The invention relates to methods and devices for manipulation of small amounts of liquids on surfaces, preferably chip surfaces.
The term liquid, in the present text, includes among others liquids, mixtures, dispersions, and suspensions, as well as liquids, in which solid parts, for example, biological material, are located.
With the “lab-on-a-chip” technology existing at the earliest time, it is desirable to move a defined, small quantity of liquid to a defined analysis or synthesis point. The quantities of liquid are therefore, for example, in the range of pico-liters or milliliters. The analysis points often have only dimensions of a few micrometers or less on chips in the size of electronic semi-conductor elements.
The analysis of this type of quantities of liquid already is used today for analysis in biology (Ann Y. Fu et al., Nature Biotechnology 17, page 1109 and on (1999)). These methods are used, among other things, for inorganic reagents or organic material, such as cells, molecules, macromolecules or genetic materials, or in buffer solutions.
Thus, the movement and the reaction of defined volumes of small quantities of liquids are realized by means of micro-structured channels (for example, O. Müller, Laborwelt 1/2000, pages 36–38). Such channels, for example, are etched into the chip and are many micrometers deep or wide and generally capped. The movement takes place by means of electrokinetic (M. Köhler et al, Physicalische Blätter 56, Nr. 11, pages 57–61), mechanical or electrical pumps or capillary forces, respectively, in micro-structured channels.
High pump power is necessary, in order to move a liquid through these channels. Based on the sharp edges and narrow channels, cleaning after use is very difficult.
Should a liquid or material contained therein be analyzed on a specific surface, then often a chemically, physically, and/or biologically functionalized surface is used. In order to perform such analysis or synthesis at a good localized point, the functionalized area must be located within a channel and is thus difficult to make. With a corresponding functionalizing on a free surface without channel forming, on the other hand, an accurate localization of the liquid during the analysis is not warranted.
An object of the present invention is to provide a method and a device, with whose assistance, a manipulation of small quantities of liquids along accurately defined transport paths or at defined analysis or synthesis points is possible, whereby the method or the device can be made cost effectively or performed simply.
This object is solved with a method and device with the features described herein.
With the method of the present invention, a small amount of liquid, which is held together by its surface tension, on an area of a surface, for example, is applied to a solid body surface, which includes an intermediate region and at least one guide strip. The intermediate region is defined by guide strips at least in one spatial direction. The surface characteristics of at least one intermediate region and the guide strips are selected, such that a surface with a surface characteristic, which corresponds with the surface characteristic of a guide strip, are wetted more strongly with the quantity of liquid than a surface with the surface characteristics of the intermediate region. Between the liquid and a guide strip, then, a flatter wetting angle of contact is positioned, then between the liquid and the intermediate region. The liquid is applied on the surface, such that it contacts a guide strip as well as the intermediate region. The necessary quantity, for example, can be determined in pre-sampling or can be reached by successive application of the liquid.
With a device of the present invention, at least one correspondingly arranged guide strip for defining an intermediate region with the corresponding surface characteristics is provided.
The quantity of liquid is held by surface tension and by the preferred wetting with the surface at least of one guide strip. In order to further promote the localization, the surface of the surface outer region, which is adjacent to a guide strip on its side facing the bordering intermediate region, has different wetting characteristics from the surface of an intermediate region, such that the surface of the intermediate region wets more strongly with the small quantity of liquid. The surface of at least one guide strip wetted by the liquid, then, is the strongest. Since the surface of the surface outer region is wetted even less with the quantity of liquid than the intermediate region, the quantity of liquid is localized additionally in the area of the intermediate region and the guide strips.
The different surface characteristics can be achieved by corresponding coatings. Thus, for example, for manipulation of an aqueous solution, the surface of the guide strips can be selected to be hydrophilic in comparison to the surface of the intermediate region. With oily solutions to be analyzed, the guide strips can be selected to be lipophilic in comparison to the intermediate region.
The coatings can be achieved in a simple manner, for example, by lithographic methods with subsequent coating steps. Different wetting characteristics can be achieved further by means of micro-structuring, as is the case with the so-called lotus effect, which contacts the different roughnesses of the surfaces. This can be maintained, for example, by micro-structuring of the corresponding surface regions, for example, by chemical treatment or ionic radiation.
With another form of the invention, the intermediate region is raised relative to at least one guide strip, whereby the raised step is smaller than the height of the quantity of liquid on the intermediate region held together by surface tension. Such a stepping between the guide strips and intermediate region can be achieved through a very flat etching, for example, with a depth in the submicrometer range of the surface of a solid body chip. Alternatively, with the aid of lithographic methods, the intermediate region can comprise a coating, or it can be grown in all regions of the surface with absorption of the guide strip crystal material.
Macroscopically, that is, on a longitudinal scale in dimension of the width of the intermediate region or the lateral extension of the small quantity of liquid, the surface remains essentially planar. Such a flat etching or step can be made very simply and definitely in finishing technology, without occurrence of the known problems of deep etchings of narrow channels.
Collectively, the inventive design is that on the edge of the intermediate region, guide strips are located, to which the liquid would like to disperse. With one form, this is affected by means of the preferred wetting of the guide strips; with another form, this is affected by the downward guiding step. On the sides of the intermediate region, then, the quantity of liquid is guided or retained by guide strips. The surface tension of the small quantity of liquid additionally prevents divergence.
The quantity of liquid, depending on the surface tension, can be found in the form of a drop on the intermediate region defined by the guide strips. With longitudinally extending intermediate regions with bordering guide strips, the liquid also can be found in the form of a “hose” on the intermediate region with the bordering guide strips.
The design of the present invention makes possible that in the intermediate region, independently from the wetting characteristics, a functionalizing can be selected. The localizing or guiding of the quantity of liquid is permitted by the guide strips. Thus, it is possible, for example, that material is analyzed in an aqueous solution at a functionalized region, which is hydrophobic. The functionalized hydrophobic region represents the intermediate region, which is surrounded by hydrophilic or recessed guide strips. The liquid, then, is held in the functionalized region, without the need for deep etching for accommodating the quantity of liquid, although the functionalized region is hydrophobic. The guide strips prevent the liquid from leaving the functionalized and hydrophobic region. Of course, also a combination of the embodiments with modular wetting characteristics and recessed guide strips is possible.
With a further embodiment of the methods of the present invention or the devices of the present invention, the width of the guide strips are greater than the width of a precursor film of the liquid to be analyzed, preferably more than approximately 100 nm. The precursor film forms by condensation of liquid vapor on a solid body (A. W. Adamson and A. P. Gast, “Physical Chemistry of Surfaces,” John Wiley & Son, Inc., New York 1997, 6th edition, pages 372, 373) in the environment of a quantity of liquid on a surface independently from the wetting angle of contact.
With one advantageous form, the small quantity of liquid is defined on multiple sides by guide strips. Thus, an accurate localization of the quantity of liquid can be achieved, in order, for example, to enable performance of a reaction at a localized point. The liquid can be guided to such a reaction region, for example, on an intermediate region limited on two sides by guide strips in a type of guide rails.
For transport of small quantities of liquid on a chip surface, parallel arranged guide strips with an intermediate region located therebetween are suited.
By action of an outer force, for example, a liquid drop is guided along such an intermediate region with laterally arranged guide strips, such as on a “track”.
In the intermediate region, various functionalized surface regions can be arranged, whereby no particular consideration must be given to their wetting characteristics.
With one form with an intermediate region, which is wetted worse by the liquid than the guide strips, only minimal a braking force on the liquid is produced, so that a faster transport is possible.
With a further embodiment, multiple guide strips are arranged parallel to one another, whereby, respectively, between two guide strips, an intermediate region is located. The outer guide strips serve for lateral limiting of the movement of the liquid, while the guide strips located therebetween permit the stabilizing of the movement.
The methods of the present invention or the devices of the present invention are suited for chemical, physical, and/or biological analysis of the quantity of liquid or of material in the quantity of liquid. In this connection, the intermediate region can be functionalized accordingly. Particularly advantageous, the method or device can be used to analyze biological material, for example, cells or DNA molecules in buffer solutions. Thus, the intermediate region is functionalized with the aid of biological macromolecules. The liquid is brought into the functionalized region and localized by the guide strips or limited in their movement in one spatial direction. The biological material located in the liquid reacts with the biological macromolecules in the intermediate region. The changes resulting from the physical, chemical and/or biological behavior can be analyzed and used for analysis.
Of course, a plurality of these types of “reaction regions” can be provided on a chip, which makes possible a “DNA screening”, for example.
With advantageous further embodiments of the methods or devices of the present invention, an outer force effect is used, in order to achieve a stirring of the small quantity of liquid. In this manner, a reaction can be accelerated or uniform reaction conditions can be achieved.
If guide strips in a parallel orientation are provided, between which an intermediate region is disposed, then the quantity of liquid can be moved along these guide strips by effect of an outer force.
If the quantity of liquid moves along a longitudinally extending intermediate region with defining guide strips, whose distance is not constant, then the shape of the small quantity of liquid changes corresponding to the lateral extension of the intermediate region with the defining guide strips.
The outer force can be produced in various ways, for example, electrostatically. Especially advantageous, however, is the production of an outer force with the aid of surface sound waves. These types of surface sound waves lead to a mechanical deformation of the surface, which affects an impulse transmission on the quantity of liquid.
If, for example, a piezoelectric crystal is used as the solid body, on which the arrangement is located, then the mechanical deformation of the surface is accompanied additionally by electrical fields, which, in turn, affect a force effect on charged or polarizable material within the liquid to be analyzed.
By the named effects, a surface sound wave transmits an impulse to the liquid. The impulse affects a movement of the liquid in the direction of the dispersion direction of the surface sound waves. In addition, stirring of the liquid by the action of the surface sound waves is achieved.
Of course, also multiple quantities of liquid can be guided to one another with surface sound waves from different directions, in order to react with one another or to mix.
For production of surface sound waves, advantageously, an inter-digital transducer made is inserted on a piezoelectric region of the substrate or on a piezoelectric substrate. Thus, it is sufficient when the substrate or the corresponding coating is piezoelectric only in the area, in which the inter-digital transducer is located.
Such an inter-digital transducer has two electrodes in simple designs, which engage in one another in the manner of fingers. By application of a high frequency alternating field, for example in the magnitude of 10 to 100 MHz, a surface sound wave is stimulated in the piezoelectric substrate or in the piezoelectric region of the substrate, when the resonance condition is approximately fulfilled, that the finger distance of an electric corresponds to the quotients of the surface sound speed and the frequency. The surface sound wave has the wave length of the finger distance of an electrode and its dispersion direction is essentially perpendicular to the engaged finger electrode structures. Such an inter-digital transducer can be made very simply and cost-effectively with known lithographic methods and coating technologies. Inter-digital transducers can be controlled wirelessly, for example, by radiating an electromagnetic alternating field in an antenna device connected with the inter-digital transducer.
In order to drive a quantity of liquid along a longitudinally extending intermediate region with transverse, enclosing guide strips, for example, an inter-digital transducer is arranged on the chip surface, such that one of its wave dispersion directions essentially is along the longitudinal extending arrangement from the intermediate region and guide strips.
Of course, multiple inter-digital transducers can serve for controlling different paths formed by intermediate regions with enclosing guide strips. Likewise, a network arrangement of corresponding paths and associated inter-digital transducers is possible.
With use of inter-digital transducers with non-constant finger distance (“tapered inter-digital transducer”), also the lateral dispersion region of the surface sound of an inter-digital transducer can be limited. With such tapered inter-digital transducers, different regions of a chip can be selectively controlled.
Inter-digital transducers can be realized in different geometries. According to the present invention, also other inter-digital transducer geometries can be used, such as those known from the technology of surface wave filters.
Particular advantages of the impulse transmission by means of surface sound waves for movement or stirring of small quantities of liquid are:
The method or device of the present invention can be used advantageously also in a system of various analysis or synthesis points on a solid body chip. In this manner, a so-called “lab-on-a-chip” is formed. In this manner, longitudinally extending intermediate regions with two-sided, lateral guide strips serves as connection points between different analysis or synthesis points. Individual intermediate regions, which are surrounded on multiple sides by guide strips, can be used as reaction regions. Of course, the device or method of the present invention can be combined with other transport or localization methods on one chip.
The liquid, for example, is applied with the aid of a pipette robotic onto the intermediate region, such that at least one guide strip is contacted. The necessary quantity can be determined in pre-trials or can be achieved by successive application of the liquid. With contact of two guide strips, which, for example, are arranged in parallel, the quantity of liquid is localized by the preferred wetting of the guide strips in cooperation with the surface tension. With a suitable selection of geometry or of method cycle, the liquid can also be self-adjusting. The liquid quantity is brought into contact with a guide strip and the intermediate region. By outer force effect, for example, by a surface sound wave or by movement of the entire chip, the quantity of liquid is moved, such that it can come into contact with a further guide strip. It adjusts itself, then, in a self-adjusting manner, in which the quantity of liquid, based on its surface tension and the preferred wetting of the guide strips, is retained between these.
Next, the invention will be explained in detail with reference to the accompanying figures. The schematic figures serve for clarification of the principles and are not necessarily to scale. The figures show sections of plan view or cross sections of chip surfaces, which can be a part of a greater complex. In the figures:
a shows a cross section through the arrangement of
b shows a cross section according to the line along line B—B of
c shows a cross section along the line C—C with the line of sight provided in
Typically, the guide strips are approximately one-tenth to one third of the lateral extension of the quantity of liquid to be manipulated, in the shown example, then, of the drop diameter, however larger than the width of the precursor film, that is, greater than approximately 100 nm.
The liquid volume moves in dimensions from 1 μm3 to 1 cm3.
Between the guide strips 5, an intermediate region 3 is located, which, for example, is reaction functionalized. For example, biological macromolecules can be bound in the reaction functionalized intermediate region 3. Also, the strip formed from the intermediate region 3 with the guide strips 5 is not completely shown in
Spaced from the strip arrangement of intermediate region 3 and guide strip 5, an inter-digital transducer 7 is located, which is applied on the solid body surface with known lithographic technologies and coating technologies. The inter-digital transducer comprises electrodes 9 with finger-type appendages 11, which engage in one another. The distance of the individual fingers is in the dimension of micrometers. With the embodiment of
The distance of the inter-digital transducer 7 from the shown strip arrangement is not shown to scale. Greater distances are contemplated, as are known from surface sound wave technology.
a shows a section through the arrangement of
b shows a section along line B—B of
Such an arrangement can be used as follows. A liquid drop 1 is applied on the strip arrangement on the intermediate region 3 with the lateral guide strips 5. The liquid drop 1 includes an aqueous solution with, for example, biological material. The necessary amount of liquid can be determined in pre-trials. Likewise, the amount can be increased successively, for example, with the aid of a pipette, until both guide strips 5 at least are contacted. Based on the hydrophilic qualities of the lateral guide strips 5, the liquid drop disperses in the direction of the edge. Based on the surface tension of the drop, it is held together in its shape and a diverging is prevented. This is greatly reinforced by the surface characteristic of the surface region 31, in which a still smaller wetting occurs than in the intermediate region 3. In the intermediate region 3, which has more strongly hydrophobic characteristics than the guide strips 5, a steeper wetting angle of contact β is formed, while in the region of the guide strips 5, a flatter wetting angle of contact α is formed.
An electrical alternating field of the provided dimension is applied on the electrodes 9 of the inter-digital transducer, in order to emit a surface sound wave in the direction 13. The surface sound wave transmits its impulse to the liquid drop 1, for example, by the mechanical deformation of the surface. The liquid drop is moved forward in this manner in the direction 13. The guide strips 5 prevent a lateral bursting or breaking out. This behavior is independent of which wetting characteristics the intermediate region 3 has. Also, a less hydrophilic region, such as that provided with the shown embodiment, is possible for the intermediate region 3, since the direction of the drop movement is determined by the guide strips 5. A defined movement of the liquid drop along such a “track” is produced.
Such an arrangement can be used in order to bring the liquid drop, for example, to a selected analysis point, in which the intermediate region 3 is functionalized in a particular form, in order to make possible a reaction or analysis, for example. In this manner, no consideration must be made of the wetting characteristics of the intermediate region, since the movement of the drop is determined by the guide strips 5.
With the shown embodiment, the liquid is arranged in the form of a drop 1 on the surface. With a correspondingly narrower embodiment, the liquid is in the form of a “liquid tube” on the “track” 3, 5.
In
The drive of the liquid drop 1 takes place likewise with an inter-digital transducer in an analogous arrangement as that of
In
With the arrangement of
Of course, also the arrangement of
Various reaction regions 4 of this type can be bound to one another via corresponding “tracks” and so various reactions are possible with one liquid. Also, other analysis or synthesis stations can be provided, which are connected to one another via associations according to
The invention, then, makes possible a defined movement of a quantity of liquid on a chip surface. In this connection, no deeply etched channels with the existing, known difficulties are necessary. The surface remains essentially planar, can be cleaned very easily, and represents no additional hindrance for the movement of the quantity of liquid.
By the effect of the surface sound waves, the quantity of liquid is placed into turbulence and stirred. A reaction can be accelerated in this manner.
The shown geometries serve for clarification of the methods and devices of the present invention and therefore represent preferred embodiments. The claims include other arrangements of intermediate regions and guide strips or inter-digital transducers that are obvious to the practitioner. Likewise, the number of the shown elements is not limited. Thus, for example, multiple inter-digital transducers can be provided for the movement in various directions, when intermediate regions and guide strips have corresponding geometries.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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101 20 035 | Apr 2001 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP02/04545 | 4/24/2002 | WO | 00 | 10/24/2003 |
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WO02/085520 | 10/31/2002 | WO | A |
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