One method of creating a modular sterile facility is to interconnect pre-made modular units. In order to maintain both the operating facility and a newly-added pod in a sterile condition it is necessary to have a junction between the operating facility and the modular units so adapted that they may be connected and disconnected without allowing outside, unsterile air to enter. Prior art does not meet this requirement.
Embodiments provide for devices, methods and systems of interconnecting one sterile building pod to another. Another name for pod is module. Each pod has a doorway, which is initially sealed with a membrane so as to maintain the interior of the pod sterile. A new pod is positioned next to an existing pod so that a doorway on each are proximal, facing each other, and aligned. A flexible gasket is placed between the two doorways, creating a volume inside the gasket, between the two membranes. This volume is sterilized, and then the two membranes are removed, creating a through passage through the two doorways between the existing and new pods.
In one embodiment the gasket is inflatable and inflated to seal volume created.
In one embodiment the gasket has one or more penetrations or manifolds to permit a sterilizing fluid to be blown or pumped into the volume.
In one embodiment the membranes are accessible from the inside of the existing pod and from the outside of the new pod.
In one embodiment, the gasket isolates the two pods from noise and vibration.
In one embodiment, the gasket isolates the two pods against motions due to earthquakes.
In one embodiment one or more mechanical restraints are between the two pods, around the perimeter of the two doorways, wherein the restraints provide a first level of movement freedom within a first range of relative motion between the two pods, and provide a second level of movement freedom beyond the first range of relative motion. The first range may be substantial freedom of movement, limited primarily by flexing of the gasket. The second range may be substantially rigid, preventing the flexible gasket from damage and protecting the junction between the doorways from opening such that the sterile seal is broken. In this second range, movement of one pod is coupled to the other pod.
The membranes may be single-use or reusable. They may be attached, or removed, or both, without any tools or without specialized tools.
All descriptions, embodiments, drawings, and examples are non-limiting.
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In one embodiment, the existing pod 19 is part of an operating sterile environment such as a vivarium. The new pod 20 is being added to expand the environment. The new pod is mechanically positioned so that the doorway 16 on the new pod 20 is aligned with, opposite, and proximal to the doorway 10 on the existing pod 19. Then, a flexible gasket 18 is placed between the two doorways 10 and 16. In one embodiment the gasket 18 is already attached to either the existing or new pod.
In one embodiment, the gasket 18 is inflatable, somewhat like an inner tube, via valve 12 or fluid intake manifold 13. In other embodiments the gasket is flexible but not inflatable, such as a comprising a foam material. In yet another embodiment, the gasket is in configured as one or more bellows, or comprises z-fold surfaces.
In one embodiment, a membrane 11 is used across the doorway 10 of the existing pod 19. This membrane 11 serves to maintain the sterile environment inside existing pod 19. In one embodiment, a membrane 15 is used across the doorway 16 of the new pod 20. This membrane 15 serves to maintain the sterile environment inside new pod 20.
In one embodiment, membrane 11 is accessible from the direction of the interior of the existing pod 19. In one embodiment, membranes 15 is accessible from the outside of the new pod 20, when the new pod 20 is free standing. Thus, membrane 15 is accessible from the inside of the existing pod 19, once the two pods are interconnected and membrane 11 is removed.
When the gasket is inflated, it forms a seal between the existing pod 19 and the new pod 20. A volume, the “inter-pod volume,” is created, where a portion of that volumetric perimeter comprises the membrane sealing the doorway of the existing pod, the membrane sealing the doorway of the new pod, and the gasket. This inter-pod volume is not shown explicitly in
Continuing with an installation method or process, the membrane 11 sealing the doorway 10 of the existing pod 19 is then removed. This may be removed manually, possibly without specialized tools, from inside the existing pod One removed, the previous inter-pod volume is accessible freely from the existing pod 19. From the interior of the existing pod 19, via the inter-pod volume, the membrane 15 sealing the new pod 20 is removed. Now, the interior of the existing pod and the interior of the new pod are connected, without voiding any previous sterility of the interiors of the existing pod 19 or the new pod 20.
Continuing with
The process in reverse is (1) place membrane 15 on doorway 16; (2) place membrane 11 on doorway 10; and then (3) separate pod 20 from pod 19.
Membranes 11 and 15 may be single-use or may be re-used. Gasket 28 may be single-use or may be re-used.
It is sometimes desirable to isolate the pods for noise and vibration. In some embodiments, the gasket 18 also provides noise and vibration isolation between pods.
It is sometimes desirable to isolate the pods for motion causes by earthquakes or other sources, including nearby activity or ground settlement. In some embodiments, the gasket 18 also provides such motion isolation.
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Membranes may comprise a plastic sheet, such as polyethylene terephthalate, polyethylene, polypropylene or other plastic. Membranes may comprise a rubber sheet, treated paper, or other material. A membrane need not be gas impermeable, however, it must be impermeable to contaminants to a vivarium sterile environment, such as bacteria. A membrane may or may not have a strengthening perimeter.
A suitable material for attaching membranes is an adhesive, which may either be permanent or removable. Examples of a removable adhesives include rubber cement, caulk, wax, and the adhesive used to attach pull-tabs to soft-drink cans. Adhesives may be removed mechanically, cut, dissolved, or removed or separated by other means. Gaskets or sealants may be used in addition to an adhesive or other attachment means. Another attachment means is hook and loop fasteners. Yet another attachment means is a zipper. Yet another attachment means is snaps. Yet another attachment means is a ridge in a receptacle slot, such as used in common sandwich household storage bags. Yet another attachments means is static, such as used for common car window stickers. Yet another attachment means is a film adhesive such as commonly used for glass tinting films. Yet another attachment means is to place the edge of the membrane within a flap secured to the doorframe or pod opening. Adhesives may be cured by the use of heat, cooling, visible light, UV light, or other radiation. Adhesives may be cured by time or by exposure to air or to a chemical hardener. Adhesives may have two components, such as used by epoxies and some polymers. Membranes may be attached without the use of specialized tools or without the use of any tools. Membranes may be removed without the use of specialized tools or without the use of any tools. New membranes may be on a roll. Portions of membranes, or some or all of a membrane attachment mating element may be 3D printed.
Both membranes may be accessible only from the direction that is inside of pod 40. That is, membrane 46 is accessible only from outside of pod 47 when pod 47 is not proximal to a blocking object, such as pod 40. In another embodiment one or both membranes are accessible from both inside and outside their respective pods. In one embodiment membrane 46 is accessible from only inside of pod 47.
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Suitable air bladders, or portions of air bladders, are made by Dynamic Rubber Inc of Des Plaines, Ill. and by Pawling Engineered Products of Pawling, N.Y.
Turning now to
An alternative embodiment to limit pod-to-pod motion is shown in
Embodiment elements 61 and 59 limit relative motion of the two pods away from each other. Elements 54, 58 and 57 limit relative motion of the two pods towards each other. 58 and 54 may be called “bumpers.” There may be two as shown, or there may be only one. Bumpers may be made out of rubber, plastic, steel, aluminum or another material. They may be solid or hollow. They may be monolithic or comprised of multiple elements. A bumper may comprise or be composed of one or more springs in any form, including coil, leaf, and hydraulic.
A bumper may be integral to the gasket, 56. Here, gasket 56 is shown inflated with a gasket interior of 55. The gasket has a gasket base, 57, which may be used to attach the gasket 56 either directly or indirectly to pod or pod structural element 63. Another gasket base is shown in
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In one embodiment, ingress pod 152 provides for ingress of people at doorway 155, with a gown-in area 154 and an air shower area 153. Ingress pod 152 may have a supplies-in doorway 150 and a clean storage area 151. Both people and equipment from the ingress pod 152 may move into the hallway pod 172 through doorway junction 169. Embodiments include the relative arrangement shown of any subset of these elements.
In one embodiment, egress pod 164 provides for egress of people and waste at doorway 168, with a procedure and surgery suite 163 and equipment access at doorway 162. Area 167 may be used for de-gown and dirty storage. Doorway junction 165 is use for people exit and for two-way animal and equipment movement from and to the hallway pod 172 and staging area 66. Embodiments include the relative arrangement shown of any subset of these elements.
Cage-rack pods 156, 158, 159 and 161 may have animal cages in racks 170 where the racks are arranged in two rows along the interior sides of the pod, such as pod 158. Cages in racks may be accessed by an automated cage placement and retrieval device that operates down the corridor of the pod between the rows of cage racks. The automated cage placement and retrieval device may pick up and deliver animal cages at a doorway junction, such as 171 with the hallway pod 172.
A procedure station, not shown in the Figure, may be mobile within the hallway pod 172, and align with the spur pod doorway junctions, such as 171, and be configured to accept a cage from or deliver a cage to the automated cage placement and retrieval device.
The procedure station may mate with the doorway junction, such as 171, such that air flow from the spur pod, such as 157, through the procedure station, and air flow from the hallway pod interior through the procedure station, and then both airflows exhaust through an exhaust port in the procedure station, such that gases and potential contaminants in the procedure station do not enter or contaminate the air of either the spur pod or the hallway pod.
Pods may be constructed from standard shipping containers. HVAC, power and IT components in the HVACPIT pods may be industry standard components, rather that expensive, specialized high-reliability components of vivarium prior art. Cage-rack and other pods may have their interiors powder-coated. Some permanent components of pods, such as cage racks, may be installed prior to powder-coating and powder-coating at the same time as the pod interior.
Access space 173 between spur pods may or may not exist. That is, spur pods may be effectively adjacent to each other. Or, a service gap may be present, as shown in the Figure.
Pods may be supported on adjustable feet or supports that may raise and lower the pod to align with other pods, and may level the pod to align with other pods. Pods may be supported on vibration, noise, shock or earthquake isolation feet or support. The feet or supports for raising, lower, and leveling may be the same feet or supports for vibration, noise, shock or earthquake isolation. Such supports may be inflatable. Additional such supports may be used for redundant support.
Pods may be moved into position and aligned using X-Y movable shuttles, whereby shuttle we mean any piece of transport equipment so adapted, whether controlled manual or automatically, and whether powered or unpowered.
Methods of attachment for membranes include but are not limited to:
A membrane material may be gas impermeable.
A membrane support surface may be stainless steel, glass, hard plastic (PVC, etc.) or other material. It may be attached to the pod doorways with permanent caulk or other adhesive. The purpose of the membrane support element is to create a smooth, uniform surface of known characteristics, unlike the doorway of a shipping container. The membrane support surface may be little more than a flat, open rectangle, a “picture frame,” glued to the container around the doorway.
Note that inter-pod volumes may be small or large. In one embodiment, the volume should be as small as possible while permitting gaskets and pod-to-pod motion restraints to be placed and be functional as described herein. Such minimization limits wasted space within a modular vivarium plan and minimized pod-to-pod transit. However, the inter-pod volume may also be so large as to be considered a passageway, hall or hallway. Doors, doorways and doorframes are not necessarily rectangular. Note, for example, the door opening 92 in
“Inside a doorway” may mean either from the interior of a doorframe, similar to the common meaning of “standing in a doorway,” or may mean the inside of a building or module comprising the doorway. “Outside a doorway” may mean either not the interior of a doorframe, similar to the common meaning of “not standing in a doorway,” or may mean on the outside of a building or module comprising the doorway.
The terms “fixed” and “movable,” and the terms “existing” and “new” as applied to doorways, doorframes, buildings and modules are arbitrary unless stated otherwise, and are used for clarity only. All doorways, doorframes, buildings and modules may be any combination of “fixed,” “movable,” “existing” and “new.”
The term “baffle” includes but is not limited to an accordion configuration. One non-limiting example of a baffle is a light-tight baffle between a moving lens (for focus) and a camera body. Another non-limiting example of a baffle is the pliant baffle between the two rigid bodies of an articulated bus. Yet another non-limiting example of a baffle is the baffle on a bellows.
The “axis of an annulus” is a line perpendicular to the plane of the annulus. For a pliable annulus, the axis of the annulus is along the primary direction of baffle pliability.
In most instances, the “inter-pod volume” of this specification is the same or predominantly the same as the “inter-doorway volume” in the claims, when the doorways are used for or are part of pods.
“Limiting relative motion” between two pods or two doorways may mean “preventing” such motion or may mean limiting such relative motion to significantly less motion per unit of force that than is permitted when such relative motion is not so limited. For example, one might consider a pliable annulus or gasket as having a first spring constant for its normal operating range and the embodiments of this invention having a second spring constant for pod-to-pod (or doorway-to-doorway) distances less than a desired minimum distance and greater than a desired maximum distance. The second spring constant is substantially higher than the first spring constant. Substantially higher means at least a factor of 5, 10, 50, 100, 500, 1000 or 5000. The second spring constant may be “substantially rigid.” Normal operating range of the pliable annulus or gasket being the normal day-to-day motions caused by temperature, movement of people and equipment, movement of nearby traffic, normal settling, normal ground heave, wind, vibration, and common noise.
“Flexible” and “pliable” are equivalent terms.
Specifically claimed as embodiments are all combinations of claims, features embodiments and drawings relating to door interconnections used in modular vivariums, modules for vivariums, and methods of constructing, modifying, expanding, maintaining, and removing modular vivariums and modules for vivariums. Doors, doorways, door frames or doorway interconnections may be used for, with, or in vivarium modules.
Ideal, Ideally, Optimum and Preferred—Use of the words, “ideal,” “ideally,” “optimum,” “optimum,” “should” and “preferred,” when used in the context of describing this invention, refer specifically a best mode for one or more embodiments for one or more applications of this invention. Such best modes are non-limiting, and may not be the best mode for all embodiments, applications, or implementation technologies, as one trained in the art will appreciate.
All examples are sample embodiments. In particular, the phrase “invention” should be interpreted under all conditions to mean, “an embodiment of this invention.” Examples, scenarios, and drawings are non-limiting. The only limitations of this invention are in the claims.
May, Could, Option, Mode, Alternative and Feature—Use of the words, “may,” “could,” “option,” “optional,” “mode,” “alternative,” “typical,” “ideal,” and “feature,” when used in the context of describing this invention, refer specifically to various embodiments of this invention. Described benefits refer only to those embodiments that provide that benefit. All descriptions herein are non-limiting, as one trained in the art appreciates.
Embodiments of this invention explicitly include all combinations and sub-combinations of all features, elements and limitation of all claims. Embodiments of this invention explicitly include all combinations and sub-combinations of all features, elements, examples, embodiments, tables, values, ranges, and drawings in the specification and drawings. Embodiments of this invention explicitly include devices and systems to implement any combination of all methods described in the claims, specification and drawings. Embodiments of the methods of invention explicitly include all combinations of dependent method claim steps, in any functional order. Embodiments of the methods of invention explicitly include, when referencing any device claim, a substation thereof to any and all other device claims, including all combinations of elements in device claims.
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