The present disclosure relates to acoustic streaming fluid injectors for inkjet printers, drug delivery devices, and screening devices for drug discovery and DNA sequencing, among other applications.
Inkjet printing is rapidly becoming an increasingly important technology. Aside from consumer market, it is currently used in industrial printing, 3-D printing for rapid prototyping, circuit board printing, LCD and OLED display production, and a number of other industries. New applications of the technology for diagnostics and drug discovery industry are being investigated.
Currently there are two major technologies used in ink-jet printing, thermal and piezoelectric. The thermal design, commonly used in consumer ink-jet printers utilizes the production of bubbles by heating an electrode to eject a droplet of water out of a nozzle. The main disadvantage of this technology is that it works only with water as a solvent. The piezoelectric design more commonly used in commercial printers utilizes the piezoelectric diaphragms that change the volume of the chamber. The main limitations of this design are the price, printing speed, and the size of the droplets.
The present disclosure addresses one or more deficiencies in the prior art.
In an exemplary aspect, the present disclosure is directed to an acoustic streaming fluid ejector that includes a fluid filled chamber having an opening, a selectively vibrating flow generator having a sharp edge pointed toward the opening, and a driving device configured to vibrate one of the flow generator and the chamber to create a streaming fluid flow in a direction away from the sharp edge through the opening.
In an aspect, the flow generator comprises two nonparallel surfaces forming an angle, the nonparallel surfaces being symmetrically disposed about an axis aligned with an axis through the opening. In an aspect, the two nonparallel surfaces converge to form the sharp edge. In an aspect, the sharp edge has an angle of 90 degrees or less. In an aspect, the driving device is configured to vibrate the flow generator at the resonance frequency of the flow generator. In an aspect, the driving device is one of piezoelectric stack and a coil. In an aspect, the opening is disposed directly proximate the sharp edge of the flow generator. In an aspect, the fluid is a drug for treating a condition. In an aspect, the fluid is an ink. In an aspect, the fluid is non-water soluble.
In an exemplary aspect, the present disclosure is directed to an acoustic streaming fluid ejector including a fluid reservoir, a fluid filled chamber in communication with the reservoir, the chamber having an opening, and a selectively, vibrating flow generator having a sharp edge. A driving device is configured to vibrate one of the flow generator and the chamber to create a streaming fluid flow in a direction away from the sharp edge in the chamber.
In an aspect, the sharp edge has an angle of 90 degrees or less. In an aspect, the driving device is configured to vibrate the flow generator at the resonance frequency of the flow generator. In an aspect, the driving device is a piezoelectric stack. In an aspect, the flow generator comprises two nonparallel surfaces forming an angle, the nonparallel surfaces being symmetrically disposed about an axis aligned with an axis through the opening. In an aspect, the two nonparallel surfaces converge to form the sharp edge. In an aspect, the driving device is configured to vibrate the flow generator at the resonance frequency of the flow generator.
In an exemplary aspect, the present disclosure is directed to a method including providing a flow generator in a fluid-filled chamber having an opening, the flow generator having a sharp edge defined by two nonparallel surfaces forming an angle, the nonparallel surfaces being symmetrically disposed about an axis aligned with an axis through the opening; and selectively vibrating the flow generator with a driving device to vibrate the sharp edge of the flow generator to eject a fluid droplet from the chamber and out of the opening.
In an aspect, vibrating the flow generator with a driving device comprises vibrating the flow generator with a piezoelectric stack. In an aspect, the method includes vibrating the flow generator at the resonance frequency of the flow generator.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory in nature and are intended to provide an understanding of the present disclosure without limiting the scope of the present disclosure. In that regard, additional aspects, features, and advantages of the present disclosure will be apparent to one skilled in the art from the following detailed description.
The accompanying drawings illustrate embodiments of the devices and methods disclosed herein and together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the present disclosure.
For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the present disclosure, reference will now be made to the exemplary embodiments illustrated in the drawings, and specific language will be used to describe the same. It will nevertheless be understood that no limitation of the scope of the disclosure is intended. Any alterations and further modifications to the described devices, instruments, methods, and any further application of the principles of the present disclosure are fully contemplated as would normally occur to one skilled in the art to which the disclosure relates. In particular, it is fully contemplated that the features, components, and/or steps described with respect to one embodiment may be combined with the features, components, and/or steps described with respect to other embodiments of the present disclosure. For the sake of brevity, however, the numerous iterations of these combinations will not be described separately. For simplicity, in some instances the same reference numbers are used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts.
The present disclosure relates generally to fluid ejection systems and methods for acoustic streaming of a fluid. More particularly, the disclosure relates to acoustic streaming accomplished by vibrating a sharp edge to generate anomalous streaming. In general, the fluid ejection systems have few or no movable parts making them highly reliable, and they may be easily integrated with micro-fluidic circuits. In addition, the fluid ejection systems may be relatively easy to manufacture as they may be used/built in conjunction with MEMS (micro-electromechanical systems). They also may be customizable as they may be tunable to a wide range of conditions, and may have tunable jets for operations like dispensing a controlled microscopic amount of substance.
In some aspects, the system is an acoustic streaming fluid ejection system that may find particular utility in inkjet printers, drug delivery devices, and other ejection type systems. In one aspect, the disclosure relates to a mechanism that ejects microscopic fluid droplets out of a nozzle that can be used in Drop on Demand (DOD) inkjet printers, 3-D printers, industrial printing, 3-D printing for rapid prototyping, circuit board printing, LCD and OLED display production, and a number of other industries. These same systems may be used in drug delivery applications, diagnostics and drug design, and other technologies. The principle of operation is acoustic streaming of fluid from a sharp vibrating edge. An applied ultrasonic pulse ejects a single drop of fluid from a nozzle. The system may be optimized to eject desired sizes of droplets. When used in inkjet printing applications, the systems disclosed herein may reduce the costs of an inkjet head, may be tunable to change the size of droplets and may include producing sub-micron size droplets. In addition the system provides the ability to work with wide variety of fluids and solvents, including viscous materials such as polymer melts. Printing speeds may be increased and the system may have increased reliability and robustness of design.
The nozzle member 104 comprises a material dispensing portion 106 with electrical contact pads 108 that connect via traces on the underside of the tape 106 to electrodes on a print-head substrate affixed to the underside of the tape 106. Nozzles 110 accommodate the ejection of ink onto the print surface.
The flow generator 134 is configured and arranged to physically displace the fluid in the acoustic streaming fluid ejection chamber 130 in a forward direction, which is in the direction of arrow 143. Here, the flow generator 134 is disposed directly in the fluid flow and is centrally disposed along the central axis 138 of the acoustic streaming fluid ejection chamber 130. Accordingly, it is surrounded by fluid in the acoustic streaming fluid ejection chamber 130. In some embodiments, the flow generator 134 is a wedge-shaped microscopic blade and is arranged to vibrate at a particular frequency back and forth in a translational or non-pivoting manner as indicated by the arrow 144 in
The flow generator 134 is shown in greater detail in
Depending on the embodiment and the amount of fluid to be driven by the pump, the flow generator 134 may have a lateral length L in the range of about 50 microns to 5 cm. In other embodiments, the lateral length L is in the range of about 100 microns to 2 cm. While the flow generator 134 may be formed of any material, in some embodiments, the flow generator 134 may be in the form of a steel blade with a 20° sharp edge. In some exemplary embodiments, the flow generator 134 includes two rounded edges 162, 164 so that only the edge 154 is sharp. In some instances, the flow generator 134 may form a tear-drop shape in cross-section.
Returning to
In some exemplary embodiments, the driving device 136 is mechanically connected to the flow generator 134 by an extending shaft (not shown). The extending shaft is a rigid shaft capable of translating the vibrations from the driving device 136 to the flow generator 134. Embodiments using inductive magnetic fields to impart vibration to the driving device may perform without a mechanical connection. Other embodiments vibrate the acoustic streaming fluid ejection chamber 130 without vibrating the flow generator 134 to induce a relative vibration between the fluid and the flow generator.
Acoustic streaming that is accomplished by the system in
The anomalous streaming occurs at the sharp edge 151 of the wedge-shaped flow generator 134. The flow generator 134 vibrates perpendicular to its cutting edge 154 and generates a strong microscopic current in the direction of the edge 151 shown in the
To induce the streaming, the flow generator 134 may be vibrated at its resonance frequency. In some embodiments, the flow generator 134 may be vibrated at its resonance frequency within a range of about 100 Hz to 10 MHz, for example. In an example where the flow generator 134 was a steel blade with a 20° sharp edge on one end, the vibration-generating driving device 136 vibrated the flow generator 134 at its resonance frequency which happened to be 461 Hz in water. For explanatory purposes, the acoustic motion introduces a boundary layer along the walls of the flow generator 134. The boundary layer is a low pressure acoustic force area, and it creates a path for fluid to enter. The fluid enters the acoustic force area along the sides of the flow generator 134 and is ejected at the sharp edge 154 driven by the centrifugal force. This results in the streaming pattern from the sharp edge 154.
In some embodiments, the flow rates may be tunable on the fly by modifying the power levels at the driving device 136. For example, increasing or decreasing the power applied to the flow generator 134 by the driving device 136 may result in an increased or decreased vibrational rate of the flow generator 134, thereby increasing or decreasing the resulting streaming fluid flow. As such, the flow rate and the pressure level may be controlled to desired levels.
Returning to
In use, a fluid such as ink, a drug, or other fluid may be carried within the body 102 of the cartridge 100 and fed from the body 102 to the fluid ejector 131 formed of the acoustic streaming fluid ejection chamber 130 and the acoustic streaming ejection arrangement 132. With the flow generator 134 surrounded by the fluid in the acoustic streaming fluid ejection chamber 130, the fluid ejector 131 is prepared to eject one or more droplets of fluid from the neck 140 forming the opening of the acoustic streaming fluid ejection chamber 130. Current directed to the driving device 136 activates the driving device 136. Vibrations induced in the driving device 136 may be mechanically conveyed to the flow generator which then vibrates within the acoustic streaming fluid ejection chamber 130. In some embodiments, vibrations may be induced by inductive coupling as explained above, without a mechanical connection. The flow generator 134 may vibrate at its resonance frequency to eject one or more fluid droplets, or even create a stream of fluid, through the opening in the acoustic streaming fluid ejection chamber 130. The geometry of the arrangement 132 and the ultrasonic frequency of the flow generator 134 can be optimized for a desired size of droplets.
While this disclosure describes the acoustic streaming as a mechanism for ejecting fluid droplets out of a nozzle that can be used in Drop on Demand (DOD) inkjet printers, 3-d printers, and related technologies, the same principles may be used in other industries and applications. For example, the acoustic ejectors and systems disclosed herein may find particular utility in fluidic micropumps, diagnostics and drug design, purging operations in small biological volumes, implants, medical instruments and tools, drug delivery, ink-jet printing devices, and fuel cells, among others. In some instances, the principles of the present disclosure may be used as drug delivery devices (ocular, nasal, etc.) and as a reagent delivery system in combinatorial chemistry and high throughput screening devices for drug discovery and DNA sequencing, it also has point-of-care utility, like on a lab-on-a-chip scenario. In these scenarios, specific size droplets or fluid flow may be required and produced using the systems and methods described herein. For example, gene sequencing applications may require specific droplet sizes or fluid flow that may be achieved using the systems and methods described herein.
The system disclosed herein may result in cost savings and a tunable droplet size, including rendering sub-micron size droplets. In addition, the system disclosed herein is not limited to water soluble fluids, but may work with a wide variety of fluids and solvents, including viscous materials such as polymer melts. In addition the speeds of printing may be improved, and the reliability and robustness of the system may exceed others as the designs disclosed herein include few if any moving parts.
Persons of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the embodiments encompassed by the present disclosure are not limited to the particular exemplary embodiments described above. In that regard, although illustrative embodiments have been shown and described, a wide range of modification, change, and substitution is contemplated in the foregoing disclosure. It is understood that such variations may be made to the foregoing without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. Accordingly, it is appropriate that the appended claims be construed broadly and in a manner consistent with the present disclosure.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/793,451, filed Mar. 15, 2013, the entire contents of which are included herein by reference.
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