Sheath flow methods
09649803 ยท 2017-05-16
Assignee
Inventors
- David R. Mott (Burke, VA, US)
- Peter B. Howell, Jr. (Gaithersburg, MD, US)
- Frances S. Ligler (Fuquay Varina, NC, US)
- Stephanie Fertig (Springfield, VA, US)
- Aron Bobrowski (Miami, FL, US)
Cpc classification
Y10T137/0329
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B01L3/5027
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T137/0335
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B29C48/21
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/345
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/2556
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T137/0318
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T137/0324
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T29/49
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B01L2400/0487
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C48/13
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L3/502776
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2400/084
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A sheath flow system having a channel with at least one fluid transporting structure located in the top and bottom surfaces situated so as to transport the sheath fluid laterally across the channel to provide sheath fluid fully surrounding the core solution. At the point of introduction into the channel, the sheath fluid and core solutions flow side by side within the channel or the core solution may be bounded on either side by the sheath fluid. The system is functional over a broad channel size range and with liquids of high or low viscosity. The design can be readily incorporated into microfluidic chips without the need for special manufacturing protocols. Uses include extruding materials and/or fabricating structures.
Claims
1. A method for extruding materials, comprising: providing a channel having a proximal end and a distal end, said channel having opposed facing top and bottom surfaces, said channel having at least one first fluid transporting structure across said channel located on said top surface and at least one second fluid transporting structure across said channel located on said bottom surface, said first and second fluid transporting structures being located between said proximal and said distal end and on said opposing faces surfaces, facing one another across the channel; introducing a sheath stream and a core stream at said proximal end of said channel, said sheath and core streams flowing down said channel side by side towards said distal end, wherein said fluid transporting structures transport said sheath stream across said top and bottom surfaces of said channel to surround said core stream, wherein said sheath stream controls the size and shape of said core stream, wherein said core stream is extruded from said distal end of said channel.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the core stream comprises a polymerizable, condensable, cross-linkable or crystalizable material.
3. The method of claim 1, further comprising introducing at least a second sheath stream to create an output of multiple concentric layered streams.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(20) In the present device and method, the core stream and one or more sheath streams are introduced into a single channel. One or more fluid transporting structures located at the top and bottom of the channel direct the sheath fluid around the core stream, separating the core stream from the walls of the channel. Once the position of the core stream is established in the interior of the channel, it remains in that position due to laminar flow.
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(22) The device can be readily fabricated using a variety of techniques, including molding, milling, laser ablation, soft lithography techniques and other fabrication techniques known to those skilled in the art. Any material that can be machined or molded into the appropriate shapes can be used. The current techniques used in the mass production of microfluidic components can be easily adapted to the production of this sheath flow design.
(23) The exact shape of the channel is not critical. For example,
(24) The upper limit for the channel width is set by the Reynolds number of the system. The device shown in
(25) The channel has at least two inlets at or near its proximal end. The inlets are used to introduce a sheath stream and a core stream into the channel. The size and exact location of the inlets are not important, provided that the fluid transporting structure in the channel is located downstream from the inlets.
(26) The at least one fluid transporting structure is typically a groove or a ridge located inside the channel. The structure transports the sheath stream laterally across the channel and around the core stream, separating the core stream from the walls of the channel. Once the position of the core stream is established in the interior of the channel, it remains in that position due to laminar flow. The angle of the fluid transporting structure across the channel is not critical to the design.
(27) The number and depth of the fluid transporting structures are design parameters that also can be adjusted to suit particular applications. A single structure located on the top and bottom of the channel will provide for a full sheath around the core stream. The grooves do not have to be aligned in order for the device and method to operate. Increasing the number of fluid transporting structures provides control over the lateral position of the core within the channel. Increasing the size of the fluid transporting structures correlates with a more effective transport of the sheath stream across the channel. Preferably, the fluid transporting structures penetrate the wall of the channel on the downstream end.
Example
(28) The number of grooves can be used to control the position of the core within the channel.
(29) The fluid transporting structures may also be used in a cross configuration when sheath solution is provided from both sides by a third inlet.
(30) Further, the fluid transporting structures located on the top and bottom of the channel may be configured in a shape that crosses the channel having a central area that is distal to its ends, as show in
Example
(31) A microfluidic chip was made using a Techno-isel CNC milling router (Techno Inc., New Hyde Park, N.Y.) in poly(methylmethacrylate) (PMMA) (Plexiglas G, Atofina Chemical Inc., Philadelphia, Pa.) via a method described by Howell, et al, Lab on a Chip 2005, 5, 524-530, Howell, et al, Lab on a Chip 2004, 4, 663-669, and Mott, et al, Lab on a Chip 2006, 6, 540-549, all incorporated in full herein by reference. The main channel was 3.18 mm wide by 1.02 mm deep. The grooves were 0.794 mm wide by 0.51 mm deep, and placed in pairs on both the top and bottom of the channel. A 70% fructose solution was used as core and the sheath solutions to ensure that the flow within the channel stayed in the Stokes regime. The sheath stream was labeled with fluorescent dye (Rhodamine W T, Bright Dyes, Miamisburg, Ohio). Channel cross-sections downstream of the grooves were obtained via a method described previously by Howell, P. B. et al, Lab on a Chip 2005, 5, 524-530 and Mott, et al, Lab on a Chip 2006, 6, 540-549, both incorporated in full herein by reference.
(32) The relative flow rate of the two streams can be widely varied without compromising the integrity of the sheath.
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(34) The diameters of the sheath and core can vary widely depending on the intended use of the device.
(35) Using specific variations in the pattern of grooves, the exact location of the core stream can be also be moved across the channel. The capacity either to separate the walls of the channel from the core fluid using a minimum of sheath fluid or to focus the core fluid in a well defined region within the channel are significant advantages of the sheath flow device and method.
(36) Furthermore, the relative flow rates of the core and sheath can be changed at will and the diameter of the core can be varied in real time if the application warrants, with no need to alter the device itself. As shown in the data in Table 1, the sheathing process remains unperturbed, even at sheath/core ratios over 40,000.
(37) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Reynolds Sheath Sheath Core Core Diameter Ratio of Number Flow Rate Diameter Flow Rate Calculated Measured Core/Sheath 0.0008 21 mL/min 3 mm 10 L/min 45 microns 75 microns 2,100 0.0008 21 mL/min 3 mm 1 L/min 4.5 microns 25 microns 21,000 0.0016 42 mL/min 3 mm 1 L/min 3 microns 16 microns 42,000
(38) The actual size of the core can be changed relative to the size of the channel by simply altering the relative flow rates of the core and sheath streams. Furthermore, this change can be effected in real time. Unlike nozzle system traditionally used for flow cytometry or extrusion, there is no need to go to smaller and smaller nozzles which may result in clogging problems, higher back pressures, and reduced output. In previous designs, the core solution must pass through a nozzle or other constriction to enter the flow. This presents a potential clogging point, for the solution containing the cells or other particles to be analyzed. Under the present design, channels can be of uniform size to avoid constrictions and potential clogging points.
(39) Using the device and method described herein, microdialysis could be accomplished without a membrane. The core stream is recaptured after it is exposed by sheathing to the sheath stream. This exposure provides for the removal of low molecular weight molecules by diffusion across the interface of the core stream and the sheath stream. The ability to conduct microdialysis without a membrane prolongs the life of the system. Current microdialysis systems operate for limited lifetimes due to the potential for membrane clogging. Additionally, separations based on differential solubility as well as differential size can be provided by the device and method described herein. For example, a whole blood sample could be sheathed into the center of the channel, and allowed to flow for sufficient distance for small molecules to diffuse outward from the core into the sheath. Cells and larger molecules such as proteins will not diffuse as quickly and will tend to stay in the core. The core would then be unsheathed and recovered, with the smaller molecules removed.
(40) The device and method are useful as a means of protecting conduits, including but not limited to, pipes, tubes, ducts, tubing, capillaries, and microfluidic channels, from fouling or corrosion. A thin sheath stream of protective material is formed around the core stream. The sheath stream need not be the same viscosity as the core stream, therefore a relatively slow moving and thin protective sheath coating can be formed to protect the insides of conduits exposed to corrosive core stream solutions.
(41) The device and methods described herein can also be used to reduce the power requirement for transporting viscous fluids in conduits, including but not limited to, ducts, pipes, tubes, tubing, capillaries, and microfluidic channels. Sheathing a viscous fluid in a second fluid of lower viscosity reduces the sheer stress at the conduit wall which lowers the pressure drop required to generate a given flow rate. The sheath flow component has been used to generate such a flow, in which a core and a sheath stream of differing viscosity initially enter the device side-by-side and the lower viscosity sheath stream sheaths the higher viscosity core stream.
(42) The relatively low flow resistance of the device means that it can be used to sheath quite high-viscosity systems. This is useful in food and polymer extrusion applications. The device and method is further useful in the synthesis of specialty polymeric filaments and tubes. Unlike standard extrusion technologies, filaments with continuously varying diameter can be created. Filaments made in this way can be expected to have increased elasticity over extruded filaments because of the native entropy of the polymer chains. The exact design may also be altered to change the cross-sectional shape of the resulting polymer strand. Since the extrusion device is small, inexpensive, and essentially operates as a passive component, many devices can be fabricated to perform in parallel, such as an array.
(43) The device and methods described are also useful as liquid waveguides. Liquid waveguides have been described for monitoring chemical processes in which light is guided in fluid in a capillary or in the walls of a capillary in order to measure some component of the fluid. The device and method can be used for guiding the light in either the core stream or sheath stream for similar measurements, but with the capability for more exact focusing, much greater control of the relative dimensions of the light guiding fluid and the other fluid, and the avoidance of wall effects such as scattering of the light from the core by the capillary wall. The capability of guiding light in fluids is particularly useful in microfluidic systems.
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(45) Core and sheath streams are introduced into the structure at the inlets. The core and sheath streams have approximately equivalent densities. The core stream is 70% fructose. The sheath stream is a saturated salt solution with enough fructose added to match the density of the core. There is a small amount of fluorescent dye in the sheath stream. The sheath was formed in the center of the chip 31 and then traveled outward along an increasing spiral.
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(47) The condition for waveguiding is merely that the core stream and the sheath stream have different refractive indices. The ability to hydrodynamically focus a core down to submicron diameters allows for the production of a nearfield optical microscope probe entirely out of liquid.
(48) The device and method of the present invention are useful in particle counting and flow cytometry. Flow cytometry has proven to be an effective tool for highly multiplexed screening of environmental samples in an automated format for continuous monitoring. Systems currently in use include the Luminex flow cytometer, which is relatively large and requires a significant volume of water for sheath fluida primary factor limiting the time of continuous operation to one week. Furthermore, in case of a positive result, a separate aliquot of the sample must be analyzed for agent confirmation; thus all samples must be divided and temporarily archived prior to cytometry.
(49) The flow cytometer system of the present invention is useful for continuous monitoring for biological warfare contaminants in air or water. The flow cytometer system is typically provided on a microfluidic chip, and is comprised of a sheath flow device and an interrogation region. The sheath flow device is used to introduce the core and sheath streams into a microfluidic channel in such a way that the sheath stream completely surrounds the core sample stream, thus preventing fouling of the microfluidic channel where the top and bottom of the core sample stream would have touched the channel walls and completely focusing the stream within the interrogation region. Optionally, the sheath and core stream can be separated after the analysis so that each can be separately recaptured and the sheath fluid reused. The use of the microfluidic flow cytometer and sheath fluid recapture will significantly reduce the footprint of the monitoring system.
(50) The optical interrogation region is comprised of at least one waveguide, which is composed of a photoresist material that is integrated onboard the microfluidic chip for delivery of excitation light at two different wavelengths and collection of signal for analysis of 3-color fluorescence emission and light scatter. Coded Luminex beads provide the multiplexing capability.
(51) On-chip optical analysis was performed on the core stream using a diode laser with pigtailed optical fibers to illuminate the core stream. Light scatter at 90 was measured to detect the passage of yeast cells through the illuminated region of the core. Signal tracings, representing the light scatter signal from five-fold serial dilutions of yeast cells, demonstrated that the light scatter signals were proportional to the concentration of cells in the flow stream.
(52) The addition of optical elements measuring fluorescence to a flow cytometer on a chip is straightforward using methods and devices known in the art, such as optical fibers or polymer waveguides and light sources and filters of the appropriate wavelengths. The types of fluorescence analyses using dyes and labeled binding molecules that can be performed are described extensively in literature using commercial flow cytometers and are well known in the art. In general, the number of analytes that can be analyzed simultaneously is a function of the number of labels that can be excited and discriminated. However, one approach that enables the performance of highly multiplexed assays relies only on three-color discrimination. A commercially available version of this approach for flow cytometry uses coded beads.
(53) Luminex coded beads are prepared so that two colors of fluorescence are emitted when the bead is excited using a red laser. The ratio of the two colors indicates the identity of the bead. If target is bound to the bead, that bead can be distinguished from beads with no target bound by the formation of a complex with another antibody labeled with a third fluorescent label (dye, quantum dot, fluorescent nanoparticle) excited using a green laser.
(54) Recovery of the particles producing a positive signal is desirable in order to confirm that the positive result was indeed caused by the toxin or pathogen presumed present according to the results of the screening immunoassay. Analysis of a separate aliquot inevitably assumes that the composition of the tested and archived sample fractions is identicalwhich might be questionable for very low concentration of agent. Therefore a means for sorting can be included in the microflow cytometer device that can provide the ability to sort particles of interest into an on-chip collection chamber to reserve them for further analysis.
(55) The core and sheath streams are first introduced to the same channel from a T intersection so that they are flowing side-by-side. A series of grooves placed in the top and bottom of the channel then serve to completely wrap the sheath stream around the core. The sheath fluid becomes entrained by the grooves and travels above and below the core stream to completely surround it.
Example
(56) A flow cytometer was made using soft lithography in a 3 mask process. The channels were assembled from two pieces that were mirror images of each other. To produce the template, a 35 micron layer of SU-8 was first spun onto a silicon wafer and exposed with the mask defining the 200 micron wide fluid channels. Then a second 30 microns layer was spun on and exposed with the second mask, defining the grooves. Finally a third mask was used to expose both layers and define the channels to hold the optical fibers.
(57) When baked and developed, only the exposed portions of the SU-8 remained. This created a negative master of one half of the channel. The negative masters were then used to cast Sylgard-184 (Dow-Corning) into the two halves of the chip. When the two halves were aligned and brought together, the result was a 70 micron deep fluid channel with 30 micron deep grooves placed in the top and the bottom. The fiber channels were 130 micron deep because both layers of SU-8 were exposed. This was sufficient to accommodate the 130 micron OD optical fibers.
(58) The chips have two inlets. The inlet and outlet ports were made in the bottom piece of PDMS with an 18-gauge needle. Fluidic connections to the chips were provided via a PMMA base made using a CNC mill. The base had a set of ports on the face that could be aligned with and pressed against ports of the chip. A set of internal channels connected these ports with short lengths of stainless steel tubing along the edge of the base. These could be used as friction connections to silicone tubing, which was connected to syringe pumps (Cole-Parmer, Vernon Hills, Ill.).
(59) Chip assembly required careful alignment of the two halves. The presence of the fiber channels assisted with the alignment. As a first step, the bottom piece was placed on the base and the ports on the chip were aligned with the ports on the base. Then the fibers were positioned in the fiber channels. A single-mode fiber was used for illumination and a multimode fiber was used to collect the scattered light at 90 degrees. The base of each fiber was held in place with tape so that it would remain in the channel. A small amount of ethanol was then placed on the bottom piece and the top piece positioned on top. The ethanol prevented the immediate adhesion of the two pieces of PDMS. The two pieces clicked together and were aligned to within about 20 microns, due to the fibers locking into the fiber channels. A glass slide was then placed over the top piece and weak lateral pressures were applied until the two pieces were completely aligned. The chip was then left until the ethanol evaporated and the adhesion between the two PDMS pieces was fully developed. A small amount of Sylgard-184 was then applied to the end of each fiber channel and allowed to wick in around the fiber and form a complete seal.
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(61) On-chip optical analysis was performed on the core stream using a diode laser with pigtailed optical fibers to illuminate the core stream. Light scatter at 90 was measured to detect the passage of yeast cells through the illuminated region of the core. A series of sample suspensions were made having concentrations of 222, 41.5, 7.44, 1.66, and 0.313 ppm of Yeast (Fleishmann's active dry) in phosphate buffered saline containing 0.01% Tween-20. The sample solutions were introduced into the cytometer. The volumetric flow rates of the sample and the sheath were the same.
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(63) The device and method of the present invention are also useful for the fabrication of materials. For example, the core stream can contain a polymerizable, condensable, cross-linkable or crystalizable material, which is extruded to the desired diameter using the sheath stream instead of a solid nozzle or channel. Since the flow cytometer device is small, inexpensive, and essentially operates as a passive component, many devices can be fabricated to perform in parallel, such as an array.
(64) Materials from which structure can be fabricated include but are not limited to a wide variety of polymers including polystyrene, butyl rubber, polypropylene, polyacrylamide, polysiloxane, and polymethylmethyacrylate. Biological molecules can be ordered to self assemble into higher order structures; such molecules could include a wide variety of lipids, proteins, carbohydrates and oligonucleotides. Materials that form harder structures could be used including precursors of glassy materials such as sol gels, as discussed in Sousek et al., Polymers for Advanced Technologies, 2005, 16:257-261, incorporated herein in full by reference, or initiators for subsequent deposition of metals, calcium, and/or semiconductors. The fluids used can be aqueous or organic. Preferably, the core and sheath fluid are the same phase.
(65) By varying the diameter of the core, tapered materials can be fabricated. Nonuniform or tapered geometries for waveguides can be generated. Controlling the relative rates of sheath and core flow during polymerization of filaments provides high precision, tapered structures with sub-micrometer diameter fluctuations, resulting in unique waveguiding properties.
(66) The device and method is further useful in the synthesis of specialty polymeric filaments and tubes. Unlike standard extrusion technologies, filaments with continuously varying diameter can be created. Filaments made in this way can be expected to have increased elasticity over extruded filaments because of the native entropy of the polymer chains. The exact design may also be altered to change the cross-sectional shape of the resulting polymer strand.
(67) By configuring the grooves or ridges used to transport the sheath stream, non-round shapes can also be obtained. In addition to varying the rate of flow to change the diameter of the core, the core fluid can be pulsed instead of flowed continually to stop and start the core stream to form particles or packets of core fluid. Once the desired size and shape are obtained, the material in the core is polymerized, condensed, cross-linked, or crystallized chemically, optically or by other means known in the art. Due to the geometry of the system, this type of synthesis can be conducted in continuous manner rather than in batches. Moreover, the geometry of the system is particularly amenable to the production of high-aspect-ratio structures and filaments that are especially difficult to produce in quantity.
(68) Shapes that can be fabricated in this method include, but are not limited to, ovals, ribbons, rods, wires, tubes and filaments. Using the grooves or ridges on the top and bottom of the channel can be specifically designed to produce the desired shape. The grooves or ridges do not have to be straight but can have a variety of configurations as long as they channel the fluid around the core. They can be curved, in the shape of chevrons, angled like check marks, or in a variety of other shapes in order to influence the shape of the resultant core fluid. The addition of more inputs and grooves further downstream can be used to expand the repertoire of shapes that can be fabricated.
(69) More complex shapes that can be designed and fabricated using grooves or ridges include hollow cylinders, filled sausages, coated particles, rods with alternating composition, also known as nano bar codes. Structures with longitudinal or lateral density or chemical gradients can be fabricated by introducing gradients into one of the flow streams (longitudinal) or by allowing a reactant to diffuse in or out of the core while it is in contact with the sheath stream (lateral).
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(71) Typically, the sheath stream is sufficient to move the polymerized material to the output of the channel. For some materials, however, as the extruded material polymerizes and its viscosity increases from its unpolymerized value to infinity, the dynamics of the flow profile within the channel may change to the point that feed matching is required to control the fluid velocity and effectively remove the polymerized material. There are several options available to do feed-matching. In an elastomeric chip, the fluid velocity is controlled by compressing the channel to cause the fluid to accelerate. Additionally, rollers may be placed at the exit of the chip so that they impinge on the rod and control the linear exit velocity of the polymerized rod.
(72) Generally, the core contains a polymerizable material and is extruded to the desired diameter using the sheath stream instead of a solid nozzle or channel. Once the desired shape is obtained, the core material is polymerized chemically or optically. Due to the geometry of the system, production can be in continuous instead of in batch mode. Moreover, the geometry of the system is particularly amenable to the production of high aspect ratio structures and filaments which are especially difficult to produce in quantity. Since the fabrication device is small, inexpensive, and essentially operates as a passive component, many devices can be fabricated to perform in parallel, such as an array.
(73) Obviously, many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.