1. Field
The present disclosure relates to the interfacing of an external system with a microfluidic device. In particular, an apparatus and method are disclosed wherein fluid from an external system is effectively provided to a microfluidic chip device by way of an adapter. More specifically, an interface system and method for interfacing with a microfluidic chip are disclosed.
2. Description of Related Art
Microfluidic systems typically manipulate fluid volumes in the range of nL (nanoliters) to uL (microliters), whereas conventional fluid handling equipment typically uses volumes in the range of tens of uL (microliters) to mL (milliliters) or more. This volume mismatch must be addressed when integrating a microfluidic system with an external fluidic system. Despite much progress in the field of microfluidics over the past several years, there have been no reported systems that address this world-to-chip interface problem in a general way.
The volume mismatch has been addressed in the literature for a few specialized applications. For example, a large sample in the external fluidic system can be divided up among a large number of channels or chambers in a microfluidic chip (Liu, J et al., 2003, Anal Chem., 75: 4718-4723). This approach is suitable in applications where reagents are provided in a combinatorial manner or where a sample is analyzed in a combinatorial fashion, but is not useful for microfluidic chips that perform a small number of arbitrary syntheses and analyses. A number of companies have technologies based on this concept (e.g. Caliper Life Sciences “Sipper Chip™”).
While such technologies and other ultra-low dead-volume connectors make efficient use of reagents in microfluidic chips, they do not address the general problems of elimination of trapped air when delivering fluids to the microfluidic chip, and cleaning and drying of fluid lines. From the microfluidic chip perspective, these processes involve “huge” volumes of air or fluids that need to be eliminated or passed through the chip.
Another limitation of reported microfluidic systems and technologies is that connections to external fluidic systems are impractical for commercial applications that involve frequent and repeated removal and assembly of microfluidic chips. It is believed that a vast range of microfluidic applications will one day use disposable or recyclable microfluidic chips. With this perspective, what is needed is a technology that allows rapid swapping (change-in/change-out) of microfluidic chips.
In reported connection technologies, external tubing/needles/pipette-tips are slipped or glued onto posts integrated into the microfluidic chip, or is inserted into built-in ports, held in place by glue or compression fittings. Glued and other permanent forms of connections are clearly not suitable in applications where swapping must occur. Removable connections such as slip-on fittings or threaded fittings are superior, but removal and installation of the microfluidic chip can take considerable time if there are more than a couple of fittings. In addition, manual attachment of numerous fittings introduces a significant possibility of error.
Some notable exceptions to these shortcomings exist. For example, Fluidigm Corp. has developed a carrier system wherein a PDMS (poly-dimethylsiloxane) microfluidic chip is sealed or bonded to a plastic cartridge, that is designed to be easily swappable in an instrument (See, for example, US 2005/0214173A1 “Integrated Chip Carriers with Thermocycler Interfaces and Methods of Using the Same”.) The present disclosure allows for rapid swapping of microfluidic chips without the need for a carrier/cartridge system—i.e. the microfluidic chip itself is directly swapped. The ability to swap only the microfluidic chip has the potential to dramatically reduce the complexity and cost of replaceable microfluidic devices.
In many instances when a microfluidic device is interfaced with an external fluidic system, there is a need to purge trapped air from reagent lines between reagent sources in the external system and input channels within the microfluidic chip. Delivery of reagents to the chip involves the operations of first purging the air, and then introducing the reagent.
In some applications, a “vent” port in the microfluidic channel could be opened to allow most of the air to escape. However, the use of such an open port provides the risk that the sample could be lost due to inaccuracies in flow rates, pressures, etc in the system. If the sample is valuable, it is preferable to deliver it through a single channel into a closed reactor that does not have a vent adjacent to the reactor area. If the microfluidic chip is made from a permeable material such as PDMS, any trapped air can be forced into the bulk polymer. If the microfluidic chip contains a gas-exchange membrane, the trapped air can similarly be forced through the membrane. However, depending on permeability and pressure, this can take a significant amount of time and slow down the microfluidic process. Another situation where such a “vent” port is impractical is if a reactor portion of the microfluidic chip is filled with some intermediate compound. To add a new reagent, it is desirable to fill from a single channel to avoid flushing out some of the intermediate while introducing the new reagent.
Combined with the features mentioned above, what is needed in the art is an interface system for effectively and expediently facilitating the connection of microfluidic systems to external fluidic system in a wide range of applications.
In a first aspect of the present disclosure, an interface system for interfacing a microfluidic chip system with an external system is disclosed, comprising: an adapter; at least one adapter channel having two ends within said adapter, and at least two adapter ports within said adapter, defined by a first and second opening at each end of the at least one adapter channel; a microfluidic chip system comprising: at least one microfluidic port; at least one microfluidic channel, and at least one microfluidic valve, wherein the adapter seals to the microfluidic chip system forming an interface at which the first opening of the at least two adapter ports connects to the at least one microfluidic port, and wherein the adapter is adapted to affix to the external system through connection of the second opening of the at least two adapter ports to the external system.
In a second aspect of the present disclosure, a device for interfacing a microfluidic chip system with an external system is disclosed, comprising: an adapter; at least one adapter channel located within said adapter having two ends, and at least two adapter ports located within said adapter, defined by a first and second opening at each end of the at least one adapter channel, wherein the adapter seals to the microfluidic chip system forming an interface at which the first opening of the at least two adapter ports connects to the microfluidic chip system, and wherein the adapter is adapted to affix to the external system through connection of the second opening of the at least two adapter ports to the external system.
In a third aspect of the present disclosure, a method of making an interface system for interfacing a microfluidic chip system with an external fluidic system is disclosed, comprising: providing an adapter having at least a first surface and a second surface; forming at least one adapter channel having two ends within said adapter; forming at least two adapter ports within said adapter to have a first and second opening at each end of the at least one adapter channel; providing the microfluidic chip system comprising at least one microfluidic port; at least one microfluidic channel, and at least one microfluidic valve; sealing the adapter to the microfluidic chip system to form an interface; connecting the first opening of the at least two adapter ports to the at least one microfluidic port; affixing the adapter to the external fluidic system by connecting the second opening of the at least two adapter ports to at least one external system port.
In a fourth aspect of the present disclosure, a method of making a device for interfacing a microfluidic chip system with an external system is disclosed, comprising: providing an adapter having at least a first surface and a second surface; forming at least one adapter channel having two ends within said adapter; forming at least two adapter ports within said adapter to have a first and second opening at each end of the at least one adapter channel; sealing the adapter to the microfluidic chip system to form an interface; affixing the adapter to the external system by connecting the second opening of the at least two adapter ports to the external system.
The present disclosure provides methods and devices for interfacing microfluidic chip systems with external fluidic systems. The interface described comprises primarily an “adapter”. The adapter has a simple design that can easily be manufactured from a variety of materials (e.g. plastics, metals, etc), to be chosen depending on the application and the particular fluids/gases to be used in the microfluidic chip system.
An adapter device for interfacing a microfluidic chip system with an external fluidic system according to the present disclosure, comprises an adapter between components of the external fluidic system and the microfluidic chip system. The adapter seals to the microfluidic chip to make fluid-tight connections between ports on the microfluidic chip and corresponding ports on the adapter. The adapter contains a number of internal “channels”. For each such channel, one of the two openings of the channel corresponds to a port on the microfluidic chip, while the other opening is configured to connect to the external fluidic system via tubing, threaded fittings, etc. Each adapter channel will carry fluids such as samples, reagents, wash solvents, or gases to the microfluidic chip (i.e. the inputs to the microfluidic process), and/or fluids such as synthesized product or waste from the microfluidic chip (i.e. the outputs of the microfluidic process). It should be appreciated that some adapter channels may be manifolds and connect many ports of the microfluidic chip to a single part of the external system or vice versa. The “adapter channels” may pass straight through the adapter for simplicity and ease of manufacture, or they may contain bends to allow ports to exit the sides of the adapter to provide more space for fluidic connectors or to provide for more flexible routing possibilities. Thus, it should be understood that the layout and configuration of the adapter channels and adapter ports can vary widely in an adapter just as it is known they vary in a microfluidic chip. Disclosures relating to the fabrication and assembly of microfluidic chips include U.S. Pat. No. 7,040,338, and U.S. application Ser. Nos. 11/297,651; 11/514,396, and 11/701,917, all of which are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Herein the terms “microfluidic chip”, “microfluidic chip system”, “chip”, “microfluidic device” can all be used interchangeably without significantly changing the context of the disclosure. The “microfluidic chip system” refers to the microfluidic chip and all components going into and out of the chip, whereas “chip” and “microfluidic chip” both refer to the microfluidic chip alone. A “microfluidic device” can refer to any device having microfluidic properties.
Herein the term “adapter” refers to the device and all of its internal channels, ports, valves, etc separate from the microfluidic chip system. The “interface system” refers to the microfluidic chip system, the adapter together with an external system. The “external system” is also referred to as an “external fluidic system”.
An interface system comprising an adapter according to the present disclosure is shown in
It is common in the present art that a microfluidic chip has tubing connected directly from an external system to an input port on the microfluidic chip. In
An adapter (40) according to the present disclosure, further comprising a bypass channel (30), as shown in
A bypass channel in the adapter (
Additional views of a bypass channel (30) within the microfluidic chip system (50) are shown in
By eliminating the possibility of contamination, an adapter (40) with a bypass channel (30) according to the present disclosure, provides for a means for making a quick-release, change-in/change-out adapter device as is needed in the present art.
An alternative to the bypass junction mechanism is to have a special “dummy chip” that can be installed for perform cleaning steps. A “dummy chip” would contain relatively large channels and allow substantial flow rates through the chip to speed cleaning and drying of the adapter fluidic system. However, it should be noted that a bypass channel would still be needed to purge trapped air once the adapter and microfluidic chip system are connected. It would be obvious to one having skill in the art that a “dummy chip” could not carry out the purging of the dead volume.
In one embodiment, in order to ensure the air is purged using a bypass channel according to the present disclosure, a flow rate can be calibrated for the system for a particular reagent and flow is actuated for a fixed time to guarantee removal of all air, or a fixed volume can be purged (e.g. via syringe pump) to guarantee removal of all air. Alternatively one could use mechanical, optical, electrical, etc. means to detect when fluid has entered the adapter.
In one embodiment, the microfluidic chip has all fluidic ports (60) on one surface of the microfluidic chip and interfaces with a mating surface on the adapter having adapter ports (20) in corresponding positions. Of course it is possible that the microfluidic chip and adapter meet at several surfaces and make fluidic connections at any of these surfaces. Having all ports at a single surface may be desirable as it leaves the other surfaces available for visualization via camera/microscope, temperature control, microvalve actuation, etc, and, furthermore, fabrication/machining is most likely simpler.
An adapter according to the present disclosure provides a one-piece connection for all the ports on the microfluidic chip simultaneously to enable quick installation and removal of the microfluidic chip. The individually attached connections from an external fluidic system may remain attached to the adapter in a semi-permanent manner via threaded compression fittings/ferrules or other connectors.
In one embodiment, the configuration of the adapter-to external ports (110) are on the side surfaces of the adapter (as shown in
In one embodiment, the adapter-to-external ports (110) have designed to accept threaded fittings. The design of the adapter-to-external-ports can vary as needed to fit standard tubing for several external fluidic system (100), or for one particular size and type of tubing for connecting to the external fluidic system if the adapter is intended to be a semi-permanent part of the external fluidic system. The types of fittings may be dictated factors such as the need for chemical compatibility, temperature and operating pressure requirements, as well as dead-volume limitations.
Each microfluidic port (60) on the microfluidic chip surface seals against the corresponding adapter port (20). The seal may be facilitated by an O-ring (55) (
In one embodiment of the present disclosure, the adapter has a depression (45) that is able to receive and seal with the size of the (rigid) microfluidic chip (
The depression (45) could have a non-symmetric shape to provide a fool-proof mechanism to prevent incorrect installation of the chip (not shown). An asymmetrical depression shape can be achieved, for example, by adding notches or protrusions, or clipping corners of a rectangular microfluidic chip. Also, the microfluidic chip system and adapter could fit together in only one possible arrangement, such that the microfluidic chip can only have one orientation with respect to the adapter and the adapter can only have one orientation with respect to the microfluidic chip to ensure exact alignment and seal.
In one embodiment of the present disclosure, a force is applied to the microfluidic chip system to hold it against the O-ring or gasket layer. The force can be provided by any means known to a person skilled in the art—e.g. pneumatic or hydraulic cylinders, solenoids, springs, or a clamping or bolting mechanism. An example of a simple interface sealing force means (160) is shown in
If the microfluidic chip is made wholly or partly from flexible and/or elastic materials, the force must be applied in such a way as not to cause a distortion of the chip that interferes with its operation. For example, if the chip is made entirely from elastomeric materials, applied force can cause collapse of microchannels (van Dam, R. Michael. Solvent-Resistant Elastomeric Microfluidic Devices and Applications, PhD Thesis. California Institute of Technology, 2005). Thus, it would be preferable to apply force onto the substrate (140) immediately adjacent to the microfluidic chip—assuming the substrate is slightly larger than the chip and provided the substrate is sufficiently rigid (see
In a “gasket” microfluidic chip as disclosed in U.S. application Ser. No. 11/701,917, the gasket is compressed between chip layers and serves as a seal, valve membrane, and gas exchange membrane. Instead of applying force to the entire surface of the rigid microfluidic chip to form an interface and seal it against the adapter, it would be desirable to press on part of the bottom layer that protrudes beyond the upper layer. In this way, the gasket compression force is not altered from its optimal state.
In another embodiment of the present disclosure, electrical connections are incorporated into the interface for applications in which electrodes are embedded in the microfluidic chip, e.g. for the purposes of ion trapping as disclosed in U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/950,976, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. Electrical connections could be as simple as metal pins/sockets/pads on the microfluidic chip with corresponding mating shapes on the adapter (possibly spring loaded to form a good electrical connection). The interface could also include other connections such as optical signals via fiber optic, mechanical switches (e.g. to detect insertion of the chip), bar code reader, flat thermal contact points, etc.
While it is possible that each reagent microfluidic channel could have its own bypass valve (125) downstream of the exit port, it is also possible to tie the exit ports together as shown in
From
The adapter according to the present disclosure can be made by machining or molding as is well known in the art. The fluid to be run through the interface system will dictate the types of materials which can be used. Thus the materials chosen should be compatible with the solvent and chemicals used as well as the operating temperatures and pressures. Materials to be used include, but are not limited to plastic, glass, metal and ceramic, and these materials can be assembled as one piece or multiple pieces to make the adapter. Fabrication of microfluidic chips is well known in the art (see, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,040,338, and U.S. application Ser. Nos. 11/297,651; 11/514,396, and 11/701,917). Materials and methods disclosed in these references would be applicable to the fabrication of the adapter as can be determined by one skilled in the art.
The interface system and adapter as described and shown in the present disclosure has the feature that the microfluidic chip can rapidly be “snapped-in-place” with adequate alignment between fluid delivery ports on the microfluidic chip and the adapter, and adequate sealing of the microfluidic chip to the adapter. This quick-release mechanism is particularly suitable for end-user instruments requiring simple operation and where frequent exchange of disposable microfluidic chips is needed (e.g. to avoid cross-contamination of samples, to prevent degradation of microfluidic chip materials, to prevent saturation of chromatography columns or membranes, or to replace “on-chip” consumables such as tiny reagent vessels, etc.) In applications involving hazardous conditions, (e.g. radioactivity in the production of radiopharmaceuticals), it is especially desirable that the microfluidic chip can be removed and a new one inserted in a minimum time to ensure that the operator receives the lowest possible dose of radiation. It is desirable that the snap-in mechanism provides good alignment and sealing to prevent leaks or other malfunctions resulting from an incorrectly installed chip. An additional feature of the interface system and adapter (and/or microfluidic chip) is the presence of the bypass channels. These bypass channels serve to address the problem of the disparity in volumes that can be manipulated by the microfluidic device and those that are generally manipulated by external fluid handling equipment, e.g. for HPLC, automated chemistry, etc. These novel bypass channels allow tubing between the external fluidic system and the microfluidic chip to be rapidly flushed/washed to eliminate trapped air, contaminants and undesired fluid.
Advantageous applications of the disclosed interface system and adapter for the interfacing of any microfluidic chip system with an external fluidic system are numerous. Accordingly, the present invention is not limited to any particular application or use thereof. In preferred aspects, the following uses and applications for the present invention are contemplated.
The adapter system as disclosed can be used in applications including, but not limited to: biopolymer synthesis, cell sorting, DNA sorting, chemical analysis, chemical synthesis, chemical purification, radiochemical synthesis, therapeutic synthesis, optofluidics, biochemical assays, biological assays, drug discovery, pathogen detection, and semiconductor processing.
In summary, an interface system and device for interfacing a microfluidic chip system is disclosed comprising an adapter having channels and ports connecting to the microfluidic chip system and an external fluidic system. An interface, device and method are provided herein, that disclose the connection of larger volumes of an external fluidic system to smaller volumes of a microfluidic chip system and the ability to effectively purge microfluidic channels without contamination.
While illustrative embodiments have been shown and described in the above description, numerous variations and alternative embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art. Such variations and alternative embodiments are contemplated, and can be made without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Ser. No. 60/847,993 for “Methods and Devices for Interfacing with a Microfluidic Chip” filed on Sep. 28, 2006 all of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention was made with support from the United States Government under Grant No. CA119347 awarded by the National Cancer Institute at Frederick. The United States Government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60847993 | Sep 2006 | US |