The present invention pertains to filtration cassettes, components thereof, and methods for manufacturing them.
Cassette filtration devices have become the standard in many high technology filter applications such as in biopharmaceutical processing, virus removal from blood products, as well as water purification. Cassette filters are well known in the art and typically include a number of filter elements selectively bound together with a flowable resin so as to define internal channels for the distribution of feed, filtrate, and retentate streams therethrough. Typically, the channels are either open or polymer based screens or plates with the appropriate openings that serve to space the filter elements from each other. The use of polymer screens in the formation of distribution layers provides a high degree of flow uniformity as well as good control of the shear imparted to the fluids. Examples of prior art filtration cassettes are provided by U.S. Pat. No. 4,715,955 to Friedman and U.S. Pat. No. 5,866,930 to Kopf, International Patent Application number WO2003/088864 to Herczeg, the teachings of which are incorporated by reference herein.
Typical cassette manufacture involves first cutting each of the flow screens and the filtration membranes into identically sized pieces which are in the shape of the cassette. The flow screens are made of one type of material and the filtration membranes are made of different type of material. Filtrate and retentate subassemblies are made in which flow is blocked by drawing a flowable resin about certain holes cut in the elements. Filtrate screen subassemblies include an elongate planar filtrate screen having a similar sized filter membrane positioned over each major surface. Each of these members of the filtrate screen subassemblies defines registered apertures for conducting either feed fluid, filtrate fluid, or retentate fluid through the assembled cassette. In the case of filtrate screen subassemblies, apertures utilized in the distribution of feed and retentate streams are blocked with the resin so as to allow those streams to pass therethrough without access to the filtrate screen. The feed and retentate subassemblies, each composes of only a single feed or retentate screen, include similarly registered apertures for mating with the filtrate subassemblies. In the feed and retentate subassemblies, the holes utilized for the distribution of filtrate streams are parametrically sealed with the flowable resin so as to prevent mixing with the feed/retentate streams. The result of stacking these subassemblies is a filtration cassette having a plurality of holes therethrough for accommodating the separation of the filtrate streams from the feed and retentate streams. The stack of these subassemblies is also parametrically sealed with a flowable resin to provide the mechanical integrity and to completely define all of the flow channels necessary for operation.
The application of the flowable resin in each of these steps is accomplished in three steps. First, a number of feed/retentate screens are stacked in a mold with an impermeable spacer layer placed between each screen. The flowable resin is injected into each elongate cavity formed by the overlying filtrate apertures. The mold is then closed about the stack of screens and a vacuum is applied to the mold cavity so as to draw the resin into the screens sufficiently to form a fluid-tight gasketing seal about those apertures. Second, a number of filtrate subassemblies are stacked in a mold with an impermeable spacer layer placed between adjacent subassemblies. The flowable resin is injected into each elongate cavity formed by the overlying feed and retentate apertures. The mold is closed about the stacked subassemblies and a vacuum is applied to the mold cavity to draw the resin into the screens sufficiently to form a fluid-tight seal about those apertures. Upon the resin hardening, the screen and an overlying and underlying filter membrane are permanently joined about the feed/retentate apertures. Third, the final encapsulation step of the entire cassette requires all of the subassemblies to be appropriately stacked and the resin introduced around the periphery of the assembly. Again, a vacuum is drawn on the interior of the assembly through the all of the apertures and the resin is drawn into the perimeter of the parts, thereby binding the stack permanently.
Subassemblies 17, 19, and 25 thereby define registered apertures comprising first and second feed/retentate ports 36 and 38 extending in fluid communication with feed/retentate passageways 30 and 32 and registered apertures comprising first and 20 second filtrate ports 40 and 42 extending in fluid communication with filtrate passageway 34. Gaskets 21 and 31 serve to isolate the feed/retentate stream from the filtrate steam of cassette 10. Filter membranes 24 and 26 allow the filtrate component of the feed stream to pass from feed/retentate passageways 30 and 32 into filtrate passageway 34. Filter membranes 24 and 26 are desirably selected from the group comprising ultrafiltration flat sheet membranes, microfiltration flat sheet membranes and may optionally be selected to be either asymmetric or symmetric membranes as are known in the art. Impermeable films 16 and 18 are also optionally discarded from cassette 10 if the cassette is to be used in a filtration fixture which has walls which can seal against the top and bottom of the cassette. A sealing resin (not shown) may be provided to parametrically seal the edges of the filtration media and the porous mesh as well as to seal the apertures defined thereby so as to render the feed/retentate passageways in obstructed fluid communication with the filtrate passageways only through the filter media. The sealing resin defines at least an end portion of a fluid channel in each passageway. Optionally a cassette may utilise a plurality of filtrate subassemblies 25 in which case a further filtrate screen 28 is positioned between each such subassembly—as shown in dotted lines in
The present invention relates to improved filter cassettes and improved methods for making such cassettes.
As described previously, each filtrate subassembly 125 includes a first and second filter membrane 124 and 126 which encloses a smaller-sized filtrate screen 128. Filtrate screen 128 defines an elongate filtrate passageway 134. Filter membranes 124 and 126 define both first and second feed/retentate ports 136 and 138 and first and second filtrate ports 140 and 142, while filter screen 128 only defines first and second filtrate ports 140, 142. Subassembly 125 includes sealed regions 131 which isolate feed/retentate ports 136 and 138 from filtrate passageway 134.
Sealed regions 131 further serve to bond filter membranes 124 and 126 to each other. Subassemblies 117, 119, and 125 thereby define registered apertures comprising first and second feed/retentate ports 136 and 138 extending in fluid communication with feed/retentate passageways 130 and 132 and registered apertures comprising first and second filtrate ports 140 and 142 extending in fluid communication with filtrate passageway 134. Sealed regions 131 serve to isolate the feed/retentate stream from the filtrate steam of cassette 110. Filter membranes 124 and 126 allow the filtrate component of the feed stream to pass from feed/retentate passageways 130 and 132 into filtrate passageway 134. Filter membranes 124 and 126 are desirably selected from the group comprising ultrafiltration flat sheet membranes, microfiltration flat sheet membranes and may optionally be selected to be either asymmetric or symmetric membranes as are known in the art. Optionally a cassette may utilise a plurality of filtrate subassemblies 125 in which case an intermediate filtrate screen 129 is positioned between each such subassembly. Intermediate filter screen 129 is made of a piece of screen material (for example, polypropylene such as Propyltex™ from Sefar (catalogue no. 05-420/30) which has a melting point of 165° C.) in the shape of a rectangle with rounded corners, two of which have been removed leaving projecting tabs 173, 175 which leave the filter screen in the form of an elongated Z-shape. The two corners which are removed are diametrically opposed and are the corners which correspond to the corners of the filter membranes 124, 126 which have the filtrate ports of filter membranes 124, 126. The two projecting tabs 173, 175 of intermediate filter screen 129 are provided with first and second feed/retentate ports 136, 138 which are positioned so that in use they are aligned with the first and second feed/retentate ports 136, 138 of filter membranes 124, 126. The amount of material removed from the two corners of intermediate filter screen 129 and the size of intermediate filter screen 129 are adapted so that when a filter screen is placed on a filter membrane 124, 126 with its first and second feed/retentate ports aligned with the first and second feed/retentate ports of the filter membrane, then there is a distance of at least 1 mm, preferably at least 2 mm and most preferably 3 mm from the edge of each of tabs to the nearest filtrate port on the filter membrane 124, 126, and at least 1 mm, preferably at least 2 mm and most preferably 3 mm from the edges of the filter screen to the closest edge of the filter membrane. Preferably the projecting tabs 173, 175 of intermediate filter screen 129 are shortened so that the first and second feed/retentate ports 136, 138 are open towards the short sides of the intermediate filter screen 129 as shown in
A layered filtration cassette assembly 114 can be made by stacking a top subassembly 117 and one or more filtrate subassemblies 125 onto a bottom assembly 119. This can be achieved by placing a bottom assembly with the impermeable file side facing downwards into a fixture, applying a pattern of melted resin such as Eastman Provista 21019BG (available from Eastman Chemical Company, Kinsport Tenn. 37662-5280 USA) around the filtrate ports and the perimeter of the upward facing filter membrane of the bottom subassembly, aligning the ports in a intermediate filter screen with the ports in the bottom subassembly and placing it on bottom assembly, aligning the ports in a filtrate subassembly with the ports in the bottom assembly and placing it onto the melted resin, and pressing the filtrate subassembly towards the bottom subassembly while allowing the resin to solidify. This process is repeated until the rest of the filtrate subassemblies and the top subassembly is stacked with the impermeable film facing upward. The resin fulfils two functions, namely to hold the layers of the layered filtration cassette assembly to each other while the filtration cassette is being manufactures and to provide a temporary seal between the outside of the cassette and the filtrate/feed/retentate passageway before the edging is applied to the layered filtration cassette assembly.
As shown in
In a further embodiment of the present invention, instead of the encapsulating material being insert molded onto the stack, a pre-shaped pattern of encapsulating material is cut out of a sheet of impermeable material and positioned between each pair of subassemblies as the stack of subassemblies is being built. The cassette is then compressed under a temperature above the melt point of the thermoplastic, preferably in a fixture to ensure proper cassette geometry.
In a further embodiment of the present invention, a large cassette is formed by combining a plurality of cassettes together. This can be achieved by stacking one cassette on top of at least one other cassette with their ports aligned and then joining the adjacent surfaces of the cassettes together, for example by heating or the use of an adhesive. Alternatively, or additionally, the cassettes may be taped together using an adhesive tape which overlaps the join between the cassettes.
While the preferred embodiment of the present invention has been shown and described, it will be obvious 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. For example, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the specific shapes of the subassemblies, components, apertures and notches disclosed herein. The actual scope of the invention is intended to be defined in the following claims when viewed in their proper perspective based on the prior art.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US05/24268 | 7/8/2005 | WO | 00 | 7/17/2008 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60588479 | Jul 2004 | US |