This invention relates to a single layer fluid routing device and a method of routing fluid within a single layer. The invention relates, in particular, to a fluid routing device and method which can be utilised to mix two or more fluids, preferably in a microfluidic circuit. Although described with reference to microfluidic circuits, the present invention can be equally applied outside of the area, for example in oil pipelines or other fluid networks.
Microfluidic networks, such as those used in so-called “lab on a chip” systems are increasingly common and it is often necessary to mix two or more fluids which are passing within such a microfluidic network, for example, to enable a reaction to take place or to allow one fluid to be diluted by mixing with a different fluid. In such microfluidic networks, the fluid flow is generally laminar and therefore the amount by which the fluids are mixed is limited by the rate of diffusion of the two fluids, which is proportional to the size of the surface area of contact between the fluids.
Mixing two or more fluids with a single interface in a diffusion limited regime is therefore very slow and requires large dead volumes within the network of passages. Consequently, it is necessary to try to maximise the surface area between the fluids to be mixed, and so increase the rate of diffusion.
Typically this is achieved by combining two sets of interlaced channels in each of which a pair of different fluids flows, as shown in
Unfortunately, in this form of interdigitated laminar mixing, all the channels 11, 12, 13, 14 have to be connected to individual reservoirs of either fluid A or fluid B to enable this device to be produced within a single microfluidic layer. However, having multiple reservoirs for the same fluid is an inefficient use of space within the device. Therefore, in order to use only a single reservoir for each fluid A and B, a two layered device is desirable.
One example of a simple two layered mixing device 20 is shown in
There are several disadvantages to a two layered construction and these include a greater manufacturing cost due to the need for multiple layers to be shaped and significant manufacturing complexity in aligning the separate layers, typically to micron scale accuracy, which also significantly increases the cost of an individual device. Multilayer systems are also often difficult to prime repeatedly at low pressures and at low flow rates and this leads to incorrect, or at least unreliable, test results.
As cost is a primary parameter in the commercial viability of microchemistry or “lab on a chip” microfluidic circuits, it is an aim of the present invention to provide a fluid routing device using only a single layer, but which does not unduly limit the routing of fluid within the device and hence reduce the function that can be achieved by such a device.
According to the present invention, there is provided a single layer microfluidic fluid routing device comprising:
a first channel having a cross-section of a first aspect ratio and a first depth;
a second channel having a second cross-section of a second different aspect ratio and a second different depth;
wherein the second channel intersects with the first channel from a first point to a second point, the first and second points having different offsets relative to the cross-section of the first channel.
Thus, the present invention provides a device which is capable of moving part of one or more fluids from one position in a flow to a different position in the flow to enhance mixing of the fluids. The device is space efficient as it does not require lengthy passageways in which the diffusion takes place as the flow pathways are relatively short compared to other known devices and therefore means that the mixing is carried out quickly.
When the depths of the channels are equal, the network is pseudo two dimensional and there will generally be little or no crossing of the two flows. However, as the depths of the channel are caused to differ, partial crossing of the flows starts to occur. In many cases, it is desirable to have similar viscous drag on the two fluid flows and so the two channels have opposite aspect ratios; for example 2:1 and 1:2.
As the aspect ratios become more elongated, more complete crossover of the two fluid flows is seen. However the channels become increasingly expensive to fabricate and the viscous drag rapidly increases. Taking these considerations into account, aspect ratios in the range between 1.5:1 and 10:1 are suitable, while aspect ratios in the region of 3:1 to 6:1 are the more preferred.
The present invention also provides a single layer microfluidic fluid routing device comprising:
a first channel having a cross-section of a first aspect ratio and a first depth and having a longitudinal axis; and
a second channel having a cross-section of a second different aspect ratio and a second different depth,
wherein the second channel passes through at least part of the first channel in a direction transverse to the longitudinal axis.
The cross-section of the intersecting first and second channels may be T-shaped. The first and second channels may be elongate in cross-section typically having an aspect ratio of 5.
The aspect ratio of the first channel may be a 90° rotation of the aspect ratio of the second channel to equalise the flow through each channel and the first and second channels preferably have substantially the same cross-sectional area.
The total cross-sectional area of the first and second channels is preferably also substantially constant.
The second channel may be separate from the first channel until the first point. The second channel may continue beyond the first channel after the second point. Alternatively, the second channel may extend only between the first and the second point.
In an example in which the second channel continues beyond the first channel after the second point, the first and second channels may be recombined to create a multi-laminar flow. In this example, the first and second channels may pass through a respective intermediary channel prior to recombination, each intermediary combination having substantially the same aspect ratio cross-section.
The second channel may be formed by a gradual change in aspect ratio from the first point. Alternatively, at the first point, there may be a step which signifies the start of the second channel.
At the second point, there may be a step which indicates the end of the second channel.
The first and second channels may have flow directions which are at 90° to each other.
The first and second points may be at different longitudinal positions in the first channel, each intermediary channel having the same aspect ratio cross-section.
The invention also provides a fluid mixer comprising a fluid routing device as described above and fluid supply means for supplying the fluids supply to be mixed and which is connected to the fluid routing device.
The mixer preferably comprises additional fluid routing devices as described above connected in series, such that an outlet from one device passes into the inlet of a subsequent device.
The fluid mixer may comprise a pair of inlet passages for supplying, in use, different fluids to the first channel. Alternatively, there may be three inlet passages, the outer two supplying a different fluid to the central passage. This is particularly advantageous if the volume of the fluid supplied by the central passage is small compared to the volume of the other fluid, as it increases the number of interfaces even before the fluids enter the routing device itself.
The mixer may additionally comprise a geometric pin between each of the fluid supply passages and the first channel.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is also provided a method of routing fluid in a single layer, the method comprising the steps of;
providing a fluid in a first channel having a cross-section of a first aspect ratio;
passing a portion of the fluid from the first channel into a second channel which has a cross-section of a second different aspect ratio and which intersects with the first channel from a first point to a second point, each point having a different offset relative to the cross-section of the first channel; and
moving the fluid through the second channel from the first point to the second point.
The method preferably comprises the further step of recombining the fluid from the second channel into a different portion of the fluid in the first channel.
The method may also comprise the step of passing the fluids from the first and the second channels into respective intermediary channels, each of which may have the same aspect ratio cross-section, prior to recombining the fluids from the first and the second channels.
There is also provided a method of routing fluid in a single layer, the method comprising the steps of:
providing a first fluid in a first channel having a cross-section of a first aspect ratio; and
flowing a second fluid, within a second channel having a cross-section of a second aspect ratio and intersecting the first channel, across the first channel.
There is also provided a method of diverting fluid from a first channel to a second channel, the method comprising the step of flowing a fluid through a fluid routing device as described above.
Examples of the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
As can be seen in
A further example of a device according to the invention is shown in
The first and second channels are then fed into intermediary channels 60 which recombine to form a passageway 61, which contains a four way laminar flow as shown in
The length of passageway 61 will be dependent upon the fluids used and their flow rate. For example, passageway 61 may be shaped so that it becomes narrower and deeper than at the point at which the channels 60 merge.
The square cross-section inlet passage 54 transforms, at first point 56, via a step change 58, although this may be a gradual change, into a T-shaped cross-section. The vertical (second channel 57) and horizontal (first channel 55) components of the “T” bifurcate, with both the first channel and the second channel containing a portion of both fluid A and fluid B. The two separate channels can then be recombined, via intermediary channels 60, in channel 61 to give a laminate flow with three interfaces which would be expected to increase the rate of diffusion by the square number of the number of interfaces (n2); in this case n=3.
Importantly, and as shown in
This creates a single-layer mixer which uses chip area efficiently, due to its exponential mixing nature and which, providing the flow regime is laminar, will operate at a wide range of flow rates and channel sizes.
As referred to earlier, priming parallel structures at very low flow rates can be problematic. The present invention is resistant to these problems due to its modular construction, but it is still desirable to improve the priming to make use of every unit in the chain, thereby minimising dead volume and chip area. Techniques such as CO2 priming and the use of a surfactant to solve these problems are well known, but the introduction of extra chemical species to a fluid can be undesirable in sensitive chemical systems.
The use of a hydrophobic dot at the fluid recombination mode, i.e. the junction between passages 60 and 61, can be used to pin the fluids and ensure complete priming, but this can add considerably to the cost of the chip and is therefore also undesirable, given the considerable implications of increase cost described earlier.
Accordingly, simple geometric pins in the recombination mode are the simplest method of ensuring priming, and these can be easily manufactured as part of the fluidic layer at negligible extra costs. Two possible geometries are shown in
While geometric pins may be used to enhance the priming of parallel structures, there is still a problem regarding bubbles from elsewhere in the circuit becoming trapped within the mixer.
For example, when multiple fluids are brought together before mixing, they will be inevitably a timing difference between these fluids. This will often manifest itself in a bubble of trapped air which then be pushed into the fluidic circuit. Another source of bubbles may be the fluid reservoir if this is imperfectly degassed/primed.
A simple geometric bubble trap 90, as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02256607 | Sep 2002 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB03/04045 | 9/23/2003 | WO | 00 | 10/6/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2004/028954 | 4/8/2004 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060157129 A1 | Jul 2006 | US |