NONINVASIVE VACCINE TESTER
20220291124 · 2022-09-15
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
This invention this invention is a device and method for validating the identity of a liquid in a container that is transparent to light, while the liquid is in the container, without physically invading container. The liquid is particularly suited for validating vaccines such as the vaccine for COVID-19. The invention uses light from a refractometer and/or nephelometer, passing into and reflected out of the transparent wall of the container, to characterize the liquid.
Claims
1. A system for validating the identity of the liquid contents of a transparent container, comprising: a.) an optical device adapted to measure an optical property of the liquid contents of the transparent container, without physical invasion of the container, and without removing the liquid from the container, to provide a value for the optical property; and b.) a comparator that compares the optical property to a standard value, to validate the identity of the liquid contents of the transparent container.
2. A system as recited in claim 1, wherein the optical property is selected for a group comprising refractive index, turbidity, and combinations thereof.
3. A system as recited in claim 1, wherein the optical property is determined by shining a beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beam.
4. A system as recited in claim 1, wherein the optical property is determined by shining a beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beam, and thereby determining the index of refraction of the liquid.
5. A system as recited in claim 1, wherein the optical property is determined by shining a beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beam, and shining another beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beam to determine turbidity of the liquid, and using the value of the turbidity to correct the determined index of refraction, thereby determining the index of refraction of the liquid.
6. A system as recited in claim 1, wherein the optical property is determined by shining two separate beams of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beams to determine the index of refraction of the liquid.
7. A system as recited in claim 1, wherein the optical property is determined by shining two separate beams of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beams to determine the index of refraction of the liquid, and shining another beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beam to determine turbidity of the liquid, and using the value of the turbidity to correct the determined index of refraction, thereby determining the index of refraction of the liquid.
8. A system as recited in claim 1, wherein the liquid is selected from a group comprising vaccine, anti-viral vaccine, and COVID-19 vaccine, and combinations thereof.
9. A system as recited in claim 1, wherein the optical property is determined by shining a beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and using the technology described in a group comprising U.S. Pat. Nos. 10,139,340, 10,234,386, and combinations thereof.
10. A system as recited in claim 1, wherein the optical property is determined by shining a beams of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and determining the index of refraction, using a device selected for the group comprising a refractometer, a nephelometer, and combinations thereof
11. A method of validating the identity of the liquid contents of a transparent container, comprising the steps of: determining an optical property of the contents of a container of known content without physically invading the container and without removing the contents from the container, determining an optical property of the contents of a container of unknown content without physically invading the container, and without removing the contents from the container, and comparing the optical property of the contents of a container of known content, with optical property of the contents of a container of unknown content.
12. A system as recited in claim 11, wherein the optical property is selected for a group comprising refractive index, turbidity, and combinations thereof.
13. A system as recited in claim 11, wherein the optical property is determined by shining a beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beam.
14. A system as recited in claim 11, wherein the optical property is determined by shining a beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beam, and thereby determining the index of refraction of the liquid.
15. A system as recited in claim 11, wherein the optical property is determined by shining a beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beam, and shining another beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beam to determine turbidity of the liquid, and using the value of the turbidity to correct the determined index of refraction, thereby determining the index of refraction of the liquid.
16. A system as recited in claim 11, wherein the optical property is determined by shining two separate beams of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beams to determine the index of refraction of the liquid.
17. A system as recited in claim 11, wherein the optical property is determined by shining two separate beams of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beams to determine the index of refraction of the liquid, and shining another beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and observing the reflection of the beam to determine turbidity of the liquid, and using the value of the turbidity to correct the determined index of refraction, thereby determining the index of refraction of the liquid.
18. A system as recited in claim 11, wherein the liquid is selected from a group comprising vaccine, anti-viral vaccine, and COVID-19 vaccine, and combinations thereof.
19. A system as recited in claim 11, wherein the optical property is determined by shining a beam of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and using the technology described in a group comprising U.S. Pat. Nos. 10,139,340, 10,234,386, and combinations thereof.
20. A system as recited in claim 11, wherein the optical property is determined by shining a beams of light through the wall of the container, without physically invading the container, and determining the index of refraction, using a device selected for the group comprising a refractometer, a nephelometer, and combinations thereof.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0012] Referring now to the invention in more detail, in
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[0017] The preferred version of this device is a combined refractometer and nephelometer. A refractometer is an instrument for the measurement of an index of refraction of a liquid. A nephelometer is an instrument for measuring the concentration of suspended particulates in a liquid. The refractometer and the nephelometer that are preferred for use in this invention have been granted separate US patents (U.S. Pat. Nos. 10,139,340 and 10,234,386, respectively). Although each of these devices can non-invasively characterize a liquid in a transparent container, the combination provides an exceptional level of identification, because each device relies of different characteristics of a liquid.
[0018] The device is a box with a hole on top where the vial is inserted. There is a display and the necessary number of push buttons (probably two). Inside the box there are two printed circuit boards: the motherboard and the display/push button board. The boards are connected with a flex cable. Manual assembly is minimized by having all electronic components sit on the boards, thus allowing robotic assembly. The laser may need manual mounting. There are no moving parts.
[0019] The measurements will be carried out at room temperature. Some vaccines are diluted for injection; some are not. The intention is to measure vials unopened, before dilution. That will also make the measurement easier as the concentrations are higher.
[0020] Optical Design: The optical design of the preferred version of this invention follows the teachings of the two US patents, mentioned above. The dimensions of the this device will be effected by the dimensions of the vaccine vials.
[0021] The optical assembly sits on a motherboard. The vial is in direct contact with the optical assembly, subjected to a light lateral pressure effected by a spring assembly to ensure good contact. The optics consist of one (525 nm) diode laser (modulated to minimize the effect of ambient light), one optical assembly part consisting of four light pipes (injection molded), and four detectors that sit on the motherboard. The laser is probably best mounted manually into the optical assembly. Being seated in the optical assembly, its alignment is secure. Detectors (1 and 2) perform the refractometer function, and detectors (3 and 4) perform the nephelometer function. Both measurements are ratiometric. The refractometer data is distorted by scattered light from the vaccine if the vaccine is cloudy; the nephelometer data is used to correct it. The sensitivity of the refractometer to scattered light is minimized by the special optical design that rejects off-axis light—the less to correct, the better.
[0022] It is not known to what extent the label on the vial obscures the view with various vaccine brands. At least some of them have a clear segment on the side of the vial. If the label covers the side surface entirely, measurement from the bottom may have to be considered. Should the vial be misaligned, showing the label to the optics, the condition will be easily detected from the detector signals.
[0023] Vaccine Vial Interface: The vial receptacle should accommodate different vial sizes as needed. Since the measurement is done in the vertical plane, vial diameter does not have an effect on the result. (There is a second-order effect on the optics, but it is not expected to be significant, and it is included in the calibration—all the vials tested under that calibration must be of the same size). If necessary, the bottom height of the receptacle could be adjustable. The ambient light should be excluded when the vial is in.
[0024] The use of a cover flap is a possibility. It is possible that the modulation of the laser light is sufficient to remove the effect of ambient light.
[0025] Electronics: The motherboard carries a processor and enough memory to store at least 1000 readings (timestamp, refractometer and nephelometer). The device is battery-operated, with a battery capacity adequate for at least 1000 measurements. USB charging is a possibility. The largest consumer of power is the laser, with a current draw of the order of 10 mA. A square-wave modulation at 1 kHz is suggested. The four detector channels should have lock-in amplifiers.
[0026] There is an optional wireless module for transmitting results to a local computer or a remote site. This may prove to be useful, as an early warning of a forgery will give the authorities a head-start in tracking down its source. Deviant results may occur for reasons other than forgery; we will have to find ways to deal with that possibility. The display may optionally show the actual refractometer and nephelometer readings, or it may show red/green. An audible signal is a possibility.
[0027] Operation: The operation at the vaccination site, or anywhere in the vaccination chain, includes a calibration measurement with a vaccine vial that is known to be good and subsequent testing of any number of vaccine vials against the calibration. If the combined refractometer/nephelometer data deviates from the calibration by more than a preset tolerance, the device sounds an alarm and sends an alert using the optional wireless module. Calibration values are retained until a new calibration is done.
[0028] This invention measures refractive index and cloudiness of liquids through glass. Vaccine components such as sucrose and PEG affect the refractive index. Each vaccine has its characteristic cloudiness, some are clear. This invention detects aberrant values that indicate a forgery. The device measures one vaccine vial at a time. One vial, known to be authentic, is chosen as calibration, and all other vials will be compared to it. The vial is inserted. For the calibration vial, the Calibration button is pressed. For all others, the device will signal any significant deviation in refractive index or cloudiness. No need to open the vial.
[0029] Fast measurement: Because of the fast measurement, all vials in a batch can be tested. No need to rely on statistical estimates. Option of wireless transmission of data cab allow instantaneous alert. The invention is easy to use, at any vaccination site, the invention can be used. The invention can be used on vaccines other than COVID-19. The invention provides it life saving function at very low cost.
[0030] While the foregoing written description of the invention enables one of ordinary skill to make and use what is considered presently to be the best mode thereof, those of ordinary skill will understand and appreciate the existence of variations, combinations, and equivalents of the specific embodiment, method, and examples herein. The invention should therefore not be limited by the above described embodiment, method, and examples, but by all embodiments and methods within the scope and spirit of the invention.