Sample cup
10870109 ยท 2020-12-22
Assignee
Inventors
- Ulrich Schaff (Livermore, CA, US)
- Jon Epperson (Livermore, CA, US)
- Laura Fredriksen (Berkeley, CA, US)
- Kirk Harmon (San Ramon, CA, US)
Cpc classification
G01F19/00
PHYSICS
B01L2300/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2400/0457
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/087
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L3/502
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01L3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01F19/00
PHYSICS
Abstract
A cup used to receive, hold, measure and pour liquids, such a specimens, such as for a medical assay, is described. The cup comprises an open receiving upper chamber, two or more open sample-directing channels, and an open, calibrated and marked measuring column. When sitting on a level surface, fluid flows freely from the upper chamber through the sample-directing channels into the measuring column. A foot is under each fluid-directing channel. The base of the measuring column functions as an additional, such as a third, foot. Cups nest, with the two feet of the upper cup sitting into two sample-directing columns of lower cup. The measuring column and upper chamber taper to permit nesting. If the cup is tipped, it rests on two of three of: the two feet and the base of the measuring column, and a point on a lower perimeter of the upper chamber, such that fluid will not spill.
Claims
1. A cup comprising: an upper chamber open at the top of the cup; two sample-directing chambers fluidly connected to the upper chamber; a measuring chamber fluidly connected to the sample-directing chambers; wherein the sample-directing chambers and the measuring chamber each comprise a base and wherein the cup rests level supported by the bases, when on a horizontal surface; wherein each sample-directing chamber is substantially in the form of a channel, comprising a sloped bottom leading into the measuring chamber; wherein, each sample-directing chamber comprises a top open to the upper chamber; wherein, when the cup is on a horizontal surface, a fluid placed in the upper chamber flows under gravity into at least one of the sample-directing chambers and thence to the measuring chamber; wherein a base of the upper chamber is sloped towards one or more sample-directing chambers.
2. The cup of claim 1, wherein: the cup comprises exactly two sample-directing chambers.
3. The cup of claim 1, wherein: when the cup is on a horizontal surface, gravity causes fluid to flow freely from the upper chamber, via the sample-directing chambers, into the measuring chamber.
4. The cup of claim 1 further comprising: a graduated scale adapted such that the graduated scale indicates a quantity of fluid in the cup, up to a predetermined maximum measurable fluid volume.
5. The cup of claim 1 further comprising: a visually distinct mark at a predetermined threshold volume on the measuring chamber.
6. The cup of claim 5 wherein: the shape of the cup is adapted such that, if the cup is resting on its side, fluid in the cup less than or equal to the threshold volume will not spill from the cup.
7. The cup of claim 1 further comprising: a pouring spout located on a rim of the cup above the measuring chamber.
8. The cup of claim 1 comprising: a first cup and a second identical cup, wherein; the upper chamber, each sample-directing chamber, and the measuring chamber are tapered such that the second identical cup nests inside of the first cup; and wherein the first cup and the second identical cup are monolithic.
9. The cup of claim 1 further comprising: an upper chamber curved lower perimeter forming a boundary between a side of the upper chamber and a base of the upper chamber; wherein the cup is adapted such that when the cup is placed on its side on a horizontal surface that the cup rolls so that it resting on three points exactly: (i) one point of the upper chamber curved lower perimeter, and (ii) two out of three of: two bases of the sample-directing chambers and the base of the measuring chamber; and wherein the cup is adapted such that when the cup is placed on its side on a horizontal surface that any fluid in the cup, up to a predetermined non-spilling volume, does not spill from the cup.
10. The cup of claim 1 further comprising: an enzyme on the inside of the cup.
11. The cup of claim 1 further comprising: a shared side of the measuring chamber that is also a portion of a side of the cup.
12. The cup of claim 11 further comprising: a fluid volume measuring graduated scale on the shared side of the measuring chamber.
13. The cup of claim 1 wherein: the cup is adapted such that for a first volume of fluid between a predetermined low volume and a predetermined high volume the fluid occupies a portion of the measuring chamber and a portion of both sample-directing channels, and wherein fluid levels in the cup between the predetermined low volume and a predetermined maximum measurable volume are measurable using a graduated scale on the cup.
14. The cup of claim 1 comprising: a first cup and a second identical cup, wherein; a shape of the each sample-directing chamber and a shape of the each base of the each sample-directing chamber are adapted such that when the first cup is nested inside the second identical cup the base of the each sample-directing chamber in the first cup nests inside the each sample-directing chamber of the second identical cup; wherein the first cup and the second identical cup are monolithic.
15. The cup of claim 1 wherein: the entire cup fits within a circular cylinder and the inside diameter of the cylinder is the same as the outside diameter of the top of the upper chamber.
16. A method of measuring semen using the cup of claim 1 comprising the steps: (a) placing the cup on a horizontal surface such that it is resting on its bases; (b) placing a first quantity of semen in the upper chamber; (c) waiting for at least a portion of the first quantity of semen to flow via the sample-directing chambers into the measuring chamber; (d) reading the at least a portion of the first quantity of semen from a scale on the measuring chamber.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(8) All Figures and descriptions are non-limiting embodiments and exemplary scenarios.
(9) Turning first to
(10)
(11) Turning now to
(12) Turning now to
(13) Turning now to
(14) Turning now to
(15) Turning now to
(16) In some embodiments, one of the resting points may be either the bottom of the measuring chamber or a foot or base connected to the measuring chamber.
(17) Four or more support points may be used in other embodiments. More than two sample-directing channels may be in other embodiments. Although these Figures show sharp-cornered elements or features, any portion of the entire cup may have smooth contours between elements, or be a more organic shape in part or overall. The sample-directing channels may be shallow and may be curved. There may be recesses in the base of the upper chamber.
(18) Turning now to
(19) Embodiments nest. That is, the upper chambers nest, the sample-directing channels nest, and the measuring chambers nests. In one embodiment the feet or base of the sample-directing channels in the upper cup rest on the bottom of the sample-directing channels in the lower cup. This permits two nested cups to occupy a total height that is no more than 1.3, 1.25, 1.15, 1.10 or 1.05 times the height of a single cup.
(20) Note that a funnel shape with supporting feet will not fully nest. A novelty of embodiments is that the cups nest and are monolithic. In addition, a funnel shape does not have a measuring chamber at the side where it is easily readable.
(21) A summary of features available in one embodiment, not available all at once in the prior art, are: large opening in the upper, or receiving chamber; narrow measurement chamber; tapered so fluid flows without aid to the measurement chamber; three points of support; fully nesting (including measurement chamber); monolithic, easy to read with a graduation scale that is part of or flush with the outside surface of the cup; a single preferred volume indication mark, and does not spill if tipped.
(22) The cup may be manufactured inexpensively out of plastic so that it is appropriate to cost-sensitive applications, such as consumer or disposable use. Appropriate materials are: polypropylene plastic, specifically polypropylene random copolymer. Alternative transparent or semi-transparent plastics include polyethylene, polystyrene, PMMA (Acrylic), polycarbonate (Lexan), PET, PETG, PLA, ABS, Polymethylpentane (TPX), or PVC.
(23) Ideal, Ideally, Optimum and PreferredUse of the words, ideal, ideally, optimum, optimum, should and preferred, when used in the context of describing this invention, refer specifically a best mode for one or more embodiments for one or more applications of this invention. Such best modes are non-limiting, and may not be the best mode for all embodiments, applications, or implementation technologies, as one trained in the art will appreciate.
(24) All examples are sample embodiments. In particular, the phrase invention should be interpreted under all conditions to mean, an embodiment of this invention. Examples, scenarios, and drawings are non-limiting. The only limitations of this invention are in the claims.
(25) All numerical ranges in the specification are non-limiting examples only. Embodiments of this invention explicitly include all combinations and sub-combinations of: all features, elements, examples and limitations of all claims, text and figures. Embodiments of this invention explicitly include devices and systems to implement any combination of all methods described in the claims, specification and drawings. Embodiments of the methods of invention explicitly include all combinations of dependent method claim steps, in any functional order. Embodiments of the methods of invention explicitly include, when referencing any device claim, a substitution thereof to any and all other device claims, including all combinations of elements in device claims.