Oxygen is a gas of significant interest, simply because of its role from the cycle of all living organisms. Measurement of oxygen concentration or partial pressure is important in a wide variety of the applications. In some applications, gaseous oxygen concentrations are measured directly. In other applications, the concentration of oxygen dissolved in a liquid is measured. It is important to realize that the term “dissolved oxygen” refers to gaseous oxygen molecules dissolved in water, and it should not be confused with combined oxygen atoms as found in the water molecule, H2O.
A promising application for the measurement of dissolved oxygen is in biological specimens. These biological specimens may be in vitro specimens in a laboratory, or in vivo specimens within a patient. The measurement of dissolved oxygen in biological specimens provides important diagnostic information for care providers, and/or information about the efficacy of a particular treatment. Frequently, a biological specimen is contained within a bioreactor/mixer, and the dissolved oxygen measurement provides important information about the state of the biomass contained therein.
The life sciences industry is moving away from large, capital intensive facilities made of stainless steel with large clean in place (CIP) infrastructure and toward smaller facilities utilizing polymer-based bags or containers functioning as single-use bioreactors. A single-use bioreactor bag or container can be used once and then disposed. Using single-use bioreactors can significantly reduce the capital cost required for a plant. For example, in existing facilities using stainless steel CIP infrastructure, up to 90% of operating costs may be related to CIP infrastructure, including high-end instrumentation designed to withstand a steam cleaning cycle. By moving to disposable single-use bioreactor containers, the CIP portion of capital costs can be eliminated, facilities can be flexible and much smaller, which, in turn, allows the production of smaller batches that are needed, for example, for more targeted drug therapies and other small scale applications.
A known dissolved oxygen sensor is provided in U.S. Pat. No. 8,828,202. In the design of the above-identified patent, the sensor window membrane is placed on the wall of the container and the dissolved oxygen (DO) sensor is completely outside the container. While this arrangement is useful for sensing dissolved oxygen in single-use environments, improvements can be made.
An interface for coupling a dissolved oxygen sensor to a single-use bioreactor container is provided. A dissolved oxygen (DO) window membrane is operably coupled to the single-use container and configured to position a DO sensor at least partially within the single-use container. In some embodiments, a DO window body mounts the DO window membrane at a distal end thereof. The DO window body can include a slide lock for facilitating positioning of a DO sensor within the DO window body. Additionally, the DO window body may include at least one heat exchange fin.
Embodiments described herein generally relate to a system and method of connecting a dissolved oxygen sensor to a single-use bioreactor container via a sensor connection window membrane and a membrane holder. This system, in one embodiment, extends the sensor connection window membrane and the dissolved oxygen sensor into the single-use bioreactor container which is believed to provide better temperature compensation. As used herein, a single-use bioreactor container is intended to encompass any container or holding vessel that is suitable for a single-use process and is discarded after use rather than reused. The preferred example is a bag having a flexible polymeric wall. Additionally, some embodiments also provide a lock mechanism to secure the dissolved oxygen sensor into the sensor window.
Temperature is an important parameter for dissolved oxygen measurements. It affects the measurement by changing the permeability of the sensor membrane and the solubility of oxygen in water. Therefore, there is an internal temperature element built in the dissolved oxygen (DO) sensor.
Known dissolved oxygen (DO) sensor designs generally provide a method to attach a DO sensor to a single-use bioreactor container via a sensor connection window membrane and a membrane holder. However, the sensor window membrane is typically located on the wall of the container and the DO sensor (and its internal temperature element) is disposed completely outside the container. This can potentially create problems in terms of temperature compensation. For a typical bioreactor container, the internal process is controlled at 36.5 C whereas the room temperature is usually 20-25 C. Therefore, there is a temperature gradient throughout the attached dissolved oxygen sensor and the temperature compensation of the dissolved oxygen sensor is not accurate. In one observation, the temperature of the bioreactor container was 36.5 C and the temperature reading of the DO sensor was only 28.1 C. This temperature discrepancy may cause significant measurement errors.
To address this problem, at least some embodiments described herein provide a sensor connection window membrane and the membrane holder that is extended into the single-use container, so that the connection window membrane, the DO sensor membrane, and the sensor internal temperature element can reach thermal equilibrium with the process. This provides a better sensor temperature compensation, thus leading to higher measuring accuracy.
As shown in
Slide lock 265 helps secure DO sensor 108 in place during operation and provides lockout/tagout capabilities for the end user. Lockout/tagout is a safety procedure to ensure that dangerous machines are properly shut off and not able to be started up again until completion of maintenance or repair. In this embodiment, slide lock 265 may include an aperture through which a mechanical lock is secured in order to maintain slide lock 265 in a particular orientation. When a mechanical lock is secured through the aperture in slide lock 265, slide lock 265 may not switch positions. Thus, a DO sensor may be locked in, or locked out as desired. In this way the aperture in slide lock 265 facilitates the coupling of a mechanical lock to slide lock 265 thereby facilitating lockout/tagout. Slide lock 265 also ensures that DO sensor 108 is inserted into DO window body 250 at an exact length so that the oxygen sensing tip of DO sensor 108 can properly interface with DO window membrane 272 (shown in
As described above, embodiments described herein generally provide a DO window body, the DO membrane, and the temperature element of the DO sensor that are inserted into the container, rather than located along the wall surface of the container. Also, at least some embodiments provide fin-like features on the bottom of the DO window body to allow better heat exchange properties of the DO window body. Further, some embodiments provide a slide lock to allow selectable insertion or withdrawal of a DO oxygen sensor. Embodiments also include combinations of these features as well.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, a container flange could be provided where the DO sensor has a mechanical feature added to the sensor housing that interacts with the container flange. Since the container is pressurized during application, the only connection point of concern is the attachment to the container. This would eliminate plastic fastening devices (zip tie, etc.) to ensure the sensor is held in place.
The present application is based on and claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 62/636,408, filed Feb. 28, 2018, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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