1. Field of Invention
This invention is directed to magnetic actuators.
2. Description of Related Art
Actuators are, in general, magnetostatic, electrostatic, or mechanical. Magnetostatic actuators include well known solenoids, in which a coil of wire is energized to create a magnetic field in the interior of the coil which then interacts with a magnetic solid core, to attract the magnetic core into, or repel the magnetic core from, the interior of the coil.
To actuate fluidic or hydraulic devices, such as droplet dispensers, fluid is forced under pressure through a cylindrical tube and out of an orifice. In the case of relatively large droplet dispensers, droplet formation generally occurs when the force of gravity exceeds the surface tension of the droplet at the orifice. Therefore, for droplet volumes of several hundred nanoliters to 1 microliter or more, droplets can be dispensed by syringe pipettes, for example.
For smaller droplet volumes, kinetic energy must be delivered to the droplet volume sufficient to overcome the surface tension at the point of ejection. Kinetic energy may be imparted by piezoelectric elements or thermal elements, such as those used in ink-jet devices. Typical ink-jet devices are capable of dispensing droplets in the 10 to 100 picoliter range.
However, for droplet sizes in the intermediate range, such as in the range 1 nanoliter to 1 microliter, limited options exist. If it is acceptable to contact the surface which will receive the droplet, then “quill-pen” contact dispensing is possible, wherein a slotted cylindrical tube draws fluid in by capillary force, and dispenses the fluid by contacting the slotted cylindrical tube to a receiving surface. When non-contact dispensers are required, systems are available which pressurize a fluid in a supply volume and provide miniature solenoid switches that switch the fluid pathway between the supply volume and the ejection orifice.
Such devices for non-contact dispensing of droplet sizes in the intermediate range tend to be expensive, difficult to clean, and not disposable. When working with sticky fluids such as biological samples and proteins, the devices may become clogged, requiring extensive cleaning and vacuum drying in order to begin operating reliably and reproducibly again. Often, dispensers used with biological samples require thorough and vigorous cleaning of the equipment in order to avoid inadvertent contamination of the samples.
Therefore, there is a need for improved actuation devices which are compatible with fluidic systems. Further, there is a need for a compact and inexpensive instrument for dispensing fluids in intermediate sized droplets. There is also a need for a disposable device, or one that is readily cleaned, and suitable for dispensing biological samples.
Accordingly, various implementations provide an actuator device that is compatible with fluidic systems. Further, various implementations provide systems and methods which are capable of dispensing intermediate sized droplets, particularly, intermediate sized droplets of biological fluids. Also, various implementations provide a droplet dispensing device that is inexpensive and disposable and/or easily cleaned.
A magnetostatic actuator can be used to displace a volume of fluid. For example, a droplet dispenser system may dispense intermediate sized droplets. Such a system may be relatively inexpensive to implement, and also may be disposable.
A magnetostatic actuator may include a slug of a ferrofluid contained in a tube. A coil of conductive wire may be wound around the tube, which, when energized by a current, may generate a magnetic field along an axis defined by the coil. The ferrofluid slug may be drawn into the interior of the coil by magnetostatic interaction of the magnetic field with the induced magnetic moment of the ferrofluid.
A set of current pulses may be delivered to a plurality of electrical coils surrounding the tube. By using a particular profile of current pulses, the ferrofluid slug may be driven in a particular trajectory within the tube, to provide, for example, a “whiplash” profile which can dispense more precise droplet sizes than otherwise would be possible. The plurality of current pulses may also be applied to the plurality of coils to increase the throw of the actuator.
Various implementations may provide a convenient means for measuring the displacement of the ferrofluid slug, for example, by measuring a change in the inductance of the coil as the ferrofluid enters into, or departs from, the interior of the coil.
These and other features and advantages of this invention are described in, or are apparent from, the following detailed description.
Various exemplary implementations are described in detail, with reference to the following figures, wherein:
Systems and methods are disclosed which provide a ferrofluid magnetostatic actuator including a coil of conductive wire wrapped around a tube containing a ferrofluid slug. In various implementations, the tube is cylindrical and the coil is energized by a current which generates a magnetic field along the axis of the coil. The ferrofluid slug interacts with the magnetic field, and the interaction draws the ferrofluid slug toward the interior of the coil. The displacement of the ferrofluid slug may be used to actuate any of a number of other devices, such as switches or valves.
The word “slug” as used herein is used according to the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary definition (http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=slug) of “a detached mass of fluid (as water vapor or oil) that causes impact (as in a circulating system).”
As ferrofluid slug 120 is drawn into the coil 110, ferrofluid slug 120 pushes against piston 130, and moves piston 130 to a different position, as shown in
Cylindrical tube 140 may be chosen to have a large enough diameter such that frictional effects of ferrofluid slug 120 moving along the walls of cylindrical tube 140 do not substantially slow the actuation speed of the device. However, if cylindrical tube 140 is made excessively large, then the response of the actuator will also be slowed because of inertial effects of the larger ferrofluid slug 120. A satisfactory cylindrical tube diameter may be, for example, about 0.5 mm.
For ease of depiction, coil 110 is illustrated in
The magnetic field produced by a current I flowing through a wire can be calculated from Ampere's Law,
o∫B*dl=μ0I (1)
where μ0 is the permeability constant equal to 4π×10−3 Gauss m/ampere, and the integral is taken around a closed path. In the case of a solenoid, Ampere's Law becomes
B=μ0In (2)
where n is the number of turns per meter. For example, 20 mA applied through 200 windings in a 3 mm coil produces a magnetic field of about 17 gauss. This strength of magnetic field may be sufficient to drive ferrofluid slug 120 over a distance of about 3 mm in about 50 milliseconds.
Ferrofluid slug 120 may be any material which is magnetically permeable, yet in a fluid state. Examples of such materials include small ferromagnetic particles which are suspended in a liquid. The particles may be, for example, nanometer-sized particles of NiFe or permalloy, suspended in an oil such as. Such materials are manufactured by Ferrotec Corporation of Nashua, N.H. (see www.Ferrotec.com/ferrofluid_technology_overview.htm). The only requirement for the ferrofluid is that the particles have sufficient affinity for the fluid such that they pull the fluid along with them, rather than being torn away from the fluid by the magnetostatic force. While the ferrofluid acts like a liquid in free space, in the presence of a magnetic field, the ferrofluid may become highly viscous, and even gel-like, and therefore somewhat more difficult to move within the confined cylindrical tube volume.
The size of ferrofluid slug 120 will depend, in part, on the operating parameters of ferrofluid magnetostatic actuator 100. A larger size slug will react with more force to an applied magnetic field; however, a larger size slug will also be slower to actuate. In contrast, a smaller ferrofluid slug will respond more quickly; however, a smaller slug will deliver less force. A ferrofluid slug of length 3 mm in a cylindrical tube of 0.5 mm diameter, for example, may be suitable for many applications.
Ferrofluid magnetostatic actuator 100 may be adapted to dispense droplets of fluid.
Droplet dispenser 200 may be operated by applying a current I to coil 210. As with ferrofluid magnetostatic actuator 100, coil 210 produces a magnetic field B along an axis defined by coil 210, as shown in
As mentioned above, air bubble 225 may be used to separate ferrofluid slug 220 from working fluid 230. Air bubble 225 may therefore physically separate the two fluids to prevent them from mixing. This may be advantageous in applications in which contamination of a sample is of particular concern, such as biotechnology applications. An air bubble of length of about 1 mm, for example, may be sufficient to adequately isolate ferrofluid slug 220 from working fluid 230. However, because air is compressible, the presence of air bubble 225 may cause droplet dispenser 200 to lose force and speed.
In other implementations, rather than air bubble 225, immiscible fluids may be used. For example, an oil-based ferrofluid slug with a water-based working fluid may be used. If the fluids are sufficiently immiscible, the fluids will not mix, or even form regions containing the other material, especially if they are confined by the cylindrical tube to a small enough volume. The 0.5 mm diameter cylindrical tube described previously, for example, may be a small enough volume to discourage mixing of an oil-based ferrofluid and a water-based working fluid.
The choice of a diameter for orifice 260 is important in determining the properties of ejected droplet 270. If the diameter is chosen too large, then droplet 260 will dribble out rather than being ejected. This reduces the precision and reliability with which the droplets of fluid can be produced. If the diameter of orifice 260 is chosen too small, viscous forces within orifice 260 can cause clogging and slow dispensing of droplets. An orifice diameter which is approximately one order of magnitude smaller than the cylindrical tube diameter may be suitable for many applications. Therefore, for a cylindrical tube diameter of 0.5 mm, the orifice diameter may be, for example, 50 microns. Using an orifice/cylindrical tube diameter ratio of much greater than 1 also assures that ferrofluid slug 220 needs only to move over a relatively small distance in order to displace a desired volume of working fluid 230.
Using droplet dispenser 200 configured as discussed above, droplets may be produced, for example, ejected with a speed of several meters per second, and with a repetition rate of 100–200 Hertz. The precise dimensions of the droplets produced may be measured by strobing the droplets in free flight, and using a calibrated eyepiece to measure the diameter of the droplets. It is estimated that droplet dispenser 200 shown in
In order to dispense a droplet in this range, ferrofluid slug 220 may be urged by the magnetic field produced in coil 210 to travel a distance of about 0.3 microns. Therefore, over the total throw of about 3 mm of ferrofluid slug 220 within coil 210, thousands of droplets can be produced from the amount of working fluid 230. Once working fluid 230 has been exhausted, cylindrical tube 240 may be removed from coil 210 and discarded and replaced with a full cylindrical tube, or cylindrical tube 240 can be cleaned and reused, if desired.
However, when droplet dispenser 300 has reached the end of its throw, for example, when ferrofluid slug 320 has been drawn entirely within coil 310, second coil 350 can then be energized, and the current in coil 310 can be discontinued. Because the end of ferrofluid slug 320 is still in proximity to coil 350, ferrofluid slug 320 will interact with the fringing fields produced by coil 350, and magnetization M will be induced in ferrofluid slug 320 in response to the fringing fields from coil 350.
As shown in
The reverse movement of ferrofluid slug 320 in
One aspect of droplet dispensers is the dead volume of the dispenser, which is defined as the difference between the minimum aspiration volume and the maximum dispense volume. In various prior art devices, the dead volume could be substantial because of the distance between the ejection orifice and the driving force (the miniature solenoid valve). A larger distance increases the probability that curvatures or depressions exist in the dispensers, where eddy currents can form which reduce the minimum aspiration volume, thereby increasing the dead volume. In droplet dispenser 300 shown in
While droplet dispenser 300 shown in
Therefore, by successively passing ferrofluid slug 420 from one coil to the next, the total throw of the device is increased by a factor of about three times. This behavior is illustrated, for example, in
Furthermore, by using multiple coils, the ferrofluid slug may be caused to travel in the opposite direction, for example, used to aspirate the fluid volume in the dual coil example of
In this scenario, ferrofluid slug 420 may start at an intermediate position xstart, between coils 410 and 450. Then coil 410 may be energized by application of current I410, as illustrated in
Relatively complex current waveforms can be applied to the various coils, for example, by using a computer to generate the waveforms and to control their timing and application. An exemplary system 1000 is shown in
For clarity of depiction, ferrofluid magnetostatic actuator 1100 is shown as including only a single coil 1110 and one ferrofluid slug 1120. However, other implementations are possible.
A user may designate the waveform parameters such as pulse duration and magnitude, by inputting such information to CPU 1500 via input/output device 1300, which may be, for example, a keyboard or a mouse. Alternatively, the user may designate the size and number of droplets desired, and CPU 1500 may calculate an appropriate waveform to produce the desired droplets. For example, CPU 1500 may generate the waveforms shown in
In addition to providing a complex current waveform, system 1000 may also provide information as to the location of ferrofluid slug 1120 inside coil 1110. The presence of magnetizable ferrofluid slug 1120 will change the inductance of the surrounding coil 1110, based on the proportion of ferrofluid slug 1120 which is located inside coil 1110. Therefore, the position of ferrofluid slug 1120 may be monitored by measuring the inductance in the corresponding coil 1110. Any of a number of techniques may be used to measure the inductance of the coil, an example of which is described below.
To measure the inductance of coil 1110, a capacitance C may be placed in series with coil 1110 of ferrofluid magnetostatic actuator 1100, as shown in
System 1000 may be used to dispense a known quantity of droplets, or tailor the current waveforms applied to the coil(s), to achieve a certain droplet size (for example, by creating the whiplash profile described above), or to monitor the displacement of ferrofluid slug 1120, and alert an operator if one of the cylindrical tubes containing the ferrofluid slug appears to be empty, based on the displacement of the ferrofluid slug.
While details of this invention have been described above, various alternatives, modifications, variations, improvements, and/or substantial equivalents, whether known or that may be presently unforeseen, may become apparent upon reviewing the foregoing disclosure. For example, in addition to the droplet dispenser described above, the ferrofluid magnetostatic actuator may also be used to control a valve or switch. Accordingly, the exemplary details of the invention, as set forth above, are intended to be illustrative, not limiting.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060071973 A1 | Apr 2006 | US |