Liquid dispensing devices, such as thermal ink jet printers, may be utilized to dispense precise and minute amounts of liquid into individual wells of a multiple-well tray, such as in pharmaceutical testing, for example. Precise volume amounts should be dispensed into the individual wells in order to ensure accurate test results. There is a need, therefore, to increase the reliability and/or predictability of the volume dispensed.
Orifice plate 16 may include one or several orifices 18 or may include thousands of orifices 18, as may be suited for a particular application. Fluid 20 may be any fluid as desired for a particular application. The drop ejection device 12 generates droplets 38 of fluid 20 of differing drop volumes depending on fluid 20 and construction details of device 12. In the field of pharmaceutical testing, fluid 20 may include any water-miscible organic solvent, such as dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), for example. In other embodiments, fluid 20 may be methanol, isopropanol, ethanol, glycerol, acetone, pyridine, tetrahydrofuran, acetonitrile, and dimethylformamide, for example. DMSO is highly hygroscopic and may gain approximately 30% water by weight over time. The water content in DMSO greatly alters the physical properties of the solution as well as the ejection device performance, including turn-on-energy and drop volume, among others. Accordingly, by determining the turn-on-energy of the drops ejected from the ejection device, the water content and corresponding drop volume may be calculated and used to dispense a volume that accurately corresponds to the intended dispense volume.
Liquid dispensing device 10 may be utilized to dispense precise and minute amounts of liquid into a liquid receiving device 22, such as into individual wells 24 of a multiple-well tray 26, as used in pharmaceutical testing, for example. In some example embodiments liquid receiving device 22 may be a biochemical testing device or a diagnostic strip device, for example. Precise volume amounts should be dispensed into the individual wells 24 in order to ensure accurate test results. There is a need, therefore, to increase the reliability and/or predictability of the volume of fluid 20 dispensed into each of the individual wells 24.
Liquid dispensing device 10 may include one or more drop detection devices 28. The drop detection device may be chosen from one of an electrostatic detection device, a capacitive detection device, an acoustic drop detection device, and an optical detection device, for example. In the embodiment shown, drop detection device 28 may include a light emitting device 30 that emits a light 32, such as a laser, and a light detecting device 34 positioned with respect to orifice plate 16 such that light detecting device 34 receives light 36 reflected, scattered or otherwise emanating from drops 38 of fluid 20 ejected from orifice plate 16 and illuminated by light 32. Light detecting device 34 may be a photodetector chosen from one of a photo diode, a CMOS, a charge-coupled device, a photo multiplying tube, and any other photodetector. Light emitting device 30 may be chosen from one of a laser, a light emitting diode, an arc discharge lamp, and any other high intensity light source.
Light detecting device 34 may be connected to a controller 40 that may conduct a mathematical operation on the light information received from light 36, so as to determine the number of drops to be ejected into each compartment of liquid receiving device 22, such as into each of the individual wells 24 of a well tray 26, with each well 24 receiving different intended volumes, as one example. Controller 40 may include a database of information such as electronically or otherwise stored graphs, tables, and the like that correlate different types of information, such as a correlation of turn-on-energy to water content of DMSO solutions, for example. In the embodiment shown, drop detection device 28 is a light based detection device. However, drop detection device 28 may be an electrostatic device, a capacitive device, an acoustic device, a magnetic detection device, an optical device, or any other drop detection device that will function for a particular application.
In one example embodiment, drop detection device 28 may be a light scattering drop detector including a light emitting device 30, with a 1 millimeter (mm) laser beam diameter Light detecting device 34 may be a single channel photocell or a photocell array that is capable of detecting up to 5,000 to 8,000 drop-events per second. Using a 0.1 mm laser beam diameter, the same detector may be capable of detecting up to 50,000 to 80,000 drop-events per second. As the drops 38 fall, light 32 from laser diode 30 illuminates the drop 38, and light 36 scattered from the drops is detected by photo cell 34. At a drop velocity at 10 m/second, the expected time-of-flight (TOF) of the drops is 100 micro seconds (μsec). In one embodiment the drops 38 may continue to fall into a drop collection reservoir (not shown) for later use in liquid dispensing device 10, such that the fluid is not wasted, or drops 38 may fall into a separate reservoir (not shown) to be collected for disposal. However, in the embodiment shown the drops 38 fall directly into a predetermined individual well, such as a well 24a, for example, of well tray 26 and real time processing is conducted to determine an additional number of drops to be dispensed into the particular well 24a so that well 24a will contain a minute, precise, predetermined and known volume of fluid 20.
In one example embodiment, drop detection devices 28 function as turn-on-energy detection devices by detecting the onset of the ejection of drops 38 as the controller 40 increases the energy supplied to printheads 14 until the ejection energy 52 is attained. Alternatively, the turn-on-energy detection devices 28 could be used to detect when drops 38 cease to be ejected when the controller 40 is used to gradually decrease the energy supplied to printheads 14. Controller 40 uses this turn on energy to conduct a mathematical operation, such as an empirical formula that may relate the turn on energy to the water content, or use an information database, to determine a water content of the drops 38 ejected. In other words, the firing parameter or parameters of the printheads may be independently varied and any resultant drop ejection may be monitored, and utilized in conjunction with a correlation curve (
The controller may then further conduct a determination of the drop volumes of the ejected drops 38 from an information database or a mathematical operation that correlates water content to drop volume of the ejected drops. In one example method the turn on energy (TOE) may be measured, which may then be used to determine the water content. The water content may then be used to determine the drop volume, which may then be used to determine the intended number of drops. The controller may conduct the determination of the total number of drops to be ejected from an information database or mathematical operation that correlates or calculates total intended volume to the total number of drops to be ejected for a particular drop volume. In this manner, precise volume amounts of fluid 20, with previously unknown water content, can be placed into individual wells 24a and the like of a well tray 26 during real time processing of drop ejection information to provide quick, efficient and accurate liquid dispensing. The turn-on-energy information may be received by drop detection devices 28 during real-time operation or before real-time operation, as part of a setup or calibration routine. An example method will now be described with respect to
In this manner, a quick, efficient and accurate total number of drops 70 may be placed into multiple individual liquid receiving compartments 24 of a liquid receiving device on a large scale to achieve multiple intended total volumes. For example, minute and precise volumes of liquid 20 may be dispensed into the individual wells 24 of a well tray 26 that may include hundreds or thousands of individual wells 24, for example.
In other embodiments a light detection device may be utilized to determine the turn-on-energy of the drops utilizing algorithms such as waveform analysis of the detected drop quality, drop shape, and drop scattering information, for example.
Advantages of the turn-on-energy determination of the process described herein include a determination of the water content of DMSO solutions for example, the lack of use of fluid additives to enable drop detection, improved accuracy and precision of dispensed volumes, the speed of the drop volume calculation method, and the lack of use of expensive detection hardware. Moreover, this method may be used “on-line” or in “real-time” during filling of a well tray, or before filling a well tray during a set-up or calibration routine.
The information contained in
Other variations and modifications of the concepts described herein may be utilized and fall within the scope of the claims below.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2008/009218 | 7/30/2008 | WO | 00 | 1/20/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/014061 | 2/4/2010 | WO | A |
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