The present invention relates to droplet microfluidic devices, and more specifically to Active Matrix Electrowetting-On-Dielectric (AM-EWOD) devices, and to methods of operating such devices for manipulating multiple filler fluids having different properties to achieve a desired fluid interaction.
Electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD) is a well-known technique for manipulating droplets of fluid by application of an electric field. Active Matrix EWOD (AM-EWOD) refers to implementation of EWOD in an active matrix array incorporating transistors, for example by using thin film transistors (TFTs). It is thus a candidate technology for digital microfluidics for lab-on-a-chip technology. An introduction to the basic principles of the technology can be found in “Digital microfluidics: is a true lab-on-a-chip possible?”, R. B. Fair, Microfluid Nanofluid (2007) 3:245-281).
The microfluidic system further may include a control system configured to control actuation voltages applied to the electrode array of the microfluidic device to perform manipulation operations to the fluid droplets. For example, the reader 32 may contain such a control system configured as control electronics 38 and a storage device 40 that may store any application software and any data associated with the system. The control electronics 38 may include suitable circuitry and/or processing devices that are configured to carry out various control operations relating to control of the AM-EWOD device 36, such as a CPU, microcontroller or microprocessor.
In the example of
In the AM-EWOD device 36, a non-polar fluid 60 (e.g. oil) may be used to occupy the volume not occupied by the liquid droplet 52. An insulator layer 62 may be disposed upon the lower substrate 44 that separates the conductive element electrodes 48A and 48B from a first hydrophobic coating 64 upon which the liquid droplet 52 sits with a contact angle 66 represented by 8. The hydrophobic coating is formed from a hydrophobic material (commonly, but not necessarily, a fluoropolymer). On the top substrate 54 is a second hydrophobic coating 68 with which the liquid droplet 52 may come into contact. The reference electrode 58 is interposed between the top substrate 54 and the second hydrophobic coating 68.
The contact angle θ for the liquid droplet is defined as shown in
In operation, voltages termed the EW drive voltages, (e.g. VT, V0 and V00 in
For the purposes of driving and sensing the array elements, the electrical load 70A/70B overall functions in effect as a capacitor, whose value depends on whether a liquid droplet 52 is present or not at a given element electrode 48. In the case where a droplet is present, the capacitance is relatively high (typically of order pico-Farads), whereas if there is no liquid droplet present the capacitance is low (typically of order femto-Farads). If a droplet partially covers a given electrode 48 then the capacitance may approximately represent the extent of coverage of the element electrode 48 by the liquid droplet 52.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,163,612 (Sterling et al., issued Jan. 16, 2007) describes how TFT based thin film electronics may be used to control the addressing of voltage pulses to an EWOD array by using circuit arrangements very similar to those employed in active matrix display technologies. The approach of U.S. Pat. No. 7,163,612 may be termed “Active Matrix Electrowetting on Dielectric” (AM-EWOD). There are several advantages in using TFT based thin film electronics to control an EWOD array, namely:
A serial interface 82 may also be provided to process a serial input data stream and facilitate the programming of the required voltages to the element electrodes 48 in the array 50. A voltage supply interface 84 provides the corresponding supply voltages, top substrate drive voltages, and other requisite voltage inputs as further described herein. A number of connecting wires 86 between the lower substrate 44 and external control electronics, power supplies and any other components can be made relatively few, even for large array sizes. Optionally, the serial data input may be partially parallelized. For example, if two data input lines are used the first may supply data for columns 1 to X/2, and the second for columns (1+X/2) to M with minor modifications to the column driver circuits 76. In this way the rate at which data can be programmed to the array is increased, which is a standard technique used in liquid crystal display driving circuitry.
The array element circuit 72 may typically perform the functions of:
Various methods of controlling an AM-EWOD device to sense droplets and perform desired droplet manipulations have been described. For example, US 2017/0056887 (Hadwen et al., published Mar. 2, 2017) describes the use of capacitance detection to sense dynamic properties of reagents as a way for determining the output of an assay. Such disclosure incorporates an integrated impedance sensor circuit that is incorporated specifically into the array element circuitry of each array element. Accordingly, attempts have been made to optimize integrated impedance sensing circuitry into the array element structure, and in particular as part of the array element circuitry. Examples of AM-EWOD devices having integrated actuation and sensing circuits are described, for example, in Applicant's commonly assigned patent documents as follows: U.S. Pat. No. 8,653,832 (Hadwen et al., issued Fe. 18, 2014); US 2018/0078934 (Hadwen et al., published Mar. 22, 2018); US 2017/0076676 (Hadwen, published Mar. 16, 2017); and U.S. Pat. No. 8,173,000 (Hadwen et al., issued May 8, 2012). The enhanced method of operation described in the current application may be employed in connection with any suitable array element circuitry.
The description above demonstrates advantages of using a TFT configuration to make the backplane of the AM-EWOD device. This permits a large area for droplet manipulations that is achieved at relatively low cost. Example materials for manufacturing TFT based AM-EWOD devices could be any suitable materials for manufacturing active matrix displays, including for example low temperature polysilicon (LTPS), amorphous-silicon (a-Si), and indium gallium zinc oxide (IGZO), and any suitable related manufacturing processes may be employed. Even with the advantages of TFT based AM-EWOD devices, analytical challenges remain. In particular, it may be desirable to control or dictate the interface between a polar, aqueous liquid droplet and the non-polar fluid to achieve a desired fluidic operation or interaction.
EP 2 616 854 (Mallard et al., published Jul. 24, 2013) describes certain “desirable” characteristics of a non-polar fluid that might be utilized within an EWOD device to achieve a desired fluidic interaction. Such patent document, however, does not teach or suggest any ways of manipulating multiple non-polar fluids to achieve a desired fluidic interaction at different stages or stages of a multi-step reaction protocol.
Tao He et al. (BIOMICROFLUIDICS 10, 011908 (2016)) describe two-phase microfluidics in electrowetting displays and relates effects on optical performance. The article discloses a display device that comprises an array of micropixels having walls that separate the pixels. The article discloses: “The pixels were 150 um×150 um with grid height and width about 6 and 15 um, respectively. Coloured oil and conductive liquid were then filled and sealed with a cover plate to form an electrowetting display device.” As a microfluidic display device, there is nothing in He et al. to suggest operations that include transferring fluid from one pixel to another, as such operation would not be useful in a display device.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,658,111 (Srinivasan et al., issued Feb. 24, 2004) describes an EWOD device divided spatially into multiple zones that are designed to separate different oils within their respective zones, and a means of moving droplets between the zones. The difference zones are generated employing different actuation voltages to different portions of the device.
Applicant has previously attempted to control fluidic interactions through the use of electrowetting forces to generate reconfigurable barrier regions formed of a polar fluid. The barrier regions, for example, may control the flow of filler fluids (oil) that are inputted into the device, or may separate regions of the device for use in different reaction steps. Examples of such operations are described in Applicant's application Ser. No. 15/759,685 filed on Mar. 13, 2018, and application Ser. No. 16/147,964 filed Oct. 1, 2018, the contents of which are incorporated here by reference.
Liquid droplets to which manipulation operations are to be performed are typically polar, aqueous fluids that are commonly surrounded by a non-polar filler fluid (typically an oil) within which the polar liquid droplets are immiscible. Examples of the non-polar filler fluid include (without limitation) silicone oil, fluorosilicone oil, pentane, hexane, octane, decane, dodecane, pentadecane, hexadecane, which generally may be referred to as oil. Although less typical, in certain applications the filler fluid may simply be air or another gas.
A non-polar oil filler fluid may perform various functions, which may include (without limitation) the following. The oil filler fluid lowers the surface tension around the boundaries of the polar liquid droplets (as compared to having the droplets in air) so that the polar fluids can be inputted into the device more readily and/or be manipulated more easily by electrowetting operations. In some applications, a surfactant may be employed to enhance the lowering of the surface tension of the polar liquid droplets. When used, the surfactant may be dissolved in the filler fluid (although in some applications the surfactant alternatively may be dissolved in the polar fluid). The filler fluid also prevents the polar liquid droplets from reducing in size due to evaporation.
Attempts have been made to perform EWOD operations using multiple and different filler fluids for different reactions or different phases of a reaction protocol on a single EWOD device. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,439,014 (Pamula et al., issued Oct. 21, 2008) describes the sequential use of different filler fluids. To avoid cross-mixing or contamination, the differ filler fluids are inputted into separate physical chambers that are separated by walls or other comparable structural barriers. The need for structural barriers built onto the EWOD device limits spatial flexibility for performing reaction steps.
There is a need in the art for improved systems and methods of operating an EWOD or AM-EWOD device that can accommodate multiple filler fluids having different characteristics that may be employed within a single EWOD device. The requirements of the filler fluid may differ depending upon the particular application for which the EWOD device is to be used. Properties or characteristics of a filler fluid also may need to be different at different stages within a specific assay, sample preparation, or reaction protocol that is to be performed within an EWOD device. The present invention provides a system and methods that accommodate the need to use filler fluids of different properties or characteristics by facilitating the use of multiple and different filler fluids within a single EWOD device.
In exemplary embodiments, a polar fluid source may be dispensed into an EWOD device array by any suitable mechanism. Electrowetting forces are employed to modify the polar fluid to form an aqueous barrier across the EWOD device array that separates the EWOD device array into fluidly separated regions or zones. First and second non-polar filler fluids are then dispensed respectively into the EWOD device on opposites sides of the aqueous barrier, such that the aqueous barrier prevents intermixing between the filler fluids. Additional polar fluid constituting one or more sample and/or reagent polar liquid droplets are dispensed onto the EWOD device. The liquid droplets may be transferred between the different device regions having the different polar fluids by employing electrowetting operations to: reconfigure the aqueous barrier, such as by opening a passage in the aqueous barrier, transfer one or more liquid droplets through the reconfigured aqueous barrier from a first region to a second region of the EWOD device, and reconstituting the aqueous barrier to re-separate the first and second regions. By employing such an aqueous barrier, intermixing of the different filler fluids and any constituents thereof is minimized.
In another embodiment, different polar fluids may be employed sequentially in time. In such device operation, a first non-polar filler fluid is dispensed into an EWOD device, and a polar fluid constituting one or more sample and/or reagent polar liquid droplets are dispensed onto the EWOD device array. Following the performance of any desired droplet manipulation operations, the first filler fluid is extracted while electrowetting forces are applied to the polar liquid droplet(s) to maintain the droplet positioning on the EWOD device array. A second non-polar filler fluid is then dispensed into the EWOD device, again while electrowetting forces are applied to the polar liquid droplet(s) to maintain the droplet positioning on the EWOD device array during the filler fluid exchange.
An aspect of the invention, therefore, is a method of operating an electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD) device that performs electrowetting operations on fluids dispensed into the EWOD device, which provides enhanced operation for using multiple non-polar filler fluids. In exemplary embodiments, the method of operating includes the steps of: dispensing a polar fluid source into the EWOD device; performing an electrowetting operation to generate an aqueous barrier from the polar fluid source, wherein the aqueous barrier separates the EWOD device into a first region and a second region that are fluidly separated from each other by the aqueous barrier; inputting a non-polar first filler fluid into the first region; inputting a non-polar second filler fluid into the second region; dispensing a polar liquid droplet into the first region; transferring the polar liquid droplet from the first region to the second region by performing an electrowetting operation to reconfigure the aqueous barrier, and performing an electrowetting operation to move the polar liquid droplet from the first region to the second region through the reconfigured aqueous barrier; and performing an electrowetting operation to reconstitute the aqueous barrier to fluidly separate the first region from the second region. The methods of the present invention may be performed by an EWOD control system executing program code stored on a non-transitory computer readable medium.
Reconfiguring the aqueous barrier may include performing an electrowetting operation to open a passage through the aqueous barrier, and reconstituting the aqueous barrier may include performing an electrowetting operation to close the passage. Reconfiguring the aqueous barrier may include forming a double walled section of the aqueous barrier enclosing a third region of the EWOD device that is fluidly separated from the first region and the second region by said double walled section. The polar liquid droplet is then transferred from the first region to the second region through the third region using a double gated transference operation by which passages are formed sequentially through different limbs of the double walled section.
Another method of operating an EWOD device may include the steps of: inputting a non-polar first filler fluid into the EWOD device; dispensing a polar liquid droplet into the EWOD device, wherein the polar liquid droplet is surrounded by the first filler fluid; performing an electrowetting operation to perform a droplet manipulation operation on the polar liquid droplet; extracting the first filler fluid from the EWOD device while actuating a portion of array elements of the EWOD device to maintain a position of the polar liquid droplet within the EWOD device; and inputting a non-polar second filler fluid into the EWOD device while actuating a portion of array elements of the EWOD device to maintain a position of the polar liquid droplet within the EWOD device.
These and further features of the present invention will be apparent with reference to the following description and attached drawings. In the description and drawings, particular embodiments of the invention have been disclosed in detail as being indicative of some of the ways in which the principles of the invention may be employed, but it is understood that the invention is not limited correspondingly in scope. Rather, the invention includes all changes, modifications and equivalents coming within the spirit and terms of the claims appended hereto. Features that are described and/or illustrated with respect to one embodiment may be used in the same way or in a similar way in one or more other embodiments and/or in combination with or instead of the features of the other embodiments.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals are used to refer to like elements throughout. It will be understood that the figures are not necessarily to scale.
The present invention pertains to systems and methods of operating an EWOD or AM-EWOD device that can accommodate multiple filler fluids having different characteristics that may be employed within a single EWOD device. The requirements of the filler fluid may differ depending upon the particular application for which the EWOD device is to be used. Properties or characteristics of a filler fluid also may need to be different at different stages within a specific assay, sample preparation, or reaction protocol that is to be performed within an EWOD device. The present invention, therefore, provides systems and methods that accommodate the need to use filler fluids of different properties or characteristics by facilitating the use of multiple and different filler fluids within a single EWOD device.
For example, in certain applications it may be necessary to provide within the filler fluid a surfactant so that small droplets can be created from a reservoir by electrowetting manipulation operations. Surfactants are used commonly in the field of microfluidic operations, and examples of suitable surfactants are described in Applicant's commonly owned US 2018/0059056 (Taylor et al., published Mar. 1, 2018). However, once the small droplets have been created, the presence of the surfactant may be undesirable as it limits or prevents later desirable events. For example, droplet speed may be limited by the presence of a surfactant, or downstream processing of an extracted sample may be disturbed by the presence of the surfactant. As another example, some applications may benefit from dissolved gas (for example oxygen) or vapor (for example water vapor) within the filler fluid during a stage of a reaction protocol (e.g. to keep cells alive), but the reaction protocol at other stages may benefit from degassed oil (e.g., during a PCR step). Other applications may benefit from different viscosities of filler fluid, e.g. a low viscosity filler fluid may be preferable for dispensing small droplets from a reservoir, whereas a higher viscosity fluid may be preferable for higher temperature applications to limit the risk of exceeding a flash point or having excessive oil evaporation.
As another example, droplets may be manipulated to form a droplet interface bilayer (DIB) by which two droplets are manipulated to make contact one with another without actual merging to yield a single enlarged droplet. By appropriate choice of surfactants in the system, a lipid bilayer forms the DIB at the interface of the two droplets. DIBs have multiple uses in EWOD applications, including for example forming structures for patch-clamp sensing, for example as described in Martel and Cross, Biomicrofluidics, 6, 012813 (2012), or for sequencing DNA when a nanopore is inserted into the DIB, as described for example in GB1721649.0. Formation of DIBs or emulsions is favored by a low surfactant concentration in a long-chain oil as the surfactant can interfere with other surfactants in the liquid droplet. Such a high viscosity, low surfactant concentration oil is unlikely to yield satisfactory results with other EWOD droplet manipulation operations, such as splitting and dispensing droplets. It may be useful, therefore, to use a short-chain oil with surfactant for certain manipulation operations, and to use a long-chain oil with lower surfactant concentration for forming DIBs.
The present invention, therefore, provides enhanced accommodation of multiple filler fluids having different characteristics that may be employed within a single EWOD device. In exemplary embodiments, a polar fluid source may be dispensed into an EWOD device array by any suitable mechanism. Electrowetting forces are employed to modify the polar fluid to form an aqueous barrier across the EWOD device array that separates the EWOD device array into fluidly separated regions or zones. First and second non-polar filler fluids are then dispensed respectively into the EWOD device on opposites sides of the aqueous barrier, such that the aqueous barrier prevents intermixing between the filler fluids. Additional polar fluid constituting one or more sample and/or reagent polar liquid droplets are dispensed onto the EWOD device. The liquid droplets may be transferred between the different device regions having the different polar fluids by employing electrowetting operations to: reconfigure the aqueous barrier, such as by opening a passage in the aqueous barrier, transfer one or more liquid droplets through the reconfigured aqueous barrier from a first region to a second region of the EWOD device, and reconstituting the aqueous barrier to re-separate the first and second regions. By employing such an aqueous barrier, intermixing of the different filler fluids and any constituents thereof is minimized.
Referring back to
The control system may be configured to perform some or all of the following functions:
The control system, such as via the control electronics 38, may supply and control the actuation voltages applied to the electrode array of the microfluidics device 36, such as required voltage and timing signals to perform droplet manipulation operations and sense liquid droplets on the AM-EWOD device 36. The control electronics further may execute the application software to generate and output control voltages for droplet sensing and performing sensing operations.
The various methods described herein pertaining to enhanced accommodation of multiple filler fluids may be performed using structures and devices described with respect to
An aspect of the invention, therefore, is a method of operating an electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD) device that performs electrowetting operations on fluids dispensed into the EWOD device, which provides enhanced operation for using multiple non-polar filler fluids. In exemplary embodiments, the method of operating includes the steps of: dispensing a polar fluid source into the EWOD device; performing an electrowetting operation to generate an aqueous barrier from the polar fluid source, wherein the aqueous barrier separates the EWOD device into a first region and a second region that are fluidly separated from each other by the aqueous barrier; inputting a non-polar first filler fluid into the first region; inputting a non-polar second filler fluid into the second region; dispensing a polar liquid droplet into the first region; transferring the polar liquid droplet from the first region to the second region by performing an electrowetting operation to reconfigure the aqueous barrier, and performing an electrowetting operation to move the polar liquid droplet from the first region to the second region through the reconfigured aqueous barrier; and performing an electrowetting operation to reconstitute the aqueous barrier to fluidly separate the first region from the second region. The methods of the present invention may be performed by an EWOD control system executing program code stored on a non-transitory computer readable medium.
In step (a) of
In step (c) of
The sequence of steps (b) and (c) in
Accordingly, the filler fluids are maintained separated from each other by the aqueous barrier 106. In some applications, a surfactant may be included in the polar fluid used to generate the aqueous barrier 106 to ensure successful loading of the polar fluid into the EWOD device, and/or formation of an elongated barrier droplet. An alternative may be to employ a relative high magnitude actuation voltage to manipulate the polar fluid to form the aqueous barrier 106. In other applications, depending upon the liquid constituents there may be no requirement for a surfactant in the polar fluid for successful elongated barrier droplet formation, even at lower actuation voltages. Accordingly, it will be appreciated that the precise manner of forming the aqueous barrier 106 to divide the EWOD device 100 into regions or zones 102 and 104 may be adapted as may be suitable for any particular application.
As described above, the EWOD device 100 may include sensor elements, such as for example external sensors or sensing circuitry integrated into the array element circuitry of each array element. Sensor elements may be used to detect when the aqueous barrier 106 is fully formed, and hence when it is appropriate to load the filler fluids into the different regions to prevent mixing of the filler fluids. The microfluidic system may employ a suitable output through a user interface, such as a visual or audio indicator, that the EWOD device is in a ready state to receive the filler fluids. Such indicators may prompt an operator for manual loading of the filler fluids, or the system may be fully automated whereby the sensor elements send a signal to the control system, which may control a fluid loading instrument to trigger automatic loading of the filler fluids.
In step (d) of
There may come a time when it is desirable that one or more liquid droplets 112 be moved between the regions 102 and 104. For example, step (e) of
As shown in step (e) of
Step (a) of
At step (c) of
To form the aqueous barrier 106, the polar fluid is drawn across the width of the EWOD device 100 by electrowetting forces. Electrowetting forces further may be used to move the aqueous barrier 106 to any desired location along the EWOD device 100. In this manner, the formation and manipulation of the aqueous barrier 106 may be used to rearrange the boundary of the first filler fluid 108 into a well-controlled shape or region as illustrated in step (d). Similarly as in the previous embodiments, sensor elements may be used to detect the boundary of the first filler fluid when initially loaded, and guide the aqueous barrier 106 into position, ensuring that the first filler fluid 108 resides on only one side of the resultant barrier in the region 102. As referenced above, once the aqueous barrier 106 has been formed and appropriately positioned to contain the first filler fluid 108 in the region 102, the second filler fluid 110 may be introduced into the EWOD device 100 in the region 104 as illustrated in step (e). Thereafter, polar sample and/or reagent droplets may be introduced into filler fluids 108 and 110, and electrowetting droplet operations may be performed for moving liquid droplets between the regions 102 and 104 by reconfiguring the aqueous barrier 106, as described above with respect to steps (d), (e), and (f) of
In a variant of this embodiment, a quantity of surfactant containing filler fluid could be loaded simultaneously with the polar fluid source to form the aqueous barrier, for example by loading two different fluids within an input instrument such as a pipette, which would provide the advantages of the this embodiment using a single fluid inputting step. The two filler fluids could then be loaded on either side of the aqueous barrier comparably as in the first embodiment.
In this embodiment, electrowetting forces may be employed to manipulate a polar fluid source 101 into an aqueous barrier 106 comparably as illustrated in
Further in this embodiment, as shown in step (a) of
With the double walled section, the embodiment of
As depicted in step (b) of
The double gated transference operation has advantages in transferring fluids between different regions of the EWOD device array. By using a double walled aqueous barrier section surrounding an internal volume of filler fluid separating different regions or zones of the device array, the transference operation further limits any potential bulk mixing of the first filler fluid 108 into the second filler fluid 110, and vice versa. Such segregation of device regions or zones may be of particular benefit when electrowetting droplet operations, or downstream processes, to which sample droplets might be transferred may be compromised by the presence of one filler fluid in the other, or an additive such as a surfactant that may be present in one filler fluid and not the other.
For example, suppose the first filler fluid 108 in the first region 102 contains a surfactant that is undesirable in the second filler fluid 110 in the second region 104, and that the droplets 112 are to move from region 102 to region 104. In such case, the aqueous barrier 106 is arranged so that the internal volume of the third region 103 is filled with the second filler fluid 110 of region 104 as shown in
Additionally, when the liquid droplets are fully enclosed within the third region, additional electrowetting manipulation operations may be performed within the EWOD device region enclosed by the double walled barrier section. For example, droplets and/or the boundary of the third region may be shuffled to perform a kind of washing effect on the droplets within the third region, before the double walled barrier section is opened for transference to another device region. The result of such a washing effect is to reduce contamination or partial contamination by additional mixing within the third region, which serves to homogenize the composition of the third region.
The double gated transference operation can be extended to include any number of barrier-enclosed regions of filler fluid, so that the droplets may pass through a plurality of gates in the transference between different regions on the device array. Performing multiple double gated transference operations further diminishes the potential for undesirable transfer of or mixing of different filler fluids, including any surfactant and other additive constituents of the filler fluids. In addition, the embodiments described above with respect to
In alternative embodiments, EWOD processing employing multiple and different filler fluids may be performed without forming an aqueous barrier defining fluidly separated regions or zones within the EWOD device. In such alternative embodiments, the use of multiple filler fluids is carried out sequentially, i.e., at different times rather than simultaneously at different positions within the EWOD device. Another method of operating an EWOD device, therefore, may include the steps of: inputting a non-polar first filler fluid into the EWOD device; dispensing a polar liquid droplet into the EWOD device, wherein the polar liquid droplet is surrounded by the first filler fluid; performing an electrowetting operation to perform a droplet manipulation operation on the polar liquid droplet; extracting the first filler fluid from the EWOD device while actuating a portion of array elements of the EWOD device to maintain a position of the polar liquid droplet within the EWOD device; and inputting a non-polar second filler fluid into the EWOD device while actuating a portion of array elements of the EWOD device to maintain a position of the polar liquid droplet within the EWOD device. The positions of the polar liquid droplet during extraction of the first filler fluid and input of the second filler fluid may be the same or different.
Accordingly,
In step (a) of
As shown in step (c) of
The principles of the sequential EWOD device operation of
Furthermore, the principles described above in connection with the various embodiments of
In another embodiment, when the distinguishing characteristic between the filler fluids is the concentration or presence of a surfactant, an alternative method of preventing surfactant transference is to remove or reduce the surfactant from a first (and only) filler fluid by providing a surfactant-removing droplet or droplets that move throughout the appropriate region of the device, drawing the surfactant from the filler fluid phase into the aqueous droplets. As such, by moving such droplet(s) around the EWOD device array, the concentration of surfactant initially present in the filler fluid phase would fall as the surfactant-removing droplets are moved throughout the device, achieving a similar effect to having a second filler fluid with either no surfactant or a lower concentration of surfactant.
In each of the foregoing EWOD operation methods depicted in
An aspect of the invention, therefore, is a method of operating an electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD) device that performs electrowetting operations on fluids dispensed into the EWOD device, which provides enhanced operation for using multiple non-polar filler fluids. In exemplary embodiments, the method of operating includes the steps of: dispensing a polar fluid source into the EWOD device; performing an electrowetting operation to generate an aqueous barrier from the polar fluid source, wherein the aqueous barrier separates the EWOD device into a first region and a second region that are fluidly separated from each other by the aqueous barrier; inputting a non-polar first filler fluid into the first region; inputting a non-polar second filler fluid into the second region; dispensing a polar liquid droplet into the first region; transferring the polar liquid droplet from the first region to the second region by performing an electrowetting operation to reconfigure the aqueous barrier, and performing an electrowetting operation to move the polar liquid droplet from the first region to the second region through the reconfigured aqueous barrier; and performing an electrowetting operation to reconstitute the aqueous barrier to fluidly separate the first region from the second region. The method of operating may include one or more of the following features, either individually or in combination.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, reconfiguring the aqueous barrier comprises performing an electrowetting operation to open a passage through the aqueous barrier, and reconstituting the aqueous barrier comprises performing an electrowetting operation to close the passage.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, transferring the polar liquid droplet from the first region to the second region comprises:
performing an electrowetting operation to reconfigure the aqueous barrier to form a double walled section of the aqueous barrier enclosing a third region of the EWOD device that is fluidly separated from the first region and the second region by said double walled section; performing an electrowetting operation to reconfigure the aqueous barrier to generate a first passage through a first limb of the double walled section, wherein the first passage fluidly connects the first region and the third region; performing an electrowetting operation to move the polar liquid droplet from the first region into the third region; performing an electrowetting operation to reconstitute the aqueous barrier by closing the first passage, wherein the polar liquid droplet remains within the third region; performing an electrowetting operation to reconfigure the aqueous barrier to generate a second passage through a second limb of the double walled section, wherein the second passage fluidly connects the third region and the second region; performing an electrowetting operation to move the polar liquid droplet from the third region into the second region; and performing an electrowetting operation to reconstitute the aqueous barrier by closing the second passage.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the third region includes the second filler fluid.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the method further includes performing an electrowetting operation to perform a droplet manipulation operation to the polar liquid droplet when the polar liquid droplet is in the third region.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the droplet manipulation operation includes a washing operation.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the aqueous barrier is generated prior to inputting the first and second filler fluids.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the first filler fluid is inputted at a first end of the EWOD device, wherein the first filler fluid migrates toward a second end of the EWOD device opposite from the first end; the polar fluid source subsequently is dispensed and the aqueous barrier is generated in a region of the EWOD device to which the first filler fluid has not migrated, the method further including performing an electrowetting operation to position the aqueous barrier to divide the EWOD device into the first region containing the first filler fluid and the second region; and the second filler fluid is inputted into the second region after the aqueous barrier is positioned.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, at least one of the first filler fluid and the second filler fluid includes a surfactant.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the polar liquid droplet includes a surfactant.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the first filler fluid and/or the second filler fluid comprise an oil.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the first filler fluid is different from the second filler fluid.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the first filler fluid and the second filler fluid include a same base filler fluid, and first filler fluid is oxygenated and the second filler fluid is deoxygenated.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the first filler fluid has a different melting and/or boiling temperature as compared to the second filler fluid.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the first filler fluid and the second filler fluid include a same base filler fluid, and the first filler fluid includes a first surfactant and the second filler fluid includes a second and different surfactant.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the method includes inputting a non-polar first filler fluid into the EWOD device; dispensing a polar liquid droplet into the EWOD device, wherein the polar liquid droplet is surrounded by the first filler fluid; performing an electrowetting operation to perform a droplet manipulation operation on the polar liquid droplet; extracting the first filler fluid from the EWOD device while actuating a portion of array elements of the EWOD device to maintain a position of the polar liquid droplet within the EWOD device; and inputting a non-polar second filler fluid into the EWOD device while actuating a portion of array elements of the EWOD device to maintain a position of the polar liquid droplet within the EWOD device.
In an exemplary embodiment of the method of operating, the first filler fluid is extracted by gradually displacing the first filler fluid with the second filler fluid.
Another aspect of the invention is a microfluidic system that includes an electro-wetting on dielectric (EWOD) device comprising an element array configured to receive a polar fluid source, one or more polar liquid droplets, and a plurality of filler fluids, the element array comprising a plurality of individual array elements; and a control system configured to control actuation voltages applied to the element array to perform manipulation operations to perform the method of operating an EWOD device according to any of the embodiments.
Another aspect of the invention is a non-transitory computer-readable medium storing program code which is executed by a processing device for controlling operation of an electro-wetting on dielectric (EWOD) device, the program code being executable by the processing device to perform the method of operating an EWOD device according to any of the embodiments.
Although the invention has been shown and described with respect to a certain embodiment or embodiments, equivalent alterations and modifications may occur to others skilled in the art upon the reading and understanding of this specification and the annexed drawings. In particular regard to the various functions performed by the above described elements (components, assemblies, devices, compositions, etc.), the terms (including a reference to a “means”) used to describe such elements are intended to correspond, unless otherwise indicated, to any element which performs the specified function of the described element (i.e., that is functionally equivalent), even though not structurally equivalent to the disclosed structure which performs the function in the herein exemplary embodiment or embodiments of the invention. In addition, while a particular feature of the invention may have been described above with respect to only one or more of several embodiments, such feature may be combined with one or more other features of the other embodiments, as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application.
The described embodiments could be used to provide an enhanced AM-EWOD device. The AM-EWOD device could form a part of a lab-on-a-chip system. Such devices could be used for optical detection of biochemical or physiological materials, such as for cell detection and cell counting. Applications include healthcare diagnostic testing, material testing, chemical or biochemical material synthesis, proteomics, tools for research in life sciences and forensic science.
This application is continuation application of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/504,606 filed on Jul. 8, 2019, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16504606 | Jul 2019 | US |
Child | 17851431 | US |