Droplet-based microfluidic rheometer system
10845284 ยท 2020-11-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
B01L3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01N35/00
PHYSICS
Abstract
A droplet-based microfluidic rheometer system and method of use for real-time viscosity monitoring of blood coagulation is disclosed. Droplets of blood samples are generated in a microfluidic rheometer, and the size of the droplets is highly correlated to the sample viscosity. The size of the droplets can be determined optically using an inverted light microscope and a camera or using electrodes. The microfluidic rheometer systems provides viscosity measurements in less than a second and consumes less than 1{umlaut over (.Math.)} blood or plasma over an hour period. The viscosity measurements may be displayed and transmitted to the Internet or cloud storage.
Claims
1. A method of using a microfluidic rheometer system comprising: filling an oil container with oil; plugging an oil supply line connected to the oil container into a microfluidic rheometer; allowing the microfluidic rheometer to fill with oil; filling an aqueous container with blood; plugging an aqueous supply line connected to the aqueous container into the microfluidic rheometer; mixing the oil and the blood or plasma from the blood to form droplets; determining the length of the droplets; calculating the viscosity of the blood or plasma based on the length of the droplets using a calibration curve relating the length of the droplets to the viscosity.
2. The method of using a microfluidic rheometer system of claim 1, and at least one of: determining the length of the droplets optically, and determining the length of the droplets using electrodes.
3. The method of using a microfluidic rheometer system of claim 2, and: determining the length of the droplets optically using an inverted light microscope and a camera to record droplet generation at a downstream channel of the microfluidic rheometer and measuring the size of the droplets using an image analysis software.
4. The method of using a microfluidic rheometer system of claim 2, and: determining the length of the droplets using electrodes includes the electrodes receiving a peak signal when a droplet passes the electrodes, the electrodes sending a signal to a data collection/readout device through a converter, and a development environment program of the data/collection readout device calculating the size of the droplets.
5. The method of using a microfluidic rheometer system of claim 1, and using the calibration curve includes calculating the calibration curve by putting water and glycerol solutions into the microfluidic rheometer.
6. The method of using a microfluidic rheometer system of claim 1, and at least one of: using 1 l or less of blood or plasma to determine blood or plasma viscosity during an hour of continuous measurement, transmitting the viscosity of the blood or plasma to cloud storage or the Internet, and optimizing the microfluidic rheometer by changing device geometry, oil viscosity, feeding pressure, or shear stress of the oil or blood or plasma.
7. The method of using a microfluidic rheometer system of claim 2, and inputting at least one of oil type, oil supply line feeding pressure, shear stress, or aqueous supply line feeding pressure into a development environment program.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) While the specification concludes with claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming the subject matter that is regarded as the present disclosure, it is believed that the disclosure will be more fully understood from the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. Some of the figures may have been simplified by the omission of selected elements for the purpose of more clearly showing other elements. Such omissions of elements in some figures are not necessarily indicative of the presence or absence of particular elements in any of the exemplary embodiments, except as may be explicitly delineated in the corresponding written description. None of the drawings are necessarily to scale.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(8) Referring to the figures in detail,
(9) The microfluidic rheometer 10 may be fabricated from glass wafers using traditional techniques. The glass rheometer 10 may include a first glass wafer that is fabricated to have patterned channels and a second glass wafer that has oil and aqueous inlet holes drilled into it. The two glass wafers may be coated to achieve hydrophobicity (discussed further below) and aligned and bonded. Inlet ports for the aqueous supply line 14 and oil supply line 18 may be created by gluing shoulder washers on top of the desired holes. The aqueous supply line 14 and oil supply line 18 may be PTFE tubes having an inner diameter of 0.022 inches. Pressures at the inlet ports may be measured using a digital pressure gauge.
(10) The microfluidic rheometer system 2 is expected to find wide spread use in hospital and clinics including but not limited to outpatient anticoagulation clinics, general medicine and surgical clinics, cardiac surgery units, various intensive-care units, dialysis units, blood banks, trauma center and emergency rooms. The information provided will help health care providers make rapid decision regarding disease states, disease trajectories, transfusion and blood component utilization decisions, medication and dosage administration decisions, surgical decisions, and more. These health care providers will include Emergency Physicians, Hematologists, Intensivists, Surgeons, Blood Bankers, Diabetologists, Cardiologists, Anesthesiologists, Rheumatologists, Pharmacists, and many other medical and surgical subspecialists for both adult and pediatric patients. The information provided may help reduce the need for blood transfusion, provide personalized and precision medication management for patients at risk for either thrombosis or coagulopathy, and guide general inflammatory and autoimmune disease management.
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(12) The walls of the constriction 124 and the downstream channel 126 must have sufficient hydrophobicity in order to prevent the droplet size from changing over time. If the walls do not have sufficient hydrophobicity and residuals of the aqueous solutions adhere to the walls, the aqueous residuals may change the hydrophobicity of the walls and result in inconsistency in droplet size over time. For example, in some embodiments, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) may coat the walls of the constriction 124 and the downstream channel 126 to provide sufficient hydrophobicity. In other examples, 2 m of parylene-C may coat the walls of the constriction 124 and the downstream channel 126 to provided sufficient hydrophobicity.
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(14) Optionally, the calibration curve is input into a LABVIEW or similar development environment program so that the viscosity of the blood or plasma is automatically calculated and displayed. The information may further be transmitted to the Internet or cloud storage to enable a doctor to check in on a patient and to support big data analytic studies on blood clotting disorders. The total blood or plasma consumption of the rheometer for one-hour continuous measurement is typically less than 1 l.
(15) The platform may include multiple channels for multiplex testing of blood or plasma, allowing specific coagulation or inflammatory disorders to be more precisely defined. Using this strategy, channels may be pre-coated with various pro or anticoagulants or various pro and antiinflammatory agents which interact with either the cellular (red cell, white cell, platelet) component of blood or the acellular (protein) component. Alternatively, mixing chambers can be created which allow blood or plasma to be mixed with these agents prior to or after oil emulsification.
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EXAMPLES
Example 1
(18) The relationship between the length of droplets and the ratio of aqueous-inlet to oil-inlet pressure (AIP/OIP) in the microfluidic rheometer system of the present disclosure was studied empirically. Glycerol and deionized water solutions with varying glycerol mass fraction were prepared for viscometer calibration. Light mineral oil with 5 wt % ABIL EM 90 and heavy mineral oil with 5 wt % ABIL EM 90 were prepared and used as the continuous phase for droplet generation. The cell culture medium contained M9 minimal medium with 36 g/l glucose (2 mM MgSO4, 0.1 mM CaCl2, 33.7 mM Na2HPO4, 22 mM KH2PO4, 8.55 mM NaCl, 9.35 mM NH4C1, 3.6% glucose). Blood serum and blood plasma were Prepared from whole blood using standard protocols. Boger fluid (i.e., constant viscosity elastic fluid) was prepared by dissolving 8000 ppm polyethylene glycol in 78% glycerol solution. The viscosities of all aqueous solutions and oil/surfactant mixtures at 25 C. were measured on a cone-and-plate rheometer. The droplet-based microfluidic viscometer was used to measure the glycerol/water solutions. After connecting the oil reservoir to the chip, pressure was applied to the oil inlet to fill the channels with oil. Then, the aqueous sample was fed into the device and droplets were generated. Recordings and measurement were made after droplet generation become steady (typically in less than 1 minute). The image stacks were analyzed using ImageJ to measure the length and speed of the droplets, the spacing between two droplets and the generation time for one droplet.
(19) The results showed that the length of the droplets (L.sub.d) is highly correlated to the aqueous-phase viscosity (.sub.aq) at high ratios of aqueous-inlet to oil-inlet pressure (AIP/OIP), yielding a linear relationship between .sub.aq and 1/(L.sub.d-L.sub.c) where L.sub.c is the minimal obtainable droplet length. Theoretical analysis verifies this linear relationship, and the resulting equations can be used to optimize the device geometry (i.e., channel widths, depths and lengths). The applicable range of viscosity measurements depends on the oil-phase viscosity (.sub.oil), and viscosities within the range of 0.01oil to 10oil can be measured reliably with less than 5% error.
Example 2
(20) The lengths of droplets were measured when different volumes of aqueous solution (aq=72.5 cP) were pipetted into the device. All measurements were conducted at OIP=3.17 psi and AIP/OIP=0.65.
(21) As shown in
Example 3
(22) The relationship between oil-inlet pressure (OIP), device geometry, and flow rate was studied empirically to assist with design considerations of the microfluidic rheometer system of the present disclosure. Data was collected, shown below, on a total of eight rheometer systems with different geometries using two different oil viscosities and four different OIPs.
(23) TABLE-US-00001 oil Device h w1 w2 w3 L3 viscosity # (m) (m) (m) (m) (m) (cP) 1 5 15 25 25 8000 37 2 22.5 47.5 55 55 8000 37 3 22.5 47.5 55 55 8000 147 4 22.5 47.5 55 55 4000 37 5 41 74 82.5 82.5 8000 37 6 44 80 88 88 8000 147 7 60 94 111 111 8000 37 8 175 230 230 230 8000 37
Based on this data, a relationship between OIP, device geometry, and flow rate was determined. Assuming w is the width of the channels, which are comparable in width, h is the channel depth, and Q.sub.tot is the total flow rate, the relationship is:
OIP=(.sub.oi1Q.sub.tot)/(10.8wh.sup.3)
(24) This equation is applied in the table below.
(25) TABLE-US-00002 Device # OIP (psi) .sub.oilQ.sub.tot/(wh.sup.3) (cP/m) 1 3.2 28.9 1 15.8 172.5 2 1.7 13.1 2 3.2 28.7 2 6.1 62.2 2 9.3 97.7 3 3.2 33.6 3 6.1 67.4 3 9.3 107.5 4 1.6 14.0 5 3.2 24.4 6 3.2 25.3 6 3.2 26.1 7 3.2 24.1 8 1.0 9.9
(26) The empirical data closely matches the equation, as shown in
(27) Accordingly, OIP=(.sub.oilQ.sub.tot)/(10.8wh.sup.3) can be considered a valid equation for a wide range of device geometry, oil viscosity, and operating pressures.