liquid a first vertically arranged chimney channel which branches off with a sharp corner excluding the presence of a tapered region, rounded edges or conically shaped outlet openings from the at least first horizontally arranged channel into a first well, wherein said first well has a greater depth than the first horizontally arranged channel with respect to an upper surface of the substrate, and wherein said first vertically arranged chimney channel is half open to the volume of the first well and is connected to the volume of the first well without being part of the volume of the first well; wetting a bottom of said first well; filling the volume of said first well.
9. The method of claim 8, comprising the step of filling a second horizontal channel which extends from an upper end of said first well.
10. The method of claim 9, comprising the step of filling a vertical chimney channel which branches off with a sharp corner excluding the presence of a tapered region, rounded edges or conically shaped outlet openings from the second horizontal channel into a second well having a greater depth than the second horizontal channel with respect to an upper surface of the substrate, wherein the second vertical chimney channel is half open to the volume of the second well and is connected to the volume of the second well without being part of the volume of the second well.
11. The method of claim 8, wherein the contact angle between the liquid and the surfaces of the channels and well is less than 90°.
12. A method for manufacturing a microfluidic device, comprising the step of providing an injection mould for a substrate which is part of a microfluidic device for forming at least a first horizontal channel which branches off with a sharp corner excluding tapered regions, rounded edges or conically shaped outlet openings as a first vertical chimney channel into a first well having a greater depth than the first horizontal channel with respect to an upper surface of the substrate, wherein the first vertical channel is half open to the volume of the first well and is connected to the volume of the first well without being part of the volume of the first well.
13. A method of using of a microfluid device of claim 1 for filling wells with a liquid comprising the steps of providing the microfluidic device and filling it with a liquid.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0031] The invention will be described based on figures. It will be understood that the embodiments and aspects of the invention described in the figures are only examples and do not limit the protective scope of the claims in any way. The invention is defined by the claims and their equivalents. It will be understood that features of one aspect or embodiment of the invention can be combined with a feature of a different aspect or aspects of other embodiments of the invention, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0038] The technical problem is solved by the independent claims. The dependent claims cover further specific embodiments of the invention.
[0039] The present disclosure relates to a device, like a microfluidic device, having surfaces with a contact angle smaller than 90° for allowing capillary filling with liquids in said microfluidic devices. With respect to the devices known from the prior art, it is to be noted that a well and lid of such devices with surfaces with a contact angle below 90°, would result in a large entrapment of air.
[0040] The geometry of wells according to the present disclosure differs specifically in having channel surfaces with a contact angle below 90° and a filling direction through a so-called chimney channel from a chimney side or via a guide channel as shown in
[0041] The term sharp corner refers within the meaning of the present invention to a transition area between two microfluidic formations like two channels which does not comprise any tapered regions, rounded edges or conically shaped outlet openings. The two microfluidic channels of a device according to the present invention transit into another into a pointed angle comprising an angle of about 90°.
[0042] A particular feature of the present invention is the presence of a semi-open channel (also referred to as chimney channel or guide channel) which directs the fluid to the bottom of the well, from where the wetting of the well starts and is thus filled from the bottom to the top without air entrapment. It is to be noted that the vertical chimney channel is not part of a well's volume although it is at the side opposite to the side where the horizontal chanter continues into the vertical channel completely open towards the well's volume. A vertical chimney channel is an additional microfluidic formation which has a smaller diameter than the well to which it is attached on one side.
[0043] The present disclosure refers basically to a microfluidic device or system comprising channels with at least two different depths, wherein the channel with the smaller depth continues into an area having a greater depth forming a well or chamber. The channel continues as a half-open, vertically arranged channel downwards to the bottom of the well. The capillary effect fills the closed and the half-open channel of a well until the bottom of the well is wetted. Then, with suitable geometries, the well fills from the bottom to the top, allowing air to escape through a continuing channel. The contact angle between liquid and substrate has to be less than 90° (or significantly smaller), as can be achieved for aqueous solutions, for example, by coating the channels with SiO.sub.x, adding surfactants or mixing with polar, organic solvents such as ethanol.
[0044] It is intended that the side walls and the bottoms of wells have a lower contact angle than the lid, so that the liquid has a low contact angle to this surface and the lids have a higher contact angle that is above the contact angle of the channel and well surfaces including a well's bottom surface, so that the liquid has a high contact angle to this surface. Without limiting the present disclosure, the contact angle of the surfaces of channel and well may be below 90°, whereas the contact angle of a lid is greater than 90°.
[0045] The microfluidic device comprises at least one substrate which has an upper and a lower surface. An extending first recess in preferably arranged in an upper surface with a rectangular or rounded shape and can be regarded as a first channel with a defined depth. The first recess extends in a longitudinal direction with respect to the flat upper or lower surface. Said first channel continues in a transition area into a deeper depth but is no longer a substantially horizontally extending recess but a more or less vertically extending channel which is at least partially open to the volume of a well or a chamber. Thus, a well or a chamber has a greater depth than the first channel and a cylindrical or cubical geometry and extends on one vertical side into the open vertical extension from the first channel with the smaller depth. This part of a well or chamber is also referred to as a chimney channel which causes the technical effect that a liquid enters a well through the chimney channel to the bottom of the well or chamber so that well or chamber will be filled from the bottom to the top (comp.
[0046] If a liquid is dispensed into a well or chamber, the liquid may rise through the chimney channel upwards to reach the first channel with the smaller depth extending substantially horizontally in the preferably upper surface of a substrate and move through capillary forces through the first channel (comp.
[0047] If the surfaces of a microfluidic device's channels and well have a small contact angle and the lid has a contact angle which corresponds to the contact angle of channels and well, the liquid can move along the edges of channels, well and lid of the microfluidic device due to a capillary effect (so-called shooter). Different contact angles between the surfaces of the channels and well on one hand and the lid on the other hand may weaken said capillary effect. Should the liquid reach the opposite channel before the well is completely filled, the opposite channel would fill and trap air in the well. There is therefore a relationship between the contact angle of the lid, the diameter of the well, the well volume and the chimney channel geometry: the well must be filled faster than the liquid can reach the channel on the other side. This can be achieved on the fabrication side.
[0048] The shooter may be prevented by one or a combination of the following: [0049] a lid with higher contact angle than the chip (e.g. glass-coated chip and PDMS film). [0050] a larger angle between chip and lid slows down the shooter. The well 2 in
[0053] Basically, Jurin's law must be observed. Jurin's law describes the interaction of capillary and gravitational force.
[0054] Another parameter that influences the filling speed is therefore the weight of the liquid column in the well. This weight force counteracts the capillary force (channel above the well). This means that in a worst-case scenario, the capillary force is no longer able to push the liquid upwards in the well, and the filling will stop.
[0055] By inserting more corners further capillary forces are created in these corners, which also counteract the weight force and thus accelerate the filling process. It is preferred to have a rectangular shape instead of round wells, because too many small corners are not related to any advantage either (number of corners towards infinity is again a circle). Thus, there is an ideal value for the number of corners depending on the geometry and corners should not be introduced according to the rule “the more the better”.
[0056] Another possibility to accelerate the filling process is to turn the arrangement upside down, i.e. channel down and well up, i.e. “overhead”. In this arrangement, the weight of the liquid in the well supports the filling process, but the liquid in the capillary/chimney channel must rise upwards, i.e. against the weight force. This is less critical due to the small diameter of the chimney channel and the resulting smaller mass compared to the mass in the well. However, the well must be so small/narrow that the liquid does not drip down onto the lid.
[0057] Furthermore, an influence by the fluid is of course also possible. The present points apply to homogeneous fluids, for inhomogeneous fluids where there is a low viscosity or well wetting component (for example solvents) can have strongly pronounced shooters and thus greatly complicate the estimation of the appropriate geometry and coating.
[0058] Advantages of the invention can be summarized as [0059] Filling of deep structures without air entrapment; [0060] Only two layers necessary (well suited for common mass production processes); [0061] No additional material; [0062] Suitable for coatings and surfaces with a contact angle below 90°
[0063] Alternative approaches to realize or to circumvent the invention relate to [0064] Round well would be standard (
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[0074] A liquid 11 moves through capillary forces along the first channel 5 (
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[0078] The different depths between a first or second channel 5, 6 and a first or second well 2, 3 in a substrate 1 can also be taken from
[0079] The foregoing description of the preferred embodiment 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 embodiment was 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.
REFERENCE NUMERALS
[0080] 1 substrate [0081] 2 first well [0082] 3 second well [0083] 5 first channel [0084] 6 second channel [0085] 7 third channel [0086] 8 sharp corner transition area [0087] 9 first chimney channel [0088] 10 second chimney channel [0089] 11 liquid [0090] 17 bottom of well