Liquid Flow Formation Method and Object Moving Method Using Same
20220370977 · 2022-11-24
Assignee
Inventors
- Takahiro Kenmotsu (Kyotanabe-shi, Kyoto, JP)
- Kenichi Yoshikawa (Kyotanabe-shi, Kyoto, JP)
- Satoshi Takatori (Kyotanabe-shi, Kyoto, JP)
- Mayu Shono (Kyotanabe-shi, Kyoto, JP)
Cpc classification
B01J19/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B82Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B82Y40/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01J19/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B82Y15/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The present disclosure provides a method for forming a liquid flow in a surface region of a liquid, and a method for moving a larger object in a non-contact and non-invasive manner.
Claims
1. A method for forming a liquid flow in a surface region of a liquid, the method comprising irradiating a specific surface region of the liquid which contains fine particles dispersed therein with laser beams of which fluxes are parallel such that a temperature of the specific surface region of the liquid is high relative to that of a temperature of other surface region of the liquid around the specific surface region so as to form a temperature gradient between both of the surface regions of the liquid.
2. The method for forming the liquid flow according to claim 1, wherein the specific surface region of the liquid which contains the dispersed fine particles is directly irradiated with the laser beams.
3. The method for forming the liquid flow according to claim 1, wherein the specific surface region of the liquid which contains the dispersed fine particles is indirectly irradiated with the laser beams through a wall member of a container in which the liquid is charged.
4. The method for forming the liquid flow according to claim 3, wherein irradiation of the laser beams is performed such that the laser beams are totally reflected at a gas-liquid interface.
5. The method for forming the liquid flow according to claim 1, wherein the fine particles are gold nanoparticles.
6. The method for forming the liquid flow according to claim 5, wherein a length based average diameter of the fine particles is 1 nm to 100 nm.
7. The method for forming the liquid flow according to claim 6, wherein the liquid which contains the fine particles has a maximum absorption coefficient at a wavelength within a range of a wavelength of the laser beams used ±40 nm.
8. The method for forming the liquid flow according to claim 7, wherein the liquid contains the fine particles in a content of 0.5×10.sup.−8% by mass to 10.0×10.sup.−8 by mass.
9. The method for forming the liquid flow according to claim 8, wherein the liquid which contains the fine particle has an absorption coefficient of 9.5×10.sup.8 M.sup.−1 cm.sup.−1 to 14×10.sup.8 M.sup.−1 cm.sup.−1.
10. The method for forming the liquid flow according to claim 1, wherein the liquid which contains the fine particles is contained in a microchip as a container.
11. The method for forming the liquid flow according to claim 10, wherein the microchip is a biochip, a tissue chip or an in vitro human model.
12. A method for moving an object, the method comprising forming the liquid flow in the surface region of the liquid according to the method of claim 1, wherein while the object is floated on and/or inside of the surface region of the liquid, the surface region where the object is floated or a surface region in the vicinity of the former surface region is irradiated with the laser beams as the specific surface region, thereby forming the liquid flow, on which the object is moved.
13. The method for moving the object according to claim 12, wherein the object is afloat on the liquid.
14. The method for moving an object according to claim 13, wherein the object is present inside of the surface region of the liquid.
15. A device, the device comprising a container which includes a liquid containing fine particles, and a laser beam source emitting laser beams of which fluxes are parallel so as to irradiate a specific surface region of the liquid with the laser beams, so that a temperature of the specific surface region of the liquid is high relative to that of a temperature of other surface region of the liquid around the specific surface region so as to form a temperature gradient between both of the surface regions of the liquid.
16. The device according to claim 15, wherein the container comprises an end surface into which the laser beams from the laser beam source are injected and through which the laser beams pass.
17. The device according to claim 16, wherein the laser beams injected into the end surface pass through the end surface obliquely upward.
18. The device according to claim 17, wherein the laser beam source is configured such that the laser beams are reflected at a liquid surface after being injected.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
EMBODIMENTS TO CARRY OUT INVENTION
[0026] Hereinafter, the present inventions will be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings by taking specific embodiments as examples, but the present invention is not limited to such embodiments.
[0027] In one embodiment of the method for forming a liquid flow of the present invention, an intended specific surface region of the liquid is directly irradiated with the laser beams. In other embodiment, the laser beams are injected into the liquid in the container through a wall member (thus indirectly) of the container formed of a material that transmits the laser beams (a material that absorbs a small amount of the laser beam) so that the specific surface region is irradiated with the laser beams. This latter embodiment is applicable, for example, when the liquid is stored in the transparent container made of such material and the laser beams are made incident on the inside of the container through a channel wall from the outside of the transparent container. Therefore, the wall member of the channel has a property of transmitting laser beams, that is, the member is transparent to the laser beams.
[0028] In the method of the present invention, the liquid which contains the fine particles is not particularly limited, and may be any suitable liquid wherein an intended liquid flow is formed. In one embodiment, the liquid may be water or an aqueous solution in view of, for example, its stability, a magnitude of its surface tension and the like. Further, a gas phase adjacent to the surface region of the liquid may be of any suitable gas, and in one preferred embodiment, the gas phase may be of nitrogen, air or the like. For example, when a liquid is placed in the transparent container, the surface region exists on the liquid side of the interface between air and the liquid (the gas-liquid interface). In other embodiment, the method for forming the liquid flow as well as the method for moving the object using the same according to the present invention may be applied to, instead of the gas-liquid interface, a liquid-liquid interface, for example, an interface between for example water and an oil, an ordinary oil and a fluorine-based oil, or the like wherein the interface tension becomes large between them.
[0029] The fine particles contained in the liquid absorb at least a portion and preferably a larger proportion of the energy of the irradiated laser beams. The term “efficiently absorb” means that the liquid which contains the fine particles has a maximum beam absorption coefficient (for example, molar absorption coefficient) at or near a wavelength of the irradiated beams (preferably within the range of the irradiated beam wavelength ±40 nm, more preferably the irradiated beam wavelength ±25 nm, and for example the irradiated beam wavelength ±10 nm), Such liquid preferably contains, for example, so-called nanoparticles, particularly metal nanoparticles (for example, gold nanoparticles, silver nanoparticles, or the like). All of such fine particles are commercially available, and appropriate fine particles can be selected and dispersed in the intended liquid for use. In other embodiment, graphite particles or carbon nanotubes can be used as the fine particles.
[0030] The size of the fine particles is not particularly limited, but the fine particles can be used of which average particle size based on the length thereof is preferably 1 nm to 100 nm, more preferably 1 nm to 60 nm, particularly preferably 5 nm to 50 nm, and for example 10 nm to 15 nm. Such average particle size is generally suitable when the laser beams are used according to the present inventions. For example, when laser beams having a wavelength of 532 nm is used, such average particle size is particularly suitable. It is noted that when fine particles having a specifically larger size (larger particles having a diameter of, for example, about 5 μm to 50 μm) are contained, such particles may be ignored upon calculating the average particle size since such particles do not provide an adverse effect but they cannot be expected to function as the fine particles of the present invention.
[0031] In the method for forming the fluid flow of the present invention, the gold nanoparticles can be mentioned as a specific example of the fine particles that are preferably used by being dispersed in the liquid. For example, spherical gold nanoparticles (gold nanoparticles with a diameter of about 15 nm) can be used which are obtained by reducing chloroauric acid (HAuCl.sub.4) with citric acid in water. The gold nanoparticles used in the Examples described later were obtained by this method and had an average particle diameter of 15 nm. Agglomerations of the gold nanoparticles due to change in time were observed, and the larger nanoparticles were also included which had a particle diameter of about 30 μm. With such gold nanoparticles, the maximum absorption is observed in a wavelength region of 522±20 nm (that is, a wavelength showing the maximum absorption coefficient is 522±20 nm), and they efficiently absorb energy of the laser beams having a wavelength of 532 nm.
[0032] An amount (that is, a content) of the fine particles contained in the liquid is not particularly limited, but is generally 0.5×10.sup.−8% by mass to 10.0×10.sup.−8 by mass, and preferably 0.7×10.sup.−8% by mass to 6.0×10.sup.−8% by mass based on the mass of the liquid containing the fine particles. It is preferable to select the content of the fine particles so that the wavelength of the laser beams used matches or is close to the wavelength at which a large absorption coefficient and preferably the maximum absorption coefficient of the liquid is observed. These content ranges are applicable when using generally commercially available fine particles, especially also the metal nanoparticles. It is noted that when the content is too large, there may be a problem in that the fine particles aggregate and the beam energy is not absorbed as predetermined, and when it is too small, there may be a problem in that the beam energy is absorbed insufficiently.
[0033] The laser beams are not particularly limited, but it is preferable to use a laser that emits beams having a wavelength at which the liquid containing the dispersed fine particles efficiently absorbs the light beam energy. In other words, it is preferable to use, as a liquid containing dispersed fine particles which liquid efficiently absorbs light energy, a liquid having a large absorption coefficient, and preferably the maximum absorption coefficient at or near the wavelength of the beams emitted by the laser used. Therefore, since the absorption coefficient depends on kinds of the fine particles used (and thus a kind, size and content of the fine particles) and the liquid used, it is preferable to select an appropriate combination of the large absorption coefficient and the wavelength of the laser beams.
[0034] It is noted that the maximum absorption coefficient of the liquid can be obtained by preparing a sample of the dispersion liquid in which the fine particles of the kind and the content intended for use are contained in the liquid intended for use, and putting the sample in a cell of a device for the measurement of the absorption coefficients so as to obtain an absorption coefficient distribution. Based on the results thereof, a laser light is selected that emits beams having a wavelength at which the maximum absorption coefficient is observed or a wavelength in the vicinity of such wavelength. By selecting the kinds and the amounts of the liquid and the fine particles to be used, it is possible to determine the wavelength of the laser beams which are preferably used. Specifically, at the wavelength of the laser beams used (for example, 500 nm to 560 nm), the liquid containing the fine particles preferably shows an absorption coefficient of 1×10.sup.8 M.sup.−1 cm.sup.−1 or more. It more preferably shows an absorption coefficient of 9.5×10.sup.8 M.sup.−1 cm.sup.−1 to 14×10.sup.8 for example 12×10.sup.8 M.sup.−1 cm.sup.−1 to 14×10.sup.8 M.sup.−1 cm.sup.−1.
[0035] For example, when using a laser that emits green beams (wavelength: 532 nm), water can be used as the liquid in which gold nanoparticles that show the maximum absorption coefficient at 522 nm are dispersed at a content of 2.2×10.sup.−8% by mass (of which average particle size of the nanoparticles can be calculated from the wavelength at which the absorption coefficient shows a peak: about 15 nm). The water containing the gold nanoparticles shows an absorption coefficient of, for example, 13.8×10.sup.8 M.sup.−1 cm.sup.−1 at 522 nm (see the absorption coefficient distribution shown in
[0036] A power (output) of the laser can be appropriately selected in consideration of the type of liquid to be used, the type and an amount of the fine particles to be used, and the like. For example, a laser can be used which has a power range of 400 mW to 1000 mW and a beam diameter of 3 mm.
[0037] The term “surface region” means a region on the liquid side of the gas-liquid interface of the liquid which contains the fine particles, in which region the influence of the surface tension gradient caused by the irradiation of the laser beams actually occurs. The surface region depends on the conditions of the liquid, the fine particles, the laser beams and the like to be used, and it is generally intended to mean a liquid region present in an area of which depth is preferably up to 1500 μm, and more preferably up to 1000 μm from the gas-liquid interface.
[0038] In one preferred embodiment, the laser beams are injected through a wall member of the channel at an end surface of a transparent container such that an optical axis of the beams is parallel to and just below a liquid surface (specifically, at a depth within 3 mm from the liquid surface). In this case, the laser beams pass through the wall member of the end surface of the container and further pass just below the liquid surface, and the specific surface region of the liquid in the vicinity of the end surface becomes the hottest and the surface tension of that region becomes the lowest. As a result, a flow is generated in the surface region of the liquid toward the direction away from the end surface, and thus an amount of the liquid moves.
[0039] In a particularly preferred embodiment, the irradiation is performed such that the upper edge of the beam diameter region is located at a position which is deeper than the liquid surface by the millimeter order (for example, 1 mm to 1.5 mm) deeper, so that the upper edge of the beam diameter region (beam diameter of about 3 mm) does not directly touch the liquid surface.
[0040] Referring to
[0041] When the laser beams are made incident in this way, the surface region 18 adjacent to the end surface 16 (corresponding to the specific surface region) is locally heated by the fine particles present there which efficiently absorb the beam energy, so that a temperature gradient is formed between the region 18 and the unheated region (at a relatively low temperature) around the region 18, resulting in the formation of the corresponding surface tension gradient, whereby a rightward liquid flow is formed in the surface region (see arrow 20). As shown in the drawing, the shape of the gas-liquid interface is an elongated rectangle, and the region of the relatively low temperature in the surface region of the liquid is located substantially on the right side of the heated region 18 as can be seen from
[0042] In other preferred embodiment, the laser beams are injected through the wall member at the end surface of the container such that they pass through the liquid and travels diagonally toward the gas-liquid interface, that is, the optical axis of the beams is slanted (i.e., intersects) with respect to the liquid surface. In this case, the laser beams are irradiated such that the incident angle of the beams at the gas-liquid interface (that is, the angle formed by the optical axis of the beams and the vertical line at the gas-liquid interface) is equal to or larger than the critical angle. In this way, the beams passing through the liquid are totally reflected at the gas-liquid interface, and the irradiated beam energy is not emitted to the outside of the liquid at the reflection point, that is, not ejected into the gas phase, but reflected and travels through the liquid, which contributes to local heating of the surface region of the liquid near the reflection point (which region corresponds to the specific surface region). That is, the temperature of the specific surface region of the liquid in the vicinity of such reflection point is high relative to the surface region around the specific surface region. As a result, a liquid flow is formed in the surface region of the liquid from the reflection point toward its outward.
[0043] Reference is made to
[0044] In the above case, all the injected beams are reflected at the reflection point 24, and the fine particles existing in the surface region 26 (corresponding to the specific surface region) near the reflection point 24 absorb also the energy of the reflected beams, and are locally heated. That is, the surface region 26 can absorb the energies of both of the incident beams and the reflected beams. A temperature gradient is formed between the heated region 26 and the non-heated region (at a relatively low temperature) around the heated region, resulting in a surface tension gradient, which leads to the formation of a leftward liquid flow (see arrow 28) and a rightward liquid flow (see arrow 30).
[0045] In the illustrated embodiment, since the shape of the gas-liquid interface is an elongated rectangle as in the case of
[0046] The laser beams can enter through the wall member of the container which contains the liquid, so that they indirectly irradiate the specific surface region of the liquid as described above with reference to
[0047] As described above, in order to carry out the method for forming the fluid flow according to the present invention, it is sufficient that the liquid side of the interface between the liquid containing the fine particles and its adjacent gas phase, that is, the specific surface region of the liquid is locally irradiated, so that the specific surface region can be locally heated. The local irradiation means that only the specific surface region of the liquid is irradiated, and for example, collecting the laser beams on the specific surface region heats such region. Such method for forming the liquid flow can be used as a pump for moving an amount of the liquid in the sense of flowing the liquid.
[0048] In the method for forming the liquid flow according to the present invention, a flowing direction of the liquid can be switched by combining the method described with reference to
[0049] It is noted that as to switching of the liquid flow, the direct irradiation with the laser beams 32 and the direct irradiation with the laser beams 34 may be used to form the rightward liquid flow. It is of course possible to combine the indirect irradiation and the direct irradiation.
[0050] In one embodiment, first, as shown in
[0051] Therefore, the present invention also provides a method for moving an object by placing it on the liquid flow formed by the method for forming the liquid flow according to the present invention. That is, the method for moving the object of the present invention is characterized in that in the method for forming the liquid flow of the aspect according to the present invention, while the object to be moved is floated on the surface region of the liquid, such floated region of the surface region or a surface region of the liquid which is located near (for example, adjacent to) the floated region is irradiated as “the specific surface region of the liquid” with the laser beams so that the liquid flow is formed, whereby the floated object is moved on the formed liquid flow. It is noted that the “floated region” means a region where the object is present, and the region or a surface region of the liquid near (for example, adjacent to) such region is irradiated with the laser beams. In this case, the floated region or the surface region of the liquid in the vicinity of the floated region corresponds to the specific surface region of the liquid.
[0052] Such method for moving the object of the present invention may be used in the case in which a liquid containing fine particles is contained in a microspace (such as a microchannel) of a microchip wherein a predetermined portion of the microspace (corresponding to the specific surface region of the liquid) is irradiated with laser beams so as to form a liquid flow, and an object is floated on the liquid flow so as to move the object. For example, the method for moving the object of the present invention can be used as a method for operating a microchip in which a specific surface region of a liquid containing a predetermined object(s) (for example, an antigen) is irradiated with the laser beams to form a liquid flow on which the object is placed and moved. Furthermore, since the antigen can be bound to an antibody incorporated in the microchip by such being moved, the method for moving of the present invention can be used for an analysis method using the microchip.
[0053] In the method for moving of the present invention, the object is to be placed on the formed liquid flow, and the object can be placed at the starting of the liquid flow (on the specific surface region of the liquid to be irradiated with the laser beams) or in middle of the liquid flow (other liquid flow that is resulted one after another from the movement of the liquid flow in the specific surface region formed by the irradiation of the laser beams). In the former case, the floated region of the object corresponds to the specific surface region. In the latter case, the floated region of the object is located near (including adjacent) the specific surface region of the liquid, in which case the object floated on the surface region of the liquid is located in the vicinity of the specific surface region of the liquid away from that region toward a direction along which the object is to be moved. In order that the object is floated on the liquid flow, it is necessary to float the object without being excessive away from the specific surface region.
[0054] Next, the specific surface region 52 is irradiated with the laser beams 56 from a lower incident position than that of the laser beams 42 at the end surface 16 such that the incident angle is 8 (theta) at the reflection point 50 just right side of the object 48′ and the beams are totally reflected at the reflection point. As a result, the fine particles contained in the specific surface region 52 absorb the beam energy and the region becomes relatively high in its temperature, and the surface tension thereof becomes relatively small, so that a leftward liquid flow (arrow 54) is formed. As a result, the object 48′ floated in the specific surface region 52 on the left side of the reflection point 50 moves leftward.
[0055] In
[0056] In the method for forming the liquid flow according to the present invention, since the flow of an amount of the liquid itself is formed, a relatively larger object can be moved. Specifically, the object to be floated on the liquid surface may have a size of the order from micrometers to millimeters, and for example, a plastic sheet piece having a size of 2 mm×2 mm (thickness 1 μm to 1 mm) can be moved.
[0057] In one embodiment, when various treatments of cells or the like are performed in the field of life science, the cells or the like can be treated as an object in the method of the present invention, and the liquid of the present invention containing the cells or the like is moved in a microchannel. A treatment necessary for the cells and the like can be performed during such movement. For example, the method of moving the object of the present invention can be used in the case of analysis using a microchip in which a sample is moved to a predetermined place in a microchannel of the microchip and processed there in order to react the sample with a specific reagent.
[0058] In other embodiment, the method for forming a liquid flow of the present invention can be used for sieving a mixture containing substances having various sizes. Specifically, as shown in
[0059] A plurality of meshes are arranged in middle of the liquid flow (arrow 20) in the transparent container such that the flow passes through the meshes of which mesh openings become stepwise smaller. Since the mesh opening through which the substance can pass has been predetermined depending on the size of the substance, the mixture of the substances can be sieved into substance size portions based on the mesh sizes.
Example 1
[0060] Water which contained gold nanoparticles as the fine particles was charged, as the liquid 10, in a rectangular parallelepiped transparent glass container 12 (8 mm (width)×100 mm (length)×18 mm (height), end surface size: 8 mm×13 mm). It is noted that the container was an open container without a lid, and the water depth was 13 mm. The transparent container was made of glass sheets having a thickness of 2 mm.
[0061] The water contained 2.2×10.sup.−8% by mass of the gold nanoparticles (length-based average particle diameter: 15 nm). The absorption coefficients of such gold nanoparticles were measured using a UV-vis device, and the measured results are shown in
[0062] As shown in
[0063] As a result, as shown in
Example 2
[0064] Similarly to Example 1, the water containing the gold nanoparticles was supplied in the container. Then, as shown in
[0065] As a result, as shown in
Example 3
[0066] Similarly to
[0067] In the same manner as in Example 2, the laser beams 61 were obliquely injected through the end surface 16 such that they were totally reflected at the reflection point 62 which is immediately on the right side of the plastic sheet 60. The incident angle θ was 84°. As a result, the temperature in the region near the reflection point 62 was increased and the surface tension of that region became smaller than that of the other region around the former region, so that a leftward liquid flow was formed as shown with the arrow 64 and thereby the plastic sheet 60 was moved to the left. The travel distance of the plastic sheet 60 in 20 seconds was about 7 mm.
[0068] Next, as shown in
[0069] The above results mean that the flow direction of the liquid flow can be changed, that is, switched. By utilizing this, it becomes possible to form a liquid flow in a desired flow direction by the laser beams so as to move the object.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
[0070] As clearly seen from the above descriptions, in the method for forming the liquid flow according to the present invention, the liquid flow can be formed by irradiating the specific surface region of the liquid contained in the transparent container with the laser beams. Furthermore, forming such liquid flow means that an amount of the liquid can be moved as predetermined in the transparent container. By utilizing this, an amount of the liquid contained in the transparent container can be moved to be treated as necessary, and after the treatment, the liquid flow can be formed by irradiating the laser beams again to move an amount of the liquid in a non-contact manner as required. For example, in the field of the life science, it is necessary to move a very small amount of a sample in order to appropriately process the sample. When the sample is placed on the liquid flow formed by the method for forming the liquid flow according to the present invention, the sample can be easily moved.
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
[0071] 10 . . . fine particle containing liquid [0072] 12 . . . container [0073] 14 . . . laser beams [0074] 16 . . . end surface of container [0075] 18 . . . specific surface region [0076] 20 . . . liquid flow direction [0077] 22 . . . gas-liquid interface [0078] 24 . . . reflection point [0079] 26 . . . specific surface region [0080] 28 . . . liquid flow direction [0081] 30 . . . liquid flow direction [0082] 32, 34 . . . direct irradiated laser beams [0083] 40 . . . gas-liquid interface (or liquid surface) [0084] 42 . . . laser beams [0085] 44 . . . specific surface region [0086] 46 . . . liquid flow direction [0087] 48, 48′ . . . object [0088] 50 . . . reflection point [0089] 52 . . . specific surface region [0090] 54 . . . liquid flow direction [0091] 56 . . . laser beams [0092] 60 . . . object [0093] 61 . . . laser beams [0094] 62 . . . reflection point [0095] 64 . . . liquid flow direction [0096] 66 . . . laser beams [0097] 68 . . . reflection point [0098] 70 . . . liquid flow direction