Claims
- 1. A microfluidic device comprising a microchannel structure in which there are one or more inlet ports, one or more outlet ports, and one or more structural units wherein said structural unit comprises:
(a) a retaining microcavity which is located between one of said one or more inlet ports and one of said one or more outlet ports; (b) a mixing unit which is located upstream the retaining microcavity and downstream said one inlet port; (c) two or more microconduits directly connected to the retaining microcavity and communicating with one of said inlet or outlet ports; wherein one or more of said microconduits comprise anti-wicking means in association with the joint between the retaining microcavity and the microconduit and/or the distance (d1) from the retaining microcavity to an opening to ambient atmosphere and including a microconduit that lacks anti-wicking means and is directly attached to the retaining microcavity, is ≧20 times the largest inner cross-sectional dimension of the microconduit at its joint to the retaining microcavity.
- 2. The microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the microconduit comprising anti-wicking means is a liquid flow microconduit and a microconduit lacking anti-wicking means is an air microconduit.
- 3. The microfluidic of claim 1, wherein at least one microconduit comprises an anti-wicking means having
(a) one or more length-going edges extending continuously from said retaining microcavity or (b) a change in geometric and/or chemical surface characteristics in at least one of said one or more edges.
- 4. The microfluidic device of claim 3, wherein said geometric change is in the form of an indentation.
- 5. The microfluidic device claim 3, wherein said change in chemical surface characteristics is a hydrophobic surface break when going in a microconduit from the retaining microcavity which has hydrophilic inner surfaces.
- 6. The microfluidic device of claim 3, wherein said change in geometric and/or chemical surface characteristics is extending between two edges delineating an inner wall.
- 7. The microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein at least one of said microconduit comprises a non-closing valve function essentially at its joint with the retaining microcavity, said valve function preferably at least partially coinciding with the anti-wicking means of said at least microconduit.
- 8. The microfluidic device of claim 7, wherein said valve function is a hydrophobic surface break at the valve function, and/or a capillary barrier caused by a change in geometric surface characteristics, and/or the curvature in the microconduit comprising the valve function.
- 9. The microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein said mixing unit comprises at least two inlet microconduits for said two or more liquid aliquots to be mixed.
- 10. The microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the device comprises a plurality of said microchannel structure.
- 11. The microfluidic disc of claim 10, wherein the disc comprises
(a) the device having an axis of symmetry coinciding with a spinning axis, (b) each of said microchannel structures is arranged relative to said axis with a downstream part more remote to said axis than an upstream part, and (c) application of centrifugal force by spinning the device about said axes being capable of forcing a liquid aliquot that is present in each of said microchannel structures to be transported in parallel in the downstream direction within said microchannel structure.
- 12. A microfluidic device comprising a microchannel structure in which there are one or more inlet ports, one or more outlet ports, and a structural unit having at least one of said ports, wherein the structural unit is selected from the group consisting of mixing unit, distribution manifold, inlet port and integrated volume-defining unit.
- 13. The microchannel device of claim 12, wherein one of said units is a mixing unit and enables mixing of two aliquots that are miscible with each other, and which comprises: a microcavity with an outlet opening; an inlet arrangement linked to the microcavity, and a mixing microconduit connected to the outlet opening.
- 14. The microfluidic device of claim 12, wherein one of said units is the distribution manifold which enables partition of a larger portion of liquid into smaller aliquots which subsequently are introduced in parallel into downstream parts of separate microchannel structures, and which comprises
(a) a continuous microconduit ontaining an upper part at each end and therebetween alternating lower and upper parts; (b) the number of upper parts is n and the number of lower parts is n-1 where n is an integer ≧2; (c) each of the upper parts has a vent to ambient atmosphere and/or anti-wicking means in length-going edges delineating its lower wall(s); (d) each of the lower parts has an emptying opening which in a downstream direction via a connecting microconduit communicates with the remaining substructure of the microchannel structure or with the corresponding substructure of another microchannel structure; (e) each of the connecting microconduits has a valve; (f) an inlet is connected to the continuous microconduit directly or indirectly at one of the upper parts, preferably via one of the end parts; and (g) an outlet port is connected to the continuous microconduit directly or indirectly at another upper part.
- 15. The microfluidic device of claim 12, wherein one of said units the inlet port which promotes penetration from an inlet opening into the microchannel structure and comprises:
a) an inlet port comprising a microcavity; and b) an inlet opening, downstream said microcavity an inlet conduit communicating into the interior of the microchannel structure; and c) one, two or more grooves and/or projections in the inner wall of the microcavity and directed towards the connection between the inlet conduit and the microcavity.
- 16. The microfluidic device of claim 12, characterized in that one of said units is the integrated volume defining unit and enables volume-definition of an aliquot within the microchannel structure and comprises:
a) a volume-defining microcavity; b) an inlet microconduit which is connected to the microcavity via an inlet opening on the microcavity; c) an outlet microconduit which is connected to microcavity via an outlet opening in microcavity with a valve at the joint between the outlet microconduit and microcavity; and d) an overflow microconduit, which is connected to an overflow opening on microcavity, the microcavity preferably being constricted at the joint between the overflow microconduit and the microcavity; wherein the overflow opening is at a higher level than the outlet opening and the volume being defined as the volume between valve and the joint between the overflow microconduit and the microcavity.
Priority Claims (7)
| Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
| PCT/SE02/00531 |
Mar 2002 |
WO |
|
| PCT/SE02/00537 |
Mar 2002 |
WO |
|
| PCT/SE02/00538 |
Mar 2002 |
WO |
|
| PCT/SE02/00539 |
Mar 2002 |
WO |
|
| 0104077-3 |
Dec 2001 |
SE |
|
| 0103522-9 |
Oct 2001 |
SE |
|
| 0201310-0 |
Apr 2002 |
SE |
|
Parent Case Info
[0001] The present invention claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/315,471, which was filed on Aug. 28, 2001; U.S. Provisional Application No. 30/322,621, which was filed on Sep. 17, 2001; International Application PCT/SE02/00531, which was filed on Mar. 19, 2002; International Application PCT/SE02/00537, which was filed on Mar. 19, 2002; U.S. Application No. 10/148,083, which is the National Stage of International Application PCT/SE02/00538 filed on Mar. 19, 2002; and U.S. Application No. 10/148,084, which is the National Stage of International Application PCT/SE02/00539 filed on Mar. 19, 2002, which are all incorporated herein by reference.
Provisional Applications (3)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60315471 |
Aug 2001 |
US |
|
60322621 |
Sep 2001 |
US |
|
60376776 |
Apr 2002 |
US |