Micro-well and nano-well plates, which are, in relevant industries, collectively referred to as “microtiter plates,” are used widely in biological, chemical and pharmaceutical research applications for the purposes of selectively retaining and analyzing small quantities of biological and chemical agents. Currently, microtiter plates are predominantly fabricated from injection-molded and/or machined plates of plastic formed to included multiple, well-ordered well sites. For various reasons, including analytical efficiency and conservation of valuable reagents, the pharmaceutical industry, for example, has placed increasing emphasis on miniaturized sample-screening formats. Accordingly, well-density on microtiter plates has continually increased and, for instance, a standard 3×5-inch microtiter plate currently includes 1536 holes (i.e., wells). It will be appreciated, however, that the degree to which well sites can be miniaturized in an effort to accommodate more numerous well sites on a plate of standardized dimensions is limited by conventional fabrication methods.
In response to the call for well-site miniaturization, the fiber optics industry has undertaken limited efforts to fabricate well plates by selectively intagliating optical fiber faceplates. More specifically, the state of the art in this regard is represented by a process in fabrication of a fiber optic faceplate including a plurality of cores fusedly retained by fused cladding material in accordance with standard processes well-known to those of ordinary skill in the optical-fiber-component fabrication arts. The cores are fabricated from a core material that is soluble in a predetermined solvent in which the cladding material is relatively insoluble. The faceplate is then chemically etched from one side to partially dissolve selected cores to define a set of closed-bottom wells in the fused cladding material. As illustrated by well plate of FIG. A, one limitation of the current faceplate intagliation process is the prohibitive difficulty of defining wells of uniform depth that exhibit “intended” bottom profiles. The well plate of FIG. A exhibits non-uniform well depth and irregular well bottoms, characteristics that are exaggerated for illustrative purposes.
Accordingly, in light of the limitations of traditional well-plate fabrication processes and the more nascent efforts to intagliate optical fiber faceplates for adaptation as well plates, there exists a need for improved methods of fabricating well plates exhibiting large numbers of small, well-defined and uniform well sites.
Implementations of the present invention are directed to methods of fabricating micro-well plates useable for the containment and analysis of small volumes of chemical and biological materials and, in various embodiments, to micro-well plates made in accordance with the methods.
Various aspects employ techniques analogous to those applied in the fabrication of optical fiber faceplates. For instance, various implementations include the formation of a fused fiber bundle including a plurality of fused fibers extending generally along a longitudinal axis between first and second ends. Each fiber includes a core and a cladding, the core being soluble in a first solvent (e.g., an acid or base) and the cladding being relatively insoluble in the first solvent. In various aspects, each of the core and the cladding comprises glass. When individual fiber preforms, each of which comprises a cladding tube and a core bar inserted therein, are bound, heated and drawn, each cladding tube collapses and fuses around the core positioned therein and the claddings of adjacent fibers become fused to one another resulting in a unitary structure (i.e., a “fused bundle”). The formation of such structures is generally known among fabricators of fused optical fiber components.
The fused fiber bundle is cut along, but not necessarily parallel to, a plane that extends perpendicularly to its longitudinal axis to form a plurality of fused fiber plates, each of which fused fiber plates includes first and second faces. In various implementations, the first and second faces of a fused fiber plate are ground and polished to create smooth faces and, if desired, a fused plate of uniform thickness or alternative profile. The plate is exposed to the first solvent (e.g., immersed) to etch out (i.e., dissolve) the cores, thereby forming a “capillary plate” comprising the fused cladding material including a plurality of voids corresponding in position and cross-section to the pre-etch positions and cross-sectional geometries of the dissolved cores. In a typical version, the capillary plates are exposed to the first solvent for a period of time sufficient to produce a selected set of voids including “through-voids” that extend through the capillary plate between the first and second faces thereof.
In accordance with one set of implementations, a base plate of material (e.g., glass or plastic) including first and second sides is bonded to the first face of a capillary plate including through-voids to define a unitary well plate including a plurality of wells, each of which wells has an open top end, a closed bottom end and a well wall extending between the open top and closed bottom ends. Representative bonding techniques and agents for bonding the capillary and base plates include, by way of non-limiting example, (i) heat fusing, with or without frit, (ii) epoxy or other polymeric adhesive bonding agent, (iii) sol gel, (iv) laser tacking and (v) anodic bonding. Although the aforementioned bonding is performed, in some implementations, subsequent to the formation of a capillary plate, in an alternative fabrication method, the capillary plate and the base plate are bonded together prior to etching core material from the capillary plate. Alternatively configured well plates fabricated in general accordance with the foregoing methods include at least one of (i) various well sizes in the same capillary plate, (ii) clear, translucent or opaque capillary plate material, and (iii) a base plate including plurality of adjacently-bonded image conduits such as fused optical fibers (e.g., an optical fiber faceplate) including, in some versions, graded-refractive-index (i.e., GRIN) optical fibers. In addition, it will be appreciated that the wells can be randomly arranged or organized into well-ordered arrays, depending on the application for which a particular embodiment is to be used. Moreover, well size, cross-sectional geometry and diameter are variable within the same well plates by fusing into the initial fiber bundle cores of correspondingly various geometries and diameters/radii. Although “diameter” is frequently thought of narrowly as the longest chord that can be fitted within the curve defining a circle, the more general definition of that term is applicable to this description and the appended claims. For instance, chords within squares, rectangles, hexagons, and even, irregular shapes are also diameters. A radius is a line segment extending from the geometric center of a shape to the boundary of the shape. Nothing in the preceding explanation should be construed to attribute to the terms “diameter” and “radius” a meaning more narrow than common usage and technical mathematical usage would attribute to them.
Various alternative embodiments include wells having integrated optical-focusing bottoms. Illustrative versions include a capillary plate in which each well of a selected plurality of wells is “plugged” or “capped” by a focusing element such as a ball lens, an aspheric lens or a GRIN optical fiber, by way of non-limiting example. In various such versions, the lens element is permanently affixed and serves the dual functions of providing a closed bottom for the well to which it is applied and facilitating empirical study of contents deposited in the well. In some versions in which a discrete focusing element plugs a well, the focusing element is permanently secured over and/or at least partially in a through-void by a bonding agent such as, by way of non-limiting example, an optical epoxy. Alternative versions integrate fiber segments formed from cores that are fused into the surrounding cladding material during fabrication of a fused bundle. In such a version, one of the first and second faces and of a fused fiber plate cut from the fused bundle is exposed to a core solvent for a period of time sufficient to etch away a portion, but not the entire length, of each core of a selected set of cores with the remaining, non-etched segment of each core serving as the closed bottom end of a well and, as applicable, a focusing element or a light-filtering element, for example.
In still further embodiments, the clad material defining an interior wall of each void of a selected set of voids in a capillary plate includes reducible ions (i.e., ions that can be caused to accept electrons). In various aspects, such embodiments are subjected to conditions (i.e., a reducing atmosphere) that cause reducible ions within the clad material to accept electrons (i.e., be reduced), thereby “blackening” the material. As discussed in greater detail in the detailed description, and illustrated in the drawings, the blackening of the void/well walls in various embodiments yields desirable characteristics including, but not limited to, the maintenance of a relatively low and constant level of undesirable autofluorescence over a range of light intensities and wavelengths. It should be noted that not all ions will result in blackening when such ions are reduced and, therefore, ions that result in blackening when reduced are to be selected in various implementations. Moreover, it should be noted that “blackening” is used throughout the specification and claims in a broad, informal sense and includes, for example, darkening other than strictly blackening and that may manifest itself in various shades of brown or gray by way of non-limiting example. More specifically, “blacken,” “blackened” and “blackening” should be read and interpreted as broadly as “darken,” “darkened,” and “darkening” regardless of actual color and shade characteristics.
It will be appreciated that the cladding material can be blackened by design in any portion desired and that selective blackening is not limited to void or well walls. For example, either face of a capillary plate may be blackened in addition to, or to the exclusive of, well or void walls. Moreover, the blackening is, in various versions, performed prior or subsequent to other fabrication steps, depending on the desired result. For instance, according to three alternative methods of fabricating a well plate including a capillary plate that is at least partially blackened, a capillary plate including reducible ions is exposed to a reducing atmosphere to at least partially blacken the cladding material prior to bonding with a base plate; (ii) subsequent to bonding with a base plate and (iii) both prior and subsequent to bonding with a base plate. In other versions in which it is desired to produce a capillary plate in which just at least one of the two faces is blackened, a fused fiber plate including cladding with reducible ions is exposed to a reducing atmosphere prior to dissolving the cores therefrom.
Representative embodiments are more completely described and depicted in the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings.
FIG. A depicts a selectively intagliated optic fiber faceplate exhibiting a plurality of well sites;
FIG. B depicts a fused fiber bundle including a plurality of cores surrounded, and retained in position, by fused cladding material;
FIG. C shows fused fiber plates cut from the fused fiber bundle of FIG. B;
FIGS. 3Bi and 3Bii depict two stages in the assembly of a large-well/small-well capillary plate;
FIGS. 3Biii and 3Biv depict two stages in an alternative method of fabricating a large-well/small-well capillary plate;
The following description of methods of fabricating micro-well plates, and of micro-well plates fabricated in accordance therewith, is demonstrative in nature and is not intended to limit the invention or its application of uses. The various implementations, aspects, versions and embodiments described in the summary and detailed description are in the nature of non-limiting examples falling within the scope of the appended claims and do not serve to define the maximum scope of the claims.
Referring to FIGS. B and C, various implementations include one of (i) fabricating and (ii) providing a fused fiber bundle 10 including a plurality of cores 12 extending through fused cladding material 14 along a longitudinal axis AL between first and second ends 16 and 18 of the fiber bundle 10. As is generally known by those of ordinary skill in the art of optical-fiber component fabrication, a fused bundle such as the illustrative bundle 10 of FIG. B is formed by temporarily binding, and then heating and drawing, a plurality of constituent fiber preforms each of which fiber preforms includes a core bar and a cladding tube disposed around the core bar (not shown). When the bound assembly of fiber preforms is heated and drawn, each cladding tube collapses around, and fuses to, the core bar inserted therein and the cladding tubes of adjacent fiber preforms fuse to one another resulting in a unitary structure (i.e., a fused bundle 10) including a plurality of cores 12 fusedly retained within fused cladding material 14.
Referring to FIG. C, fused fiber plates 20 are formed by cutting the fused bundle 10 perpendicularly to the longitudinal axis AL thereof. Each fused fiber plate 20 has a first face 22 and a second face 24. In a typical implementation, the first and second faces 22 and 24 are ground and polished to create smooth, planar faces. However, cutting, grinding and polishing to create other-than-planar faces and plate profiles that are of other-than-uniform thickness is within the scope and contemplation of the invention.
In various implementations, the cores 12 are made from a material that is more soluble in a predetermined solvent than the fused cladding material 14 to facilitate selective chemical etching of cores 12 from the fused cladding material 14. When at least a portion of the fused fiber plate 20 is exposed to the predetermined solvent for a sufficient length of time, cores 12 are etched out of the fused cladding material 14 resulting in a capillary plate 30 such as the illustrative capillary plate shown in
Referring to
Each illustrative focusing element 80 of
Referring to
Large-well/small-well plates 90 are alternatively useable as filter elements. They are also adaptable for use in the study of materials in liquid form that are retained by capillary forces in the small wells 70B of the second capillary plate 30B. The large wells 70A facilitate cleaning of the small wells 70B by the introduction of, for example, water or a cleaning solution through the large wells 70A to displace material from the small wells 70B.
As stated in the summary, various versions include voids 40/wells 70 defined by blackened cladding material 14. An illustrative method of fabricating a capillary plate 30 including voids 40 defined by blackened cladding material 14 is explained in general terms in conjunction with
Referring to
Referring to
In the illustrative example of
The foregoing is considered to be illustrative of the principles of the invention. Furthermore, since numerous modifications and changes will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is not desired that the foregoing limit the invention to the exact construction and operation shown and described. Accordingly, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be resorted to that appropriately fall within the scope of the invention as expressed in the appended claims.
The present application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/935,541 filed Sep. 7, 2004 under the title “MICRO-WELL PLATES AND METHODS OF FABRICATING AND SELECTIVELY BLACKENING THE SAME.” application Ser. No. 10/935,541 was co-pending with the present application on the date the present application was filed. Previously filed Non-provisional application Ser. No. 11/935,541 was based on, and claimed the benefit of the filing date of, Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/500,806, filed on Sep. 5, 2003, and entitled “MICRO-WELL PLATES AND METHODS OF FABRICATING THE SAME” and Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/510,621, filed on Oct. 10, 2003, and entitled “MICRO-WELL PLATES AND METHODS OF FABRICATING AND SELECTIVELY BLACKENING THE SAME.” The present application also claims the benefit of the filing dates of the aforementioned Provisional Applications through Non-provisional application Ser. No. 11/935,541. The entirety of the disclosures of the previous non-provisional and provisional applications, including the drawings, are incorporated herein by reference as if set forth fully in the present application.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60500806 | Sep 2003 | US | |
60510621 | Oct 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10935541 | Sep 2004 | US |
Child | 11906314 | US |