This invention belongs to the field of optical sensors and/or monitors based on absorption and/or fluorescence detection. It is a new process for manufacturing an oxygen sensitive patch (label) to hold or encapsulate sensing molecules. The patch adhesive and support material can be tailored for direct food contact compatibility as well as medical applications.
The patch of this invention is designed for a wide range of applications. The patch can be attached to the interior surface of packages for oxygen interrogation inside the package. The patch then is non-intrusively interrogated by a light source. The interrogation can be done using a phase fluorometer where oxygen level is desired, or inspected visually for color change using a hand held blue LED. Some of the immediate applications for the Oxygen sensing patch are:
Medical and Biological
Pharmaceutical
Food Packaging
For a fuller understanding of the nature and objects of the invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and objects of the invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The Oxygen sensing patch of this invention is a new oxygen sensing product designed specifically to measure oxygen in packaging. The Oxygen sensing patch is integrated into the inside of the package during the packaging manufacturing process and, when used with a blue LED and fluorometer, will quantitatively report the amount of oxygen in the package. The Oxygen sensing patch is suitable for measuring oxygen in gas, such as headspace applications, and in liquid. Oxygen is sensed by measuring the phase shift of fluorescence of the fluorophore immobilized in the Oxygen sensing patch. The oxygen sensing measurement can be taken at many different stages of the product's lifetime: when the product passes through a manufacturing stream; when the product is about to ship to a customer; while the product is being stored in inventory; and, before the product is about to be consumed by the end-user.
More specifically the Oxygen sensing patch uses the fluorescence quenching properties of a ruthenium or porphyrin complex to measure the partial pressure of dissolved or gaseous oxygen. The Oxygen sensing patch consists of one of three sensor coating formulations trapped in a sol-gel matrix, immobilized, and protected from the contents in the package. An optical probe is then pointed at the part of the package where the Oxygen sensing patch has been applied. The optical probe is connected to a blue LED and Fluorometer. The blue LED sends excitation light via an optical probe. The light from the blue LED passes over the Oxygen sensing patch and excites the sensor coating formulation. The excited Oxygen sensing patch then fluoresces. If the Oxygen sensing patch encounters an oxygen molecule, the excess energy is transferred to the oxygen molecule in a non-radiative transfer, decreasing or quenching the fluorescence signal. The degree of quenching correlates to the partial pressure of oxygen in the sol-gel matrix, which is in dynamic equilibrium with oxygen in the sample. If oxygen is present, a user can visually observe the Oxygen sensing patch turning pink. The fluorescence is collected by the optical probe and transmitted to the Fluorometer. The fluorescence phase is measured and related to the partial pressure of oxygen through the Stern-Volmer equation.
The novelty of this invention relates to the use of Ocean Optics' sol gel as oxygen sensitive coatings on flexible patches for new applications. The sol gel process, called ormosil, (organically modified silica), enables the new product to be used an in environment where no other presently available sensors can operate. An Ocean Optics' FOSPOR coating (pt. porphyrine doped sol gel) is designed to monitor ppb levels of oxygen in vacuum environments; Ocean Optics' HIOXY coating is designed to monitor oxygen in hydrocarbon based environments such as fuels, solvents, oil, alcoholic beverages, etc. The current conventional sol-gel mediums used in optical sensors are not suitable for packages containing volatiles, oils and other hydrocarbon derived products.
This preferred embodiment of this new invention involves the following steps. (1) Addition of sol gel precursor MTMS (methyltrimethoxysilane, MTMS)+fluorinated sol gel precursor [(3,3,3-trifluoropropyl)triethoxysilane]+water+ethyl alcohol together. (2) Doping the multi-component sol-gel with tris-(4,7-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline) ruthenium(II) chloride, (3) coating the doped sol gel on self adhesive acrylate patches by spin coating, (3) thermal and optical curing of the coating. Fluorinated sol gel provides resistance toward hydrocarbons due to its oleophobic properties, and MTMS forms a backbone glass structure with mechanical integrity and crack free coating. Once cured, the patches are attached to the inner surface of a package to be monitored. The oxygen level is then monitored either by shining blue light on the patch and visually inspecting the color of the patch (patch is orange when oxygen level is high and reddish when oxygen level is low) or by inspecting the excited state lifetime of luminescence of the batch by using a phase fluorometer. A phase fluorometer is used for excitation and emission collection of light. The excitation light transmission to the patch, and capture of the reflected emission from the patch, is performed using a bifurcated fiber optic bundle.
As shown in
Since certain changes may be made in the above described Oxygen sensing patch without departing from the scope of the invention herein involved, it is intended that all matter contained in the description thereof or shown in the accompanying figures shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
The present application claims the benefit of previously filed co-pending Provisional Patent Application, Ser. No. 60/962,396.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090028756 A1 | Jan 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60962396 | Jul 2007 | US |