The present invention relates to droplet microfluidic devices, and more specifically to Active Matrix Electro-wetting-On-Dielectric (AM-EWOD) devices, and methods to restrict droplet content migration along such devices.
Electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD) is a well-known technique for manipulating droplets of fluid by the application of an electric field. Active Matrix EWOD (AM-EWOD) refers to implementation of EWOD in an active matrix array incorporating transistors, for example by using thin film transistors (TFTs). It is thus a candidate technology for digital microfluidics for lab-on-a-chip technology. An introduction to the basic principles of the technology can be found in “Digital microfluidics: is a true lab-on-a-chip possible?”, R.B. Fair, Microfluid Nanofluid (2007) 3:245-281).
Example configurations and operation of EWOD devices are described in the following. U.S. Pat. No. 6,911,132 (Pamula et al., issued Jun. 28, 2005) discloses a two-dimensional EWOD array to control the position and movement of droplets in two dimensions. U.S. Pat. No. 6,565,727 (Shenderov, issued May 20, 2003) further discloses methods for other droplet operations including the splitting and merging of droplets, and the mixing together of droplets of different materials. U.S. Pat. No. 7,163,612 (Sterling et al., issued Jan. 16, 2007) describes how TFT based thin film electronics may be used to control the addressing of voltage pulses to an EWOD array by using circuit arrangements very similar to those employed in AM display technologies.
The approach of U.S. Pat. No. 7,163,612 may be termed “Active Matrix Electrowetting on Dielectric” (AM-EWOD). There are several advantages in using TFT based thin film electronics to control an EWOD array, namely:
AM-EWOD droplet manipulation devices are a highly desirable platform for automation of chemical and biochemical reactions. Such devices may carry out chemical/biochemical reactions or reaction sequences in multiple steps requiring different droplet manipulations, such as for example dispensing droplets from a reservoir, moving droplets along the array, splitting droplets, mixing droplets, and the like. Accordingly, it is significant that droplet positioning is precisely maintained and controlled, so as to prevent droplet contamination by adjacent droplets and with droplet contact only occurring in a controlled manner in accordance with a given reaction protocol.
There have been attempts to isolate fluid constituents for purposes of performing chemical reactions, but such principles largely have not been applied to AM-EWOD type devices. For example, US 2018/0071730 (Breinlinger et al., published Mar. 15, 2018) pertains to a non-EWOD system using immiscible fluid media to isolate microfluidic structures (pens) in a microfluidic device. In a microfluidic device that incorporates fluidically connected microfluidic structures (storage pens), the pens and channels are filled with a first fluid medium, such as oil, and then a second fluid medium, such as gas or an aqueous medium, is used to obstruct the pen openings to reduce the diffusion of micro-objects or soluble components. US 2009/0107907 (Chen et al., published Apr. 30, 2009) is another non-EWOD system, which relies on diffusion of chemical species from a porous membrane into an aqueous droplet, and the droplet is then analyzed. Such a system treats droplets in oil that is somewhat permeable to affect diffusion. As referenced above, such principles largely have not been applied to AM-EWOD type devices, as droplet manipulation is controlled principally by the electrowetting forces, without a recognized need for additional droplet manipulation mechanisms.
Typically, in reaction protocols using AM-EWOD devices, it has been presumed that in the absence of electrowetting forces, droplets remain largely fixed in position, with any migration or leakage of droplet constituents being considered negligible. Accordingly, barrier structures that are used in other analytical fluidic systems, such as pens, channels, or the like, have not been employed on EWOD devices, and in any event would not be suitable for EWOD devices given the size and number of droplets that may be dispensed, and the nature of the droplet manipulation operations. The inventors have found, however, that the presumption of negligible droplet migration or leakage of constituents does not hold true in many significant circumstances. Accordingly, there is a need in the art, that previously has gone unrecognized, for the capability to employ barriers against droplet content migration in an AM-EWOD device.
More particularly, the inventors have found that when an aqueous droplet on an AM-EWOD device is used to store a species for extended periods, under some circumstances there is a tendency for the stored species to migrate into the surrounding medium, and potentially into nearby droplets resulting in droplet contamination. This problem is particularly pronounced when the concentration of the stored species in the original droplet is high. For example, a droplet containing 1:1 v/v formic acid/water, surrounded by oil, has been shown to leak formic acid through the oil and into nearby droplets, lowering the pH of the contaminated droplets in a way that might compromise an ongoing chemical reaction.
To overcome such deficiencies, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention, in an AM-EWOD device electrowetting forces are applied to a droplet to form, as referred to herein, one or more “barrier droplets” to form a barrier droplet configuration that acts as a barrier to trap, obstruct, or otherwise prevent migration of a dissolved or suspended species in a source droplet through the surrounding oil medium. For example, the barrier droplet configuration may be positioned between a droplet containing an acid (the source droplet) and a second droplet whose pH must be kept high. Without the barrier droplet configuration, acid is able to migrate from the source droplet, through the oil, and into the high-pH second droplet. The barrier droplet configuration acts to restrict the migration of acid (or whatever species the source droplet contains) so that high concentrations may be stored on-chip in the presence of, for example, species-sensitive components or other reaction areas on the device array.
In exemplary embodiments, the barrier droplet configuration operates by exploiting a difference in preference of the migrating species for the polar or aqueous environment of the barrier droplet versus the non-aqueous environment of the non-polar fluid (oil). On encountering an oil/water boundary, the migrating species partitions itself between the oil and the water. Consider an example whereby a source droplet containing a high concentration of the migrating species is near an area that must be protected from the migrating species. This protected area may be where a chemical reaction takes place that may be sensitive to the presence of the migrating species, an electronic component that could be damaged by the migrating species, or another droplet or fluid reservoir that stores a reagent of another composition that could be contaminated by the migrating species. At the boundary between the source droplet and the oil, a portion of the migrating species will escape the source droplet and enter the oil. In the absence of a barrier droplet configuration, the migrating species may then move across the oil until the species reaches the area to be protected. If the system is closed, the system may move towards a state of dynamic equilibrium in which the concentration of the migrating species in the area to be protected is unacceptably high.
To prevent contamination of the protected area by the migrating species, a barrier droplet configuration is formed by electrowetting forces in an area of the device array between the source droplet and the protected area. The barrier droplet configuration provides an additional set of oil/water interfaces at which the migrating species population may become partitioned; in the event that the migrating species has a preference for polar or aqueous environments, the barrier will also act as a thermodynamic sink for the migrating species. The barrier droplet thus obstructs a portion of the potential pathways of migration, thereby reducing the rate of migration of the species to the protected area. By reducing the rate at which the migrating species enters the protected area, the useful lifetime of the reaction system on the AM-EWOD device is extended.
To be effective, the barrier droplet configuration should obstruct a significant portion of the potential pathways of migration to the protected area. The obstruction may be performed using a single barrier droplet or an ensemble of a plurality of barrier droplets. To achieve this requisite obstruction without the barrier droplet becoming unmanageably large, electrowetting forces applied by the AM-EWOD device are applied to control the shape of the barrier droplet(s). An AM-EWOD device can be used to prepare a barrier droplet configuration that completely surrounds the source droplet, or otherwise maintains a high aspect ratio in the barrier droplet configuration such that surface tension otherwise renders the barrier droplets unstable in the absence of the electrowetting forces.
For effective obstruction of migration pathways, a concentration of the migrating species in the barrier droplet(s) of the barrier droplet configuration is lower than a concentration of the migrating species in the source droplet. Under such conditions, the rate of migration out of a side of the barrier droplet opposite from the source droplet is lowered simply by dilution effects in accordance with Fick's diffusion laws. Additionally, the effectiveness of the barrier droplet configuration may be enhanced by the changing barrier droplet contents or makeup. Because of the makeup of the migrating species, at the oil/water interface the migrating species may have a preference for one environment over the other. In the case of a preference for non-polar environments, the aqueous barrier droplet will act as a barrier. In the case of a greater preference for the aqueous environment, the barrier droplet will act as a sink, absorbing the migrating species. The oil/water interface on the far side of the barrier droplet from the source droplet will also act as a barrier to migration. Accordingly, an additive to the barrier droplet that increases the strength of a migrating species's existing preference for either aqueous or non-polar media would help to slow its migration through the oil across the EWOD device. In one example, the additive includes a capturing agent, such as for example an adsorbent nanoparticle, that is able to capture the migrating species and physically prevent species migration, or that reacts with the migrating species to convert the species into something whose presence can be tolerated in the region to be protected.
An aspect of the invention, therefore, is a method of operating an electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD) device that includes an EWOD device array that applies electrowetting forces and contains a non-polar fluid, whereby a barrier droplet configuration is formed using electrowetting forces to obstruct migration of a species from a first area of the EWOD device array to a protected area of the EWOD device array. In exemplary embodiments, the method of operating includes the steps of: dispensing a source droplet into a first area of the EWOD device array, the source droplet containing a migrating species, wherein the EWOD device array includes a second area to be protected from the migrating species; and forming a barrier droplet configuration positioned between the first area and the second area of the EWOD device array that obstructs a migration pathway of the migrating species between the first area and the second area. The barrier droplet configuration includes at least one aqueous or polar barrier droplet, and the migrating species exhibits a preference for either the polar or aqueous environment of the barrier or the non-polar environment of the oil. For example, the concentration of a migrating species in the barrier droplet may be lower than the concentration of a migrating species in the source droplet. The barrier droplet may include an additive that increases the preference of the migrating species for the environment of the barrier droplet relative to the non-polar fluid, such as for example a capturing agent that reacts with or binds to the migrating species, or converts the migrating species into another form. The barrier droplet configuration may include a variety of numbers, shapes, and positionings of one or more barrier droplets, and in exemplary embodiments the barrier droplet(s) may be combined with one or more additional barrier elements that are not barrier droplets formed using the electrowetting forces.
The EWOD device may be operated by: dispensing a first droplet into a first area of the EWOD device array; dispensing a second droplet into a second area of the EWOD device array; forming a barrier droplet configuration; wherein the barrier droplet configuration comprises a first portion that separates the first area from the second area, and a second portion that separates both the first and second areas from a third area of the EWOD device array; maintaining the first portion of the barrier droplet configuration during a first stage of a reaction protocol, thereby obstructing a migration pathway between the first area and the second area during said first stage; and retracting the first portion of the barrier droplet configuration during a second stage of the reaction protocol, thereby opening the migration pathway between the first area and the second area to permit interaction of the first droplet and the second droplet during said second stage. The method further may include applying electrowetting voltages to the EWOD device array during the second stage of the reaction protocol to mix the first droplet and the second droplet.
According to another aspect of the invention, a microfluidic system includes an electro-wetting on dielectric (EWOD) device comprising an element array configured to receive one or more liquid droplets, the element array comprising a plurality of individual array elements; and a control system configured to control actuation voltages applied to the element array to perform manipulation operations as to the liquid droplets to perform the methods of operating the EWOD device that include forming a barrier droplet configuration. The microfluidic system further may include integrated impedance sensing circuitry that is integrated into the array elements of the EWOD device, and a configuration and position of source and barrier droplets dispensed onto the array elements is determined based on an impedance sensed by the impedance sensing circuitry. Another aspect of the invention is a non-transitory computer-readable medium storing program code which is executed by a processing device for controlling actuation voltages applied to array elements of an element array of an electro-wetting on dielectric (EWOD) device for performing droplet manipulations on droplets on the element array, the program code being executable by the processing device to perform steps of the methods of operating the EWOD device that include forming a barrier droplet configuration.
These and further features of the present invention will be apparent with reference to the following description and attached drawings. In the description and drawings, particular embodiments of the invention have been disclosed in detail as being indicative of some of the ways in which the principles of the invention may be employed, but it is understood that the invention is not limited correspondingly in scope. Rather, the invention includes all changes, modifications and equivalents coming within the spirit and terms of the claims appended hereto. Features that are described and/or illustrated with respect to one embodiment may be used in the same way or in a similar way in one or more other embodiments and/or in combination with or instead of the features of the other embodiments.
The present invention pertains to a microfluidic system including in an AM-EWOD device by which electrowetting forces are applied to a liquid reservoir to form a barrier droplet configuration to act as a barrier to trap, obstruct, or otherwise prevent migration of a dissolved or suspended species in a source droplet through the surrounding oil medium.
The microfluidic system further may include a control system configured to control actuation voltages applied to the electrode array of the microfluidic device to perform manipulation operations to the fluid droplets. For example, the reader 32 may contain such a control system configured as control electronics 38 and a storage device 40 that may store any application software any data associated with the system. The control electronics 38 may include suitable circuitry and/or processing devices that are configured to carry out various control operations relating to control of the AM-EWOD device 36, such as a CPU, microcontroller or microprocessor.
Among their functions, to implement the features of the present invention, the control electronics may comprise a part of the overall control system that may execute program code embodied as a control application within the storage device 40. It will be apparent to a person having ordinary skill in the art of computer programming, and specifically in application programming for electronic control devices, how to program the control system to operate and carry out logical functions associated with the stored control application. Accordingly, details as to specific programming code have been left out for the sake of brevity. The storage device 40 may be configured as a non-transitory computer readable medium, such as random access memory (RAM), a read-only memory (ROM), an erasable programmable read-only memory (EPROM or Flash memory), or any other suitable medium. Also, while the code may be executed by control electronics 38 in accordance with an exemplary embodiment, such control system functionality could also be carried out via dedicated hardware, firmware, software, or combinations thereof, without departing from the scope of the invention.
The control system may be configured to perform some or all of the following functions:
In the example of
The control system, such as via the control electronics 38, may supply and control the actuation voltages applied to the electrode array of the microfluidics device 36, such as required voltage and timing signals to perform droplet manipulation operations and sense liquid droplets on the AM-EWOD device 36. The control electronics further may execute the application software to generate and output control voltages for droplet sensing and performing sensing operations. The reader 32 and cartridge 34 may be electrically connected together while in use, for example by a cable of connecting wires 42, although various other methods (e.g. wireless connection) of providing electrical communication may be used as are known to those of ordinary skill in the art.
In the AM-EWOD device 36, a non-polar fluid 60 (e.g. oil) may be used to occupy the volume not occupied by the liquid droplet 52. An insulator layer 62 may be disposed upon the lower substrate 44 that separates the conductive element electrodes 48A and 48B from a first hydrophobic coating 64 upon which the liquid droplet 52 sits with a contact angle 66 represented by θ. The hydrophobic coating is formed from a hydrophobic material (commonly, but not necessarily, a fluoropolymer). On the top substrate 54 is a second hydrophobic coating 68 with which the liquid droplet 52 may come into contact. The reference electrode 58 is interposed between the top substrate 54 and the second hydrophobic coating 68.
For the purposes of driving and sensing the array elements, the electrical load 70A/70B overall functions in effect as a capacitor, whose value depends on whether a liquid droplet 52 is present or not at a given element electrode 48. In the case where a droplet is present, the capacitance is relatively high (typically of order pico-Farads), whereas if there is no liquid droplet present the capacitance is low (typically of order femto-Farads). If a droplet partially covers a given electrode 48 then the capacitance may approximately represent the extent of coverage of the element electrode 48 by the liquid droplet 52.
A serial interface 82 may also be provided to process a serial input data stream and facilitate the programming of the required voltages to the element electrodes 48 in the array 50. A voltage supply interface 84 provides the corresponding supply voltages, top substrate drive voltages, and other requisite voltage inputs as further described herein. A number of connecting wires 86 between the lower substrate 44 and external control electronics, power supplies and any other components can be made relatively few, even for large array sizes. Optionally, the serial data input may be partially parallelized. For example, if two data input lines are used the first may supply data for columns 1 to X/2, and the second for columns (1+X/2) to M with minor modifications to the column driver circuits 76. In this way the rate at which data can be programmed to the array is increased, which is a standard technique used in Liquid Crystal Display driving circuitry.
Generally, an exemplary AM-EWOD device 36 that includes thin film electronics 46 may be configured as follows. The AM-EWOD device 36 includes the reference electrode 58 mentioned above (which, optionally, could be an in-plane reference electrode) and a plurality of individual array elements 51 on the array of elements 50, each array element 51 including an array element electrode 48 and array element circuitry 72. Relatedly, the AM-EWOD device 36 may be configured to perform a method of actuating the array elements to manipulate liquid droplets on the array by controlling an electro-wetting voltage to be applied to a plurality of array elements. The applied voltages may be provided by operation of the control system described as to
The array element circuit 72 may typically perform the functions of:
Exemplary configurations of array element circuits 72 including integrated impedance sensor circuitry are known in the art, and for example are described in detail in U.S. Pat. No. 8,653,832 referenced in the background art section, and commonly assigned UK application GB1500261.1, both of which are incorporated here by reference. These patent documents include descriptions of how the droplet may be actuated (by means of electro-wetting) and how the droplet may be sensed by integrated capacitive or impedance sensing circuitry. Typically, capacitive and impedance sensing may be analogue and may be performed simultaneously, or near simultaneously, at every element in the array. By processing the returned information from such a sensor (for example in the application software in the storage device 40 of the reader 32), the control system described above can determine in real-time, or almost real-time the position, size or volume, centroid and perimeter of each liquid droplet present in the array of elements 50. As referenced in connection with
As referenced above, the present invention pertains to a microfluidic system including in an AM-EWOD device by which electrowetting forces are applied to a fluid reservoir to form a barrier droplet configuration to act as a barrier to trap, obstruct, or otherwise prevent migration of a dissolved or suspended species in a source droplet through the surrounding non-polar fluid (oil) medium. The following terms are used herein.
A “migrating species” is any dissolved chemical species, ion, molecule, or suspended particle, that is able to migrate by any means, including diffusion, out of a source droplet in which the species is originally located, through the surrounding non-polar fluid (oil), and thereby potentially into other droplets, structures, or other protected areas on the EWOD device that could be contaminated or damaged by the migrating species. The migrating species may have a preference for the polar or aqueous environment of the barrier droplet, or instead for the non-polar environment of the non-polar fluid (oil). The preference of the migrating species may be defined as having a partition coefficient between the two phases that is not equal to one.
A “barrier droplet” is a polar or aqueous droplet dispensed on an EWOD device from a fluid reservoir that obstructs a large proportion of potential pathways of migration of the migrating species. In exemplary embodiments, the migrating species has a high affinity for residence in the barrier droplet as compared to the surrounding oil, or for residence in the surrounding oil as compared to the barrier droplet, and this affinity may be further enhanced by the presence in the barrier droplet of one or more additives such as capturing agents. The barrier droplet's shape or position may be held constant by the selective actuation of corresponding array elements of the EWOD device. The EWOD device also may be used to reposition or reshape the barrier droplet, or to open and shut passages to allow or prevent the movement of the migrating species, or to merge with other droplets including other barrier droplets. The barrier droplet may be formed and manipulated in such manners as a single barrier droplet or as part of an ensemble of a plurality of barrier droplets.
A “barrier droplet configuration” is an arrangement that includes one or more barrier droplets, and optionally further may include additional barrier elements that are not barrier droplets.
A “capturing agent” is any chemical species, suspended particle or surface coating that may be located within the barrier droplet, that is able to restrict or prevent migration of the migrating species by reacting with, binding to, or removing the migrating species, or by converting the migrating species to another form. Examples of capturing agents may include magnetic beads, chemical scavengers, chelating agents, nanoparticles, ion exchange resins, supramolecular cages, pH buffers, microorganisms or the like.
As referenced above, AM-EWOD device electrowetting forces are applied to a fluid reservoir to form a barrier droplet configuration to act as a barrier to trap, obstruct, or otherwise prevent migration of a dissolved or suspended species in a source droplet through the surrounding oil medium. For example, the barrier droplet configuration may be positioned between a source droplet containing an acid and a second droplet whose pH must be kept high. Without the barrier droplet configuration, acid is able to migrate from the source droplet, through the oil, and into the high-pH second droplet. The barrier droplet configuration acts to restrict the migration of acid (or whatever migrating species the source droplet contains) so that high concentrations of the migrating species may be stored on-chip in the presence of, for example, species-sensitive components or reaction areas on the device array.
The barrier droplet configuration operates by exploiting a difference in preference of the migrating species for the polar or aqueous environment of the barrier droplet versus the non-aqueous environment of the non-polar fluid (oil). On encountering an oil/water boundary at an aqueous barrier droplet, the migrating species partitions itself between the oil and the water. Consider an example whereby a source droplet containing a high concentration of the migrating species is near an area that must be protected from the migrating species. This protected area may be where a chemical reaction takes place that may be sensitive to the presence of the migrating species, an electronic component that could be damaged by the migrating species, or another droplet or fluid reservoir that stores a reagent or another composition that may be contaminated by the migrating species. At the boundary between the source droplet and the oil, a portion of the migrating species will escape the source droplet and enter the oil. In the absence of a barrier droplet configuration, the migrating species may then move across the oil until the species reaches the area to be protected. If the system is closed, over time a state of dynamic equilibrium may be reached in which the concentration of the migrating species in the area to be protected is unacceptably high.
To prevent contamination of the protected area by the migrating species, a barrier droplet configuration is formed by electrowetting forces and positioned between the source droplet and the protected area. For effective obstruction of migration pathways, a concentration of the migrating species in the barrier droplet(s) of the barrier droplet configuration is lower than a concentration of the migrating species in the source droplet. Under such condition, the rate of migration out of a side of the barrier droplet opposite from the source droplet is lowered simply by dilution effects in accordance with Fick's diffusion laws. The barrier droplet configuration thus provides an additional set of oil/water interfaces, and may act as an additional thermodynamic sink for the migrating species, and obstructs a portion of the potential pathways of migration, thereby reducing the rate of migration of the species to the protected area. By reducing the rate at which the migrating species enters the protected area, the useful lifetime of the reaction system on the AM-EWOD device is extended.
To be effective, the barrier droplet configuration should obstruct a significant portion of the potential pathways of migration to the protected area. The obstruction may be performed using a single barrier droplet or an ensemble of a plurality of barrier droplets. To achieve this requisite obstruction without the barrier droplet(s) becoming unmanageably large, electrowetting forces applied by the AM-EWOD device are applied to control the shape and position of the barrier droplet(s) that form the barrier droplet configuration. An AM-EWOD device can be used to prepare a barrier droplet configuration that completely surrounds the source droplet, or otherwise maintains a high aspect ratio in the barrier droplet configuration such that surface tension otherwise renders the barrier droplet(s) unstable in the absence of the electrowetting forces. The barrier droplet configuration may be formed using structures and devices described with respect to
The first droplet 102 may be a source droplet that contains a high concentration of a migrating species, or a group of such source droplets. In such case, the second area 108 is a protected area that is protected from the migrating species that otherwise can migrate from the first droplet 102 through the first area 106. Conversely, the first area 106 may be the protected area, whereby the first droplet 102 may be a droplet in said protective area that must be separated by the barrier droplet from a migrating species that migrates from the second area 108. In this embodiment, because the barrier droplet 104 completely surrounds the first droplet 102, the barrier droplet obstructs all possible migration pathways between the first and second areas 106, 108 of the EWOD device array 100. Accordingly, when the first droplet 102 is the source droplet, the second area 108 of the EWOD device array 100 is protected against migration out of the source droplet 102. The barrier droplet and its contents may be static, or may be moved either separately or in unison. Electrowetting forces may be used to maintain the shape and/or position of the barrier droplet. By use of electrowetting patterns, it further is possible to open and close the barrier droplet 104, which allows the migration to be turned on and off or channeled in a particular manner as between different areas of the EWOD device array.
As referenced above, a concentration of the migrating species in the barrier droplet(s) of a barrier droplet configuration is lower than a concentration of the migrating species in the source droplet. Under such condition, the rate of migration out of a side of the barrier droplet opposite from the source droplet is lowered simply by dilution effects in accordance with Fick's diffusion laws. Additionally, the effectiveness of the barrier droplet may be enhanced by changing barrier droplet contents or makeup. Because of the make-up of the migrating species, at the oil/water interface of the aqueous barrier droplet, the migrating species will partition itself between the barrier droplet and the surrounding oil. Accordingly, an additive that enhances the preference for an aqueous medium relative to the non-polar fluid (oil), or enhances the preference for an oil medium over a polar or aqueous one, aids to slow migration through the oil across the EWOD device. For example:
By merging the barrier droplet with other droplets containing a capturing agent or other additive, a supply of the additive or capturing agent in the barrier droplet may be replenished, as the supply may become depleted over time as the concentration of migrating species in the barrier droplet increases. This strategy allows a reduction in the concentration of the additive or capturing agent that must be stored in the barrier droplet, which may be beneficial if the additive or capturing agent itself poses a migration risk.
In accordance with such features,
In previous embodiments, the barrier droplets are manipulated by the electrowetting forces to form closed barrier structures, thereby obstructing essentially all migration pathways between different areas of the EWOD device array. In certain circumstances, however, it may be sufficient to obstruct only a portion of migration pathways, such as for example when other droplets, structures, or device areas to be protected are located only at certain positions relative to the source droplet. Accordingly, a fully closed barrier configuration may not be warranted. In this regard,
The barrier droplet may be reconfigured using the electrowetting forces to alter permitted migration pathways versus obstructed migration pathways as may be suitable for a given reaction protocol. For example, the location of reagents or given reaction steps may be at different areas on the EWOD device array, Accordingly, the barrier droplet may be reconfigured as necessary to change the migration pathways in correspondence with performing different steps of a reaction protocol.
In previous embodiments, the barrier configuration is formed using a single barrier droplet. In other embodiments, the barrier configuration may be formed using an ensemble of a plurality of barrier droplets. Using electrowetting forces, it can be complex to devise and implement an EWOD driving scheme to form droplet shapes having numerous bends or turns, whereas it is simpler to form barrier droplets of more simple shapes. As an alternative, therefore, instead of shaping a single droplet into the barrier droplet configuration, multiple barrier droplets can be combined in a manner that each individual barrier droplet constitutes a segment or portion of the broader barrier droplet configuration.
In accordance with such principles,
Multiple barrier droplets may be combined in numerous different arrangements to provide different barrier droplet configurations. For example,
In previous embodiments, barrier droplet configurations are formed that surround or encompass, at least partially, a first area of the EWOD device array, or otherwise extend across a substantial portion of the EWOD device array, to separate the first area from the second area of the EWOD device array. In alternative embodiments, a linear elongated, high aspect ratio barrier droplet can be formed to separate areas of the EWOD device array. A linear elongated, high aspect ratio barrier droplet is a barrier droplet configuration in which the barrier droplet spans a larger number of array elements in a first dimension than in a second dimension. For example,
In another embodiment, an ensemble of a plurality of linear elongated barrier droplets may be employed to enhance the obstruction of the migration pathways between the first area 106 and the second area 108 of the EWOD device array. For example,
In the embodiments of
Similarly as with the embodiment of
As referenced above, it may be advantageous to form droplet configurations using patterns of smaller individual ellipsoid, square, or otherwise shaped droplets rather than larger non-standard shaped droplets, in that the EWOD driving scheme is simpler to generate and position smaller individual droplets of more standard shape (e.g., ellipsoid), as compared to generating larger droplets of more non-standard shapes that singularly span a large portion of the EWOD device array. Accordingly, previous embodiments employing larger barrier droplets of non-standard shape may be modified to form comparable barrier configurations that include an arrangement of individual smaller droplets of standard (square) or native (ellipsoid) shape. In such embodiments, any suitable number of individual droplets may be employed to form an ensemble of any suitable overall shape as warranted for a particular application. The individual barrier droplets further may have the same composition or different compositions, and may include capturing agents or other additives as in previous embodiments. The barrier droplets also may be manipulated as in previous embodiments using electrowetting forces either individually or in unison to modify the migration pathways between areas of the EWOD device array.
For example,
In accordance with the above, a myriad of barrier droplet configurations may be devised using any suitable combinations of barrier droplet arrangements, shapes, and compositions (including any capturing agents or other additives), along with any additional barrier elements that are not barrier droplets. The following illustrates potential examples, although again it will be appreciated that such examples are not intended to be exhaustive. Like references numerals are used to identify analogous components.
In certain reaction protocols, interaction between droplets may be undesirable at certain reaction stages or steps, but desirable or required at other reaction stages or steps. Under such circumstances, barrier droplet configurations may be formed to obstruct migration pathways during certain portions of the reaction protocol, and then are reconfigured by electrowetting forces to permit droplet mixing or other interaction during other portions of the reaction protocol. For example,
In the example of
In the examples of
An aspect of the invention, therefore, is a method of operating an electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD) device that includes an EWOD device array that applies electrowetting forces and contains a non-polar fluid, whereby a barrier droplet configuration is formed using electrowetting forces to obstruct migration of a species from a first area of the EWOD device array to a protected area of the EWOD device array. In exemplary embodiments, the method of operating includes the steps of: dispensing a source droplet into a first area of the EWOD device array, the source droplet containing a migrating species, wherein the EWOD device array includes a second area to be protected from the migrating species; and forming a barrier droplet configuration positioned between the first area and the second area of the EWOD device array that obstructs a migration pathway of the migrating species between the first area and the second area; The barrier droplet configuration includes at least one polar or aqueous barrier droplet, and the barrier droplet inhibits diffusion of the migrating species by the migrating species exhibiting a preference for either the polar environment of the barrier droplet or for the non-aqueous environment of the non-polar fluid. The method of operating an EWOD device may include one or more of the following features, either individually or in combination.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, a concentration of the migrating species in the barrier droplet is lower than a concentration of the migrating species in the source droplet.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the barrier droplet includes an additive that adjusts the preference of the migrating species for either the polar environment of the barrier droplet or the non-polar fluid.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the additive comprises a capturing agent that reacts with or binds to the migrating species, or converts the migrating species into another form.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the method further includes replenishing the additive of the barrier droplet.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the barrier droplet configuration completely surrounds the first area of the EWOD device array.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the barrier droplet configuration partially surrounds the first area of the EWOD device array.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the barrier droplet configuration partially surrounds the second area of the EWOD device array that does not contain the source droplet.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the barrier droplet configuration includes a plurality of barrier droplets.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the barrier droplet configuration includes multiple concentric barrier droplets.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the barrier droplet configuration includes multiple barrier droplets that in combination surround the first area of the EWOD device array.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the barrier droplet configuration includes a first barrier droplet that surrounds the source droplet and a second barrier droplet that surrounds an area of the EWOD device array that may contain a second droplet.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the second droplet includes a second migrating species that is different from the migrating species of the source droplet.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the at least one barrier droplet comprises a barrier droplet that is linearly elongated to have a high aspect ratio in which the barrier droplet spans a first dimension that is an order of magnitude longer than a second dimension.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the barrier droplet configuration comprises a plurality of individual droplets that are natively shaped and are arranged to obstruct the migration pathway.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the plurality of individual droplets includes a first layer and a second layer, wherein individual droplets of the first layer are offset relative to individual droplets of the second layer.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the barrier droplet configuration further comprises an additional barrier element that obstructs the migration pathway other than by forming a barrier droplet with the electrowetting forces.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the additional barrier element comprises a physical barrier or hydrogel located on the EWOD device array.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the additional barrier element comprises an edge of the EWOD device array.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the method includes dispensing a first droplet into a first area of the EWOD device array; dispensing a second droplet into a second area of the EWOD device array; forming a barrier droplet configuration, wherein the barrier droplet configuration includes at least one polar or aqueous barrier droplet, and constituents of the first and second droplets exhibit a preference for either a polar environment of the barrier droplet or a non-aqueous environment of the non-polar fluid; wherein the barrier droplet configuration comprises a first portion that separates the first area from the second area, and a second portion that separates both the first and second areas from a third area of the EWOD device array, the method further comprising: maintaining the first portion of the barrier droplet configuration during a first stage of a reaction protocol, thereby obstructing a migration pathway between the first area and the second area during said first stage; and retracting the first portion of the barrier droplet configuration during a second stage of the reaction protocol, thereby opening the migration pathway between the first area and the second area to permit interaction of the first droplet and the second droplet during said second stage.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating an EWOD device, the method further includes applying electrowetting voltages to the EWOD device array during the second stage of the reaction protocol to mix the first droplet and the second droplet.
According to another aspect of the invention, a microfluidic system includes an electro-wetting on dielectric (EWOD) device comprising an element array configured to receive one or more liquid droplets, the element array comprising a plurality of individual array elements; and a control system configured to control actuation voltages applied to the element array to perform manipulation operations as to the liquid droplets to perform the methods of operating the EWOD device that include forming a barrier droplet configuration. The microfluidic system further may include integrated impedance sensing circuitry that is integrated into the array elements of the EWOD device, and a configuration and position of source and barrier droplets dispensed onto the array elements is determined based on an impedance sensed by the impedance sensing circuitry.
Another aspect of the invention is a non-transitory computer-readable medium storing program code which is executed by a processing device for controlling actuation voltages applied to array elements of an element array of an electro-wetting on dielectric (EWOD) device for performing droplet manipulations on droplets on the element array, the program code being executable by the processing device to perform steps of the methods of operating the EWOD device that include forming a barrier droplet configuration.
Although the invention has been shown and described with respect to a certain embodiment or embodiments, equivalent alterations and modifications may occur to others skilled in the art upon the reading and understanding of this specification and the annexed drawings. In particular regard to the various functions performed by the above described elements (components, assemblies, devices, compositions, etc.), the terms (including a reference to a “means”) used to describe such elements are intended to correspond, unless otherwise indicated, to any element which performs the specified function of the described element (i.e., that is functionally equivalent), even though not structurally equivalent to the disclosed structure which performs the function in the herein exemplary embodiment or embodiments of the invention. In addition, while a particular feature of the invention may have been described above with respect to only one or more of several embodiments, such feature may be combined with one or more other features of the other embodiments, as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application.
The described embodiments could be used to provide enhanced AM-EWOD device operation, and in particular can be employed to provide enhanced chemical and biochemical reaction protocols. The AM-EWOD device could form a part of a lab-on-a-chip system. Such devices could be used in manipulating, reacting and sensing chemical, biochemical or physiological materials.