NANO FLOW SENSORS
20220214199 · 2022-07-07
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01N21/6428
PHYSICS
G01F1/704
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A flow meter comprises a capillary, a first and second fluid flow marker, and one or more sensors. The capillary has a longitudinally extending fluid receiving space, with a first end and a second end. The first and second fluid flow markers are immiscible and are positioned in the fluid receiving space. The one or more sensors are positioned along the capillary. A method for measuring flow rates comprises the steps of introducing a first liquid into a flow meter. That first liquid flows into the fluid receiving space at the first end of the capillary thereby displacing the first fluid flow marker and the second fluid flow marker towards the second end of the capillary. The interface between the first fluid flow marker and the second fluid flow marker is measured with one or more sensors to determine the flow rate of the first liquid.
Claims
1. A flow meter comprising: a capillary having a fluid receiving space, with a first end and a second end; a first fluid flow marker; a second fluid flow marker that is immiscible with the first fluid flow marker, the first and second fluid flow markers being positioned in the fluid receiving space, wherein the first fluid flow marker is adjacent to the second fluid flow marker; and one or more sensors positioned along the capillary.
2. The flow meter of claim 1, further comprising a plurality of first fluid flow markers and a plurality of second fluid flow markers, wherein the first and second fluid flow markers are positioned in an alternating sequence of fluid flow markers.
3. The flow meter of claim 1, wherein one or more sensor is selected from an optical sensor, an admittance sensor, and a capacitance sensor.
4. The flow meter of claim 1, wherein the second fluid flow marker is a fluorocarbon.
5. The flow meter of claim 4, wherein the first fluid flow marker is an aqueous salt solution, an ionic liquid, or a liquid metal.
6. The flow meter of claim 5, wherein the first flow marker is optically reflective.
7. The flow meter of claim 1, wherein the capillary comprises silica and the interior surface is at least partially fluorophilic.
8. The flow meter of claim 1, wherein the capillary comprises polytetrafluoroethylene.
9. The flow meter of claim 1, further comprising a valve comprising a first port, a second port, a third port, and a fourth port, wherein the flow meter is configured so that the first end of the capillary is fluidly connected to the first port of the valve and the second end of the capillary is fluidly connected to the second port of the valve, the third port is fluidly connected to the flow to be measured, the fourth port is the exit port, wherein the valve comprises two positions, a first position and a second position; in the first position, the valve is configured to fluidly connect the flow to be measured with the first end of the capillary and the second end of the capillary to the exit port, in the second position, the valve is configured to fluidly connect the flow to be measured with the second end of the capillary and the first end of the capillary to the exit port.
10. The flow meter of claim 1, comprising one or more valves configured so that the flow direction of the first and second flow markers in the capillary may be reversed to allow them to flow in both directions in front of the one or more sensors.
11. The flow meter of claim 1, wherein the flow meter is configured to measure flow rates of 100 nL/min or less.
12. A method for measuring flow rates comprising the steps of: introducing a first liquid into a flow meter, the first liquid flowing into the fluid receiving space at the first end of the capillary thereby displacing the first fluid flow marker and the second fluid flow marker towards the second end of the capillary; measuring one or more interfaces between the first fluid flow marker and the second fluid flow marker with one or more sensors to determine the flow rate of the first liquid; wherein the flow meter comprises a capillary having a fluid receiving space, with a first end and a second end; a first fluid flow marker; a second fluid flow marker that is immiscible with the first fluid flow marker, the first and second fluid flow markers being positioned in the fluid receiving space, wherein the first fluid flow marker is adjacent to the second fluid flow marker; and one or more sensors positioned along the capillary.
13. The method of claim 12, further comprising: introducing a second liquid into nano flow meter, the second liquid flowing into the fluid receiving space at the second end of the capillary thereby displacing the first fluid flow marker and the second fluid flow marker towards the first end of the capillary.
14. The method of claim 12, wherein the flow meter further comprises one or more valves configured so that the flow direction of the first and second flow markers in the capillary may be reversed to allow them to flow in both directions in front of the one or more sensors.
15. The method of claim 12, wherein one or more sensor is an admittance sensor.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein one or more sensor measures the passage of the interface between a first and second fluid flow marker.
17. The method of claim 12, wherein the flow meter is configured to measure flow of rates of 5 nL/min or less.
18. The method of claim 12, comprising: measuring a change of dielectric constant or resistivity due to the passage of the interface between the first fluid flow marker and the second fluid flow marker with one or more sensors, and calculating the flow rate of the first liquid from that rate of change.
19. The method of claim 12, comprising: measuring the time it takes for a fluid flow marker to pass, and calculating the flow rate of the first liquid from the length of the fluid flow marker measured and the amount of time it took to pass.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0008] The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments, and together with the general description given above, and the detailed description of the embodiments given below, serve to explain the principles of the present disclosure.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0021] The nano flow meters described herein measure low nL/min flow rates, or in some cases, sub-nL/min flow rates. The flow meter comprises a capillary, a first fluid flow marker, a second fluid flow marker, and one or more sensors. The capillary has a fluid receiving space, with a first end and a second end. The second fluid flow marker is immiscible with the first fluid flow marker. The first and second fluid flow markers are positioned in the fluid receiving space, wherein the first fluid flow marker is adjacent to the second fluid flow marker. One or more sensors are positioned along the capillary.
[0022] In some embodiments, there is a plurality of first and second fluid flow markers. The first and second fluid flow markers are positioned in an alternating sequence of fluid segments in the fluid receiving space of the capillary to form a multi-segment marker “train.” In some embodiments, there is at least one first fluid flow marker and at least two second fluid flow markers. In some embodiments, each of the first fluid flow marker segments have the same length. In some embodiments, each of the second fluid flow marker segments have the same length. In some embodiments, each of the first fluid flow marker segments have a different length from the other first fluid flow marker segments. In some embodiments, each of the second fluid flow marker segments have a different length from the other second fluid flow marker segments.
[0023] There is an interface between the first and second fluid flow markers. The interface between the first and second fluid flow markers is in the shape of a meniscus. See
[0024] The sensors are designed to evaluate if a fluid flow marker is in its field of perception. Examples of sensors include, but are not limited to those that use electromagnetic waves for interrogation, such as optical sensors and electrical admittance sensors. In some embodiments, the flow meter comprises optical sensors, admittance sensors, capacitance sensors, other electromagnetic sensors, acoustic sensors, or combinations thereof. In some embodiments, the flow meter comprises sensors selected from optical sensors, admittance sensors, capacitance sensors, or a combination thereof. In some embodiments, there is only one type of sensor. An optical sensor may measure the transmission, reflection, absorption, or emission of light by one or more of the fluid flow markers. Electrical admittance is the reciprocal of electrical impedance. Given constant dimensions of a test fluid between two interrogation electrodes, the observed impedance is a function of the dielectric constant of the fluid between the electrodes as well as the probe frequency if the fluid is a nonconductor. The impedance decreases and the admittance increases as the frequency or dielectric constant increases. If the fluid is a conductor, e.g., an aqueous salt solution, the admittance increases as the specific conductance of the fluid increases. In some embodiments, the interrogation electrodes are not in direct physical contact with the test fluid. The electromagnetic field from the electrodes couples to the fluid in a tube through the tube wall material, which is a dielectric. More of the field is coupled to the fluid when the tube wall material has a higher dielectric constant (e.g., 3.8 for fused silica, 3.5 for polyimide, 3.3 for polyetherether ketone (PEEK) compared to 2.1 for Teflon (poly(tetrafluoroethylene)). The one or more sensors are positioned along the capillary tube so their output changes when the properties of the fluid (s) flow in their field of perception. In some embodiments, one or more sensors are positioned along the capillary and can measure a time of flight (TOF) of one or more of the fluid flow markers.
[0025] A sensor can have a field of perception (FOP). In this context, the field of perception of the sensor is the distance along the capillary where a change in the fluid composition will result in a change in the sensor output. In some embodiments, the width of the field of perception of one or more sensors is larger than the axial width of the curved interface between the two fluid flow markers. When the field of perception width is larger than the width of the interface, the passage of the interface through the sensor FOP results in a continuous change in the sensor output, beginning from an output characteristic of that when the FOP contains only one fluid flow marker to when the FOP contains only the other fluid flow marker.
[0026] The response behavior of an admittance sensor at low flow rates (approaching 1 nL/min) appears in
[0027] There are myriad possible approaches to relate the observed or derived parameters from the detector output to the microscopically observed flow rate. One such parameter is the half width of the response peak elicited by the conductive segment. In reality, the measurement need not be the half-width, it can be the interval between any two chosen reference voltages on the ascending and descending parts of the response. There is no special significance to measuring the width at any specific relative peak height, it is important to note that if the conductive segment is long enough, the response can be flat-topped. In some embodiments, the sensor measures the change of the dielectric constant or the resistivity in the FOP over time due to the movement of the interface between the first and second fluid flow markers. The flow rate is calculated based on the rate of change of the measurement such as, for example, a time required for a change in admittance over a predetermined admittance interval. In an aspect, the predetermined admittance interval may be from 0.4 to 1.2 V.
[0028] For slow flow rates the passage of an interface can be used to measure the flow. At higher flow rates this may be the time of sight (TOS) for a given fluid flow marker crossing the field of vision and at still higher flow rates, the TOS for all the fluid flow markers. For very slow flow rates of flow, the TOS may do more than just rely on the passage of a flow marker interface that typically involves the gradual transition of the detector signal from one stable value to another, it may advantageously zoom in on that transition zone and the TOS value of interest may simply go from any arbitrarily chosen signal voltage to another in the signal transition zone. In some embodiments, a sensor measures the time it takes for a fluid flow marker to pass. The flow rate is then calculated based on the length of the fluid flow marker measured and the amount of time it took to pass.
[0029] In some embodiments, the first fluid flow marker has a low dielectric constant, a high resistivity, or both, such as the fluorocarbon FC-40 (dielectric constant 1.9, resistivity 4×10.sup.15 ohm.Math.cm) the second fluid flow marker has a high dielectric constant, a lower resistivity relative to the first fluid flow marker, or both; for example water (dielectric constant 78.3, specific resistivity 1.8×10.sup.7 ohm.Math.cm). In some embodiments, the difference in dielectric constants between the first and second fluid flow markers is sufficient to be clearly distinguished by the admittance detector. In some embodiments, the difference in resistivity between the first and second fluid flow markers is sufficient to be clearly distinguished by the admittance detector. In some embodiments, a measurement sufficient to be clearly distinguished by the admittance detector is a change such as: ±0.5%, ±1%, ±5%, ±10%. As the salinity of an aqueous solution is increased, the dielectric constant does not change markedly but the conductivity increases significantly as exemplified by a 50 mM NaCl solution that has a specific resistivity of 200 ohm.Math.cm. In some embodiments, the second fluid flow marker comprises fluorocarbon (FC) fluid such as FC-40 from the 3M company that has high resistivity (ρ), and low dielectric constant (k) that are optically transparent. An illustrative multi-segment marker train is shown in
[0030] In some embodiments, the first fluid flow marker has a high dielectric constant and the second fluid flow marker has a low dielectric constant relative to the first fluid flow marker. In some embodiments, the first fluid flow marker is optically reflective.
[0031] In some embodiments, the second fluid flow marker comprises fluorocarbon. Examples of fluorocarbons include but are not limited to Fluorinert® FC-40 oil (a liquid mixture of completely fluorinated aliphatic compounds), perfluorohexane, perfluorooctane, perfluoro(2-butyl-tetrahydrofurane), and perfluorotripentylamine.
[0032] The fluid flow markers are immiscible in each other. Examples of an immiscible par of fluid flow markers are fluorocarbons and aqueous solutions. FC-40 solubility in water and water solubility in FC-40 are <5 and <7 ppm w/w.
[0033] In some embodiments, the first fluid flow marker is an aqueous salt solution, an ionic liquid, or a liquid metal. Examples of an aqueous salt solution include, but are not limited to sodium chloride, potassium nitrate, ammonium acetate, etc.; almost any stable electrolyte is acceptable for this purpose. In some embodiments, the solution concentrations are about 10 to about 100 mM but are not limited to this range. Examples of a liquid metal include but are not limited to mercury, gallium and gallium alloys like Galinstan (gallium-indium-tin). In some embodiments, the first flow marker is optically reflective as in a liquid metal. In some embodiments, the first flow marker is an aqueous salt solution.
[0034] In some embodiments, the terminal fluorocarbon fluid flow marker can be considered “guards”. Despite the extremely low solubility of FC's in any non-FC solvent, if any FC is removed by dissolution in the measured liquid, they will be removed from these terminal fluid flow markers while any other fluid enclosed by these outer guards, including other fluorocarbon segments do not come into contact with any external fluid. These guards protect and prevent dimensional change of the protected inner fluid flow markers. In some embodiments, to protect from the intrusion of the measured liquid stream past the guard fluid flow markers, the silica capillary can be fluorosilylated. This results in the wall having a fluorocarbon (FC)-like surface. The high affinity of the FC-coated wall for the FC fluid flow markers essentially eliminates the possibility of an intermediary wall film of any other liquid.
[0035] A capillary is a tube with a small internal diameter. In some embodiments, the internal diameter is from about 5 microns to about 400 microns, such as about 10 microns to about 400 microns, about 25 microns to about 400 microns, about 35 microns to about 400 microns, about 50 microns to about 400 microns, about 5 microns to about 300 microns, about 5 microns to about 250 microns, about 5 microns to about 200 microns, about 5 microns to about 100 microns, about 5 microns to about 50 microns, and about 5 microns to about 30 microns. In some embodiments, the capillary comprises silica or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE). In some embodiments, the internal wall of the capillary is at least partially fluorophilic, this may be accomplished by using PTFE or fluorosilylating a silica capillary. In some embodiments, the internal wall of the capillary is fluorophilic.
[0036] In some embodiments, the first and second fluid flow markers or their interface are recirculated by the sensor(s) by repeatedly reversing the flow in an observation loop as soon as the marker of interest has provided the desired reading.
[0037] In some embodiments, the flow meter comprises a valve. In some embodiments, the valve comprises a first port, a second port, a third port, and a fourth port. The flow meter is configured so that the first end of the capillary is fluidly connected to the first port of the valve and the second end of the capillary is fluidly connected to the second port of the valve. The third port is fluidly connected to the flow to be measured and the fourth port is the exit port or connects to further components downstream. The valve comprises two positions, a first position and a second position. In the first position, the valve is configured to fluidly connect the flow to be measured with the first end of the capillary and the second end of the capillary to the exit port. In the second position, the valve is configured to fluidly connect the flow to be measured with the second end of the capillary and the first end of the capillary to the exit port. This valve allows the direction of flow in the capillary to be reversed so that as the first and second fluid flow markers remain in the capillary as the flow meter is being used to measure flow. The flow markers travel in one direction during measurement in the capillary and when the valve is switched to the other position, the flow markers travel in the other direction during measurement; they never leave the observation/sensor-bearing loop.
[0038] In some embodiments, the flow meter comprises at least two valves, which are at least two-position, three-port valves. They are configured as shown in
[0039] In some embodiments, the flow direction in the capillary of the nano flow meter can be reversed. For example, when a first liquid is introduced into the first end of the capillary, the first and second fluid flow markers with be displaced along the fluid receiving space of the capillary from the first end towards the second end. After one or more fluid flow marker or one or more interface pass by the one or more sensors in the nano flow meter, a liquid (e.g., a “second liquid”) can then be inserted into the opposite or second end of the capillary before the first and second fluid flow markers are dispelled from capillary. Introduction of the second liquid into second end of the capillary will then displace the first and second fluid flow markers back towards the first end, with the first and second fluid flow markers passing by the one or more sensors in the nano flow meter.
[0040] Accordingly, methods described herein can optionally further comprise introducing a second liquid into the nano flow meter, the second liquid flowing into the fluid receiving space at the second end of the capillary at a second flow rate. The methods can further comprise displacing the fluid flow marker with the second liquid at the second flow rate away from the second end towards the first end of the capillary. In some embodiments, methods described herein can further comprise detecting a time of flight of the fluid flow marker past the one or more sensors to determine the second flow rate of the second liquid.
[0041] The flow meter is configured to measure flow rates of 100 nL/min or less. Examples of flow rates to be measured range from about 1 pL/min to about 100 nL/min, such as about 10 pL/min, to about 100 nL/min, about 100 pL/min, to about 100 nL/min, about 1 nL/min, to about 100 nL/min, about 10 nL/min, to about 100 nL/min, about 10 pL/min, to about 10 nL/min, about 10 pL/min, to about 1 nL/min, about 10 pL/min, to about 100 pL/min, and about 100 pL/min, to about 10 nL/min.
[0042] Embodiments described herein can be understood more readily by reference to the following detailed description, examples, and figures (referred to as “FIGS.”). Elements, apparatus, and methods described herein, however, are not limited to the specific embodiments presented in the detailed description, examples, and figures. It should be recognized that the exemplary embodiments herein are merely illustrative of the principles of the invention. Numerous modifications and adaptations will be readily apparent to those of skill in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
[0043] In addition, all ranges disclosed herein are to be understood to encompass any and all subranges subsumed therein. For example, a stated range of “1.0 to 10.0” should be considered to include any and all subranges beginning with a minimum value of 1.0 or more and ending with a maximum value of 10.0 or less, e.g., 1.0 to 5.3, or 4.7 to 10.0, or 3.6 to 7.9.
[0044] All ranges disclosed herein are also to be considered to include the end points of the range, unless expressly stated otherwise. For example, a range of “between 5 and 10” or “5 to 10” or “5-10” should generally be considered to include the end points 5 and 10.
[0045] Further, when the phrase “up to” is used in connection with an amount or quantity; it is to be understood that the amount is at least a detectable amount or quantity. For example, a material present in an amount “up to” a specified amount can be present from a detectable amount and up to and including the specified amount.
[0046] Additionally, in any disclosed embodiment, the terms “substantially,” “approximately,” and “about” may be substituted with “within [a percentage] of” what is specified, where the percentage includes 0.1, 1, 5, and 10 percent.
[0047] The terms “a” and “an” are defined as “one or more” unless this disclosure explicitly requires otherwise. The terms “comprise” (and any form of comprise, such as “comprises” and “comprising”), “have” (and any form of have, such as “has” and “having”), “include” (and any form of include, such as “includes” and “including”) and “contain” (and any form of contain, such as “contains” and “containing”) are open-ended linking verbs. As a result, a composition or other object that “comprises,” “has,” “includes” or “contains” one or more elements possesses those one or more elements, but is not limited to possessing only those elements. Likewise, a method that “comprises,” “has,” “includes” or “contains” one or more steps possesses those one or more steps, but is not limited to possessing only those one or more steps.
[0048] Moreover, any embodiment of any of the compositions, systems, and methods described herein can consist of, or consist essentially of—rather than comprise/include/contain/have—any of the described steps, elements, and/or features. Thus, in any of the claims, the term “consisting of” or “consisting essentially of” can be substituted for any of the open-ended linking verbs recited above, in order to change the scope of a given claim from what it would otherwise be using the open-ended linking verb.
[0049] While the present disclosure has illustrated by description several embodiments and while the illustrative embodiments have been described in considerable detail, it is not the intention of the applicant to restrict or in any way limit the scope of the appended claims to such detail. Additional advantages and modifications may readily appear to those skilled in the art. Furthermore, features from separate lists can be combined; and features from the examples can be generalized to the whole disclosure.
[0050] Some embodiments described herein are further illustrated in the following non-limiting examples. Unless otherwise noted herein, chemicals described in the following examples are available from standard chemical suppliers. Milli-Q water were used to prepare aqueous solutions. 50 mM ammonium acetate, hereinafter AA, was used as the conductive aqueous segment. Aqueous ammonium acetate at a lower concentration (0.5 mM) was used as the illustrative test fluid (TF), the flow of which was measured. All solutions were filtered through 0.45 μm Whatman poly(ether sulfone) membrane filters. The fluorocarbon chosen was Fluorinert® FC-40 oil, hereinafter denoted as FC. Trichloro(1H, 1H, 2H, 2H-perfluorooctyl)silane (TCPFOS) was used for fluorosilylation.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Capillary Observation Tubes—Rendering a Silica Capillary Wall Fluorophilic
[0051] Silica capillaries of various inner diameters and 360 μm o.d., were used as the observation tubes. All of the data reported here, however, pertain to a 11 μm i.d., 35 cm long polyimide-coated fused silica capillary, unless stated otherwise.
[0052] To make a fluorophillic wall, the capillary was successively washed by 0.1 M ethanolic KOH, water, 0.1 M HCl and water, spending ca. 15 min at each step and finally dried by blowing filtered dry N.sub.2 through it and TCPFOS was aspirated into it and left to react overnight. After the spent/excess reagent was forced out with N.sub.2, the capillary was rinsed with FC. A comparison of the air-fluorocarbon interface between untreated and TCPFOS-treated fused silica capillaries indicates that the contact angle for FC markedly decreases upon TCPFOS treatment.
Example 2: Generation of Multi-Segment Fluid Flow Markers
[0053] The procedure for setting up multisegment flow markers includes a provision for simultaneously monitoring the flow by a reference method is as follows. In this example, mercury was used, since it offered a very visibly distinguishable marker under the microscope. The reference and measurement segments, separated by 1 cm, respectively comprised a ˜2 mm mercury segment in the middle of the test fluid and a FC/AA/FC (˜5/2/5 mm in length) train as the multisegment marker.
[0054] To help at least approximately achieve the desired marker lengths, a 10 cm length of the capillary was marked every mm with a fine-tip marker. All liquids were introduced into the capillary using dedicated 1 mL syringes using appropriate Luer adapters to threaded unions. The flow cell was first filled with the test fluid (TF). Then, 2 mm Hg, 1 cm TF, 5 mm FC, 2 mm AA, and 5 mm FC were injected in sequence. In all cases, the amount of the liquid initially introduced was longer than eventually intended. Mild back pressure was applied to expel the excess and the next liquid syringe was attached towards the end of this process. Finally, the mercury and segmental flow marker was pushed to the middle part of the flow cell by more test fluid. Note that aside from serving as the microscopic flow marker, the Hg segment served an important purpose, it allowed following the visualization of the introduction process of FC-AA-FC marker train, as the FC-AA interface was not easily discernible. Note that once assembled and calibrated, the sensor itself does not require mercury.
[0055] Both optical and admittance approaches were used. A simple red LED-photodiode based transmittance detector with a pinhole aperture successfully detected the interface in 300 μm i.d. PTFE tubes (
[0056] The circuitry for admittance detection is well known. Square wave excitation (15 V) at a fixed frequency of 6.6 kHz (optimized for the present application) from an LMC555 timer was used and a ultralow bias current (3 fA) transimpedance amplifier (LMP7721, located next to the pick-up electrode) was used before RMS.fwdarw.DC conversion (AD 536).
[0057] On either side of the admittance (or LED) detector based flow sensor, was the video microscopic flow measurement arrangement and the lowest flow rate (full scale 1500 nL/min) commercially available thermal mass flow sensor (MFS-1). The measurement calibration of the microscope was verified with a NIST-traceable graduated stage micrometer (10.0 μm reported by microscope as 9.99±0.05 μm, n=6). Flow rate was extracted from each Hg segment passage. Photoshop™ was used to separate each video (30 frames/s, 600×800 pixels, actual field of view 13×17.5 mm) into time-stamped frames. For each microscopic reference measurement, two frames at least several seconds apart (depending on the flow rate), were randomly selected from a single Hg segment passage. The TOF was calculated from the time interval. The two frames were merged into a single image (
[0058] Microscopic examination of several cross-sectional segments cut adjacent to the nominally 10 μm i.d. observation capillary provided a mean±s.d. of 10.5±0.1 μm (6 cross sections, 18 measurements) for the capillary bore. The flow rates cited in this application were based on this observation.
[0059] Readout electronics and a LabVIEW™ interface was developed in-house for the Elveflow® sensor. The manufacturer's calibration equation was \T.sub.out=1.4717×F (μL/min)+2.5. In-house calibration in the 0-1 μL/min range (gravimetrically measured, 10 min collection period) was in very good agreement.
[0060] The test flow was pneumatically pumped by pressurized ultra-high purity grade N.sub.2 via a high-resolution digital pressure controller (P/N MM1PBNKKZP100PSG, 6-100 psig, www.proportionair.com) from a custom-machined 25 mL capacity thick-wall Plexiglas reservoir (
Example 3: Detection Methods
Optical Detector
[0061] To measure smaller flow rates the observation tube was 28 μm i.d. transparent cyclic olefin polymer (COP) capillary; 10 μL syringes were used for FC delivery and a custom zero dead volume capillary tee was used. Even with the smallest optical slit, the fluorocarbon water-interface was not discernible. The detector could see the interface if the transmission through the aqueous phase was reduced by incorporating high concentrations of a dye.
[0062] Using a mercury segment flanked by FCs, a reflective interface detection approach was explored. Such a detector is very simple and inexpensive to construct as it requires no special optical aperture or slit arrangement. The initial trial clearly showed that a Hg—FC interface is easily detected even in the 11 μm i.d. capillary. Further contrast between light reflected by a metallic surface from light scattered by glass or Fresnel reflection is used in some embodiments through the use of a polarizing filter.
Admittance Detector
[0063] Simple on-tube admittance detectors can pick up small changes in interior fluid composition, even in capillaries as small as 2 μm in i.d. It is worthwhile to note that capacitance to voltage converters (e.g., AD7746), available inexpensively as complete evaluation boards, can also sense small changes in fluid composition within a tube.
[0064] In an admittance detector the field is capacitively coupled to the solution. It has been observed that the applied field extends beyond the electrode gap.
[0065] The response behavior of the admittance sensor at low flow rates (approaching 1 nL/min) is shown in
[0066] There are myriad possible approaches to relate the observed or derived parameters from the detector output to the microscopically observed flow rate. In some embodiments, the half width of the response peak elicited by the conductive segment is used. In reality, the measurement need not be the half-width, it can be the interval between any two chosen reference voltages on the ascending and descending parts of the response. There is no special significance to measuring the width at any specific relative peak height, it is important to note that if the conductive segment is long enough, the response can be flat-topped.
[0067] In some embodiments, a single interface edge is sensed multiple times as the direction of the flow of the fluid markers is reversed back and forth.
Lag Time in Response
[0068] Repeat experiments that involve stepping up or down in flow indicate no difference in the lag period if the flow is increased or decreased. The difference of the lag time on flow direction, 76±46 vs. 49±21 ms was not statistically significant. Small differences in electrode lengths on each side may play a role in this observation.
Linearity of Response
[0069] For the single interface movement sensing strategy, the relationship of the reciprocal of the time interval (Δt) between two randomly chosen signal values and the flow rate were examined to determine what choice of these signal values provide best linearity. While a linear relationship such as that in
[0070] The effects of temperature on sensor output was explored. Compared to thermal expansion coefficient of liquids (for example, water around 25° C. is ˜2.5×10.sup.−4/° C.), that for fused silica is far smaller (˜5×10.sup.−7/° C.). Calibration shift because of a change in i.d. of a silica tube due to a 10° C. change will be negligible. In fact, the change in the volume of water for that degree of temperature change will be 0.25%, barely detectable in many embodiments described herein. As
[0071] In summary, a relatively simple, inexpensive and robust sensor for measuring flow rates in the low nL/min range is disclosed. Additionally, the sensor in some instances can easily be extendable to even lower flow rates. As demonstrated, the passage of an interface between two liquids, even a partial passage, through the FOP of the sensor can measure low flow rates.