IMPELLER BOTTLE
20170001159 ยท 2017-01-05
Inventors
- Kevin M. Helle (Bartlett, IL, US)
- Robert F. Chisholm (Princeton, NJ, US)
- Jay Christopher Reed (Arlington Heights, IL, US)
- Michael T. Schneider (Crystal Lake, IL, US)
Cpc classification
B01F33/4533
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F35/75465
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F33/4532
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to methods and devices for mixing the contents of a mixing container, the device including a container defining a container cavity, the container including a bottom wall supporting a hollow shaft, the shaft supporting an impeller thereon such that the impeller is free to rotate about the shaft, the impeller including a central passageway therethrough for receiving the shaft, the container further including an elongate evacuation tube having a first end positioned within the passageway of the shaft and an opposed second end extending to a port of the container.
Claims
1. A device for mixing ingredients, the device comprising: a container having a container body defining a container cavity, the container body further defining at least one port in fluid communication with the container cavity, the container body including a bottom wall; a hollow impeller shaft having an elongate shaft body including a first end, a second end, and an elongate shaft body extending therebetween, said first end defining a first shaft aperture, said second defining a second shaft aperture, and said shaft body defining an elongate passageway extending in fluid communication between said first and second shaft apertures, the second end of said shaft attached to said bottom portion of said container within said cavity such that said passageway is in fluid communication with said container cavity through both said first and second shaft apertures; an elongate impeller free to rotate about the shaft, the impeller having an elongate impeller body defining an transversely-extending central aperture therethrough for receiving the shaft, and an elongate evacuation tube having a first end positioned within the passage of the shaft and an opposed second end extending to a port of the container.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein said bottom wall of said container includes a frustroconical surface.
3. The device of claim 1, wherein said second shaft aperture is transversely-oriented with respect to the shaft body.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein said second end of said evacuation tube includes a tapered rim defining said second evacuation port.
5. The device of claim 1, wherein said second shaft aperture is defined by a notch in said shaft body.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein at least a portion of said rim is spaced from said bottom wall.
7. The device of claim 1, further comprising a bushing affixed to the outer surface of the evacuation tube adjacent the first end thereof so as to hold the impeller on the shaft.
8. A device for mixing ingredients, the device comprising: a container having a container body defining a container cavity, the container body further defining at least one port in fluid communication with the container cavity, the container body including a bottom wall; a fixed impeller shaft including a first end, a second end, and an elongate shaft body extending therebetween, the second end of said shaft attached to said bottom portion of said container within said cavity; an elongate impeller having an elongate impeller body defining a transversely-extending central aperture to received the first end of the shaft so as to be free to rotate about the shaft, and an elongate hollow evacuation tube extending between a port on the container, around the outermost circumferential pathway of the impeller, and to the lowest portion of the interior of the container.
9. The device of claim 1, wherein said bottom wall of said container includes a frustroconical surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0024] The formulation bottle requires a method for mixing the contained fluids. These fluids may be from multiple sources such as bulk material and diluent or pH adjustment buffering solution(s). In addition, the formulation bottle must be the source of a homogeneous solution. Because of this the formulation bottle is physically located on top of a magnetic drive, and a magnetic stir bar is added to the formulation bottle to drive this rotational vortex style mixing. The magnetic stir bar is not supported within the formulation bottle, that is, it rotates on its own within the fluid as directed by the magnetic drive. The magnetic drive is a simple off the shelf unit that has a flat top surface for placing a bottle on top of. The added stir bar can be of several different styles, and is added to the fluid for driving the mixing process. The stir bar is typically coated with a PTFE layer so it is resistant to chemicals, and does not contaminate the fluids it is mixing.
[0025] The bottles of the instant invention are desirably formed from a pharmaceutically-acceptable material, ie, a material which is compatible and suitable for uses with pharmaceutical product fluids. The present invention contemplates that the bottles of the present invention are formed from a suitable grade of glass, ceramic or polymer. All of the other fluid-contacting components of the present invention are similarly contemplated to be formed from materials suitable for use with pharmaceutical product fluids.
[0026] Referring to
[0027] Another issue associated to the currently used equipment is that the fluid needs to be extracted from the lowest position of the bottle to get as much fluid as possible. This is currently accomplished by placing a needle, or in some cases a tube, through a port 30, or through a septum 32 spanning the port 30, defined at the top of bottle 10 with the tip of the needle, or end of the tube, being positioned in the bottom of the bottle. This can cause interference with the stir bar mentioned above, or can cause several other undesirable issues. Another issue related to this current method is associated with the radioactive nature of the material inside the bottle, and the extremity exposure to the operator positioning the needle and/or tubing. If there are any blockages in the fluid path, or repositioning is required for any reason, the operator is exposed to this radioactive field. There are sterility, or at a minimum of sanitization, issues associated to the different fluid path materials used for this method. If a needle tip, or the end of a tube, are not positioned exactly right there will be a reduced volume extracted from the formulation bottle.
[0028] With reference to
[0029] Referring now to
[0030] The formulation bottle 110 of the present invention also includes a hollow impeller shaft 150 including a first end 152, a second end 154, and an elongate shaft body 156 extending therebetween. First end 152 defines a first shaft aperture 158, second end 154 defines a second shaft aperture 160, and shaft body 156 defines an elongate passageway 162 extending in fluid communication between first and second shaft apertures 158 and 160. The present invention contemplates that shaft aperture 158 may be provided with different shapes as desired, it may be deemed to be a transversely-opening notch in shaft body which provides a minimal window through which product fluid may flow to reach the lowest point 120a of bottom wall 120 while still maximizing the ability to draw the fluid out through conduit 140. Second end 154 of shaft 150 is attached to bottom wall 120 within cavity 115 such that passageway 162 is in fluid communication with container cavity 115 through both first and second shaft apertures 158 and 160. Desirably, passageway 162 is in overlying registry with depression 123 and low point 120a so as to assist in maximizing the amount of product fluid able to be drawn from cavity 115.
[0031] Formulation bottle 110 also includes an elongate stir bar, or impeller, 112 free to rotate about shaft 150 Impeller 112 includes an elongate body 114 which defines a central aperture 116 therethrough for receiving first end 152 of shaft 150. Impeller 112 includes two or more mixing blades 112a and 112b extending to either side of central aperture 116 and equally-spaced thereabout. Additionally, bottle 110 includes an elongate evacuation tube 140 having a first end 142 positioned within passageway 162 of shaft 150 and an opposed second end 144 extending to port 130 and an elongate tube body 145 extending therebetween. First end 142 of evacuation tube 140 defines a first tube aperture 146, second end 144 of evacuation tube 140 defines a second tube aperture 148, and the tube wall defines an elongate evacuation passageway 149 extending in fluid communication with first and second tube apertures 146 and 148, respectively. The present invention contemplates that first tube aperture 146 is positioned in overlying registry with the lowest point 120a of bottom wall 120 where fluid will collect. In one embodiment, the second end of the evacuation tube terminates at a rim 141 which extends normal to the longitudinal axis of the first end 142 of evacuation tube 140 and is positioned to be spaced from bottom wall 120. Alternatively, the present invention provides rim 141 to be tapered, or bevelled, with respect to the longitudinal axis of first end 142 of evacuation tube 140 so as to provide a distal tip 141a which makes contact with bottom wall 120 while still defining a gap between rim 141 and bottom wall 120 so as to maintain fluid communication between evacuation passageway 149 and container cavity 115. The gap may be selected to have a size and shape which assists in maximizing the amount of fluid withdrawn from container cavity 115.
[0032] Bottle 110 includes a depending annular skirt 117 which defines a magnet cavity 127 for receiving a magnetic drive 124 therein. Magnetic drive 124 provides a rotating magnetic field which magnetically couples with and causes stir bar 112 to rotate within cavity 115. Stir bar 112, similar to stir bar, or impeller, 12, includes a magnetizable material so as to magnetically couple with the magnetic drive 124 and rotate under the influence of magnetic drive 124. Stir bar 112 may thus be formed from the magnetizable material or may be formed from a suitable glass, ceramic, or polymer which either supports or encases a magnetizable material as is known for stir bars in the art.
[0033] Desirably, shaft 150 includes an annular rim 170 about first end 152. Upstanding from annular rim 170 is a cylindrical wall segment 172 of first end 152 of shaft 150 that is sized and shaped to extend at least partially into the central aperture 116 of impeller 112. Annular rim 170 is desirably sized to extend radially-outward of shaft 150 so that impeller body 114 rests against it, free to rotate about cylindrical wall segment 172 under the direction of magnetic drive 124. The present invention further contemplates that evacuation tube 140 may include an annular bushing affixed adjacent open end 142, the bushing being too large to extend into the central aperture of the impeller and to thus act as a hub, similar in function to hub 22 of bottle 10. Annular rim 170 and the bushing may thus fix impeller 112 in place while still permitting rotation of impeller 112 by magnetic drive 124.
[0034] Second shaft aperture 160 may be defined by shaft body 156 to be transversely-oriented with respect thereto such that second end 154 of shaft 150 does not include a complete annular span itself. Alternatively, the present invention contemplates that second shaft aperture 160 may be defined by a longitudinally-oriented, ie, substantially equally-spaced from bottom wall 120, with respect to shaft body 156 so as to be defined by an annular rim, but then also suspended over bottom wall 120 by a non-annular support which maintains it in spaced registry with the lowest point 120a of bottom wall 120 where fluid will collect.
[0035] While the particular embodiment of the present invention has been shown and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from the teachings of the invention. The matter set forth in the foregoing description and accompanying drawings is offered by way of illustration only and not as a limitation. The actual scope of the invention is intended to be defined in the following claims when viewed in their proper perspective bottom walled on the prior art.