Microfluidic devices for the rapid detection of analytes
US-2017173578-A1 · Jun 22, 2017 · US
US10946378B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10946378-B2 |
| Application number | US-201615074652-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Mar 18, 2016 |
| Priority date | Sep 4, 2015 |
| Publication date | Mar 16, 2021 |
| Grant date | Mar 16, 2021 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
Provided herein are passive microfluidic pumps. The pumps can comprise a fluid inlet, an absorbent region, a resistive region fluidly connecting the fluid inlet and the absorbent region, and an evaporation barrier enclosing the resistive region, the absorbent region, or a combination thereof. The resistive region can comprise a first porous medium, and a fluidly non-conducting boundary defining a path for fluid flow through the first porous medium from the fluid inlet to the absorbent region. The absorbent region can comprise a fluidly non-conducting boundary defining a volume of a second porous medium sized to absorb a predetermined volume of fluid imbibed from the resistive region. The resistive region and the absorbent region can be configured to establish a capillary-driven fluid front advancing from the fluid inlet through the resistive region to the absorbent region when the fluid inlet is contacted with fluid.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A passive microfluidic pump comprising: (a) a fluid inlet structured to fluidly connect to an upstream fluidic device; (b) a resistive region dimensioned to control fluid flow; (c) an absorbent region; and (d) an evaporation barrier enclosing the resistive region and the absorbent region; wherein the resistive region comprises a first porous medium through which fluid flows from the inlet to the absorbent region, and a fluidly non-conducting boundary; wherein the absorbent region comprises a fluidly non-conducting boundary defining a volume of a second porous medium sized to absorb a predetermined volume of fluid imbibed from the resistive region, wherein a resistance to fluid flow through the resistive region is at least five times greater than the resistance to fluid flow through the absorbent region, and wherein the resistive region produces and maintains a predetermined fluid flow rate of from 1 nL/min to 100 μL/min as the fluid advances through the second porous medium from the resistive region. 2. The pump of claim 1 , wherein the first porous medium and the second porous medium comprise a porous hydrophilic material. 3. The pump of claim 1 , wherein the fluid flow rate is effective to deliver the predetermined volume of fluid to the absorbent region in from 10 seconds to 7 days. 4. The pump of claim 1 , further comprising a flow delay element influencing fluid flow though the pump. 5. The pump of claim 1 , wherein the absorbent region is detachably connected to the resistive region. 6. A compound pump comprising a plurality of fluidly connected pumps defined by claim 1 . 7. A method for inducing fluid flow through a microfluidic device comprising: fluidly connecting a pump defined by claim 1 to a fluid outlet of the microfluidic device; and contacting a fluid inlet of the microfluidic device with a fluid. 8. A method of assembling a passive pump of claim 1 , the pump configured to provide a predetermined fluid flow rate within a microfluidic channel, the method comprising fluidly connecting one or more pump subunits shaped to induce a particular fluid flow rate upon contact with a fluid to a fluid inlet to form the passive pump; wherein each pump subunit comprises a resistive region comprising a first porous medium, and a fluidly non-conducting boundary defining a path for fluid flow through the first porous medium from the fluid inlet to an absorbent region; and the absorbent region comprising a fluidly non-conducting boundary defining a volume of a second porous medium sized to absorb a predetermined volume of fluid imbibed from the resistive region, and wherein a resistance to fluid flow through the resistive region is greater than the resistance to fluid flow through the absorbent region. 9. The pump of claim 1 , wherein the resistance to fluid flow through the resistive region is at least ten times greater than the resistance to fluid flow through the absorbent region. 10. The pump of claim 1 , wherein the first porous medium and/or the second porous medium comprise fritted glass. 11. The pump of claim 1 , wherein the predetermined fluid flow rate is a constant, a step-increase, a step-decrease, or an oscillating rate of flow. 12. The pump of claim 1 , wherein the fluid inlet is structured to detachably connect to the upstream fluidic device. 13. The pump of claim 1 , wherein the predetermined volume of fluid is from 1 μL to 10 mL. 14. The pump of claim 1 , wherein the pump further comprises a second resistive region and a second absorbent region. 15. The pump of claim 14 , wherein the second absorbent region is fluidly connected in parallel to the first absorbent region. 16. The pump of claim 15 , wherein the second resistive region comprises a third porous medium, and a fluidly non-conducting boundary defining a path for fluid flow through the third porous medium from the fluid inlet to the second absorbent region; and wherein the second absorbent region comprises a fluidly non-conducting boundary defining a volume of a fourth porous medium sized to absorb a predetermined volume of fluid imbibed from the second resistive region. 17. The pump of claim 16 , further comprising a flow delay element influencing fluid flow through the pump. 18. The pump of claim 14 , wherein the second absorbent region is fluidly connected in series with the first absorbent region. 19. The pump of claim 18 , wherein the second resistive region comprises a third porous medium, and a fluidly non-conducting boundary defining a path for fluid flow through the third porous medium from the first absorbent region to the second absorbent region; and wherein the second absorbent region comprises a fluidly non-conducting boundary defining a volume of a fourth porous medium sized to absorb a predetermined volume of fluid imbibed from the second resistive region. 20. The pump of claim 19 , further comprising a flow delay element influencing fluid flow through the pump. 21. A passive microfluidic pump fluidly connected to a microfluidic device, wherein the pump comprises: (a) a fluid inlet structured to fluidly connect to the microfluidic device; (b) a resistive region dimensioned to control fluid flow rate; (c) an absorbent region; and (d) an evaporation barrier enclosing the resistive region and optionally the absorbent region; wherein the resistive region comprises a first porous medium through which fluid flows from the inlet to the absorbent region, and a fluidly non-conducting boundary, and wherein the resistive region produces and maintains a predetermined fluid flow rate; wherein the absorbent region comprises a fluidly non-conducting boundary defining a volume of a second porous medium sized to absorb a predetermined volume of fluid imbibed from the resistive region, wherein a resistance to fluid flow through the resistive region is at least ten times greater than the resistance to fluid flow through the absorbent region, and wherein the microfluidic device comprises a microfluidic channel fluidly connecting a microfluidic fluid inlet to a microfluidic fluid outlet and wherein the microfluidic fluid outlet of the microfluidic device is fluidly connected to the fluid inlet of the passive microfluidic pump. 22. The pump of claim 21 , wherein the fluid inlet is detachably connected to the microfluidic device. 23. A passive microfluidic pump fluidly connected to a microfluidic device, wherein the pump comprises: (a) a fluid inlet structured to fluidly connect to the microfluidic device; (b) a resistive region dimensioned to control fluid flow; (c) an absorbent region configured such that the fluid flow rate stays effectively constant once a fluid front reaches the absorbent region; and (d) an evaporation barrier enclosing the resistive region and the absorbent region; wherein the resistive region comprises a first porous medium through which fluid flows from the inlet to the absorbent region, and a fluidly non-conducting boundary, and wherein the resistive region determines and maintains a constant, a step-increase, a step-decrease, or an oscillating fluid flow rate; wherein the absorbent region comprises a fluidly non-conducting boundary defining a volume of a second porous medium sized to absorb a predetermined volume of fluid imbibed from the resistive region, wherein a resistance to fluid flow through the resistive region is greater than the resistance to fluid flow through the absorbent region, and wherein t
Micropumps (F04B43/043 and F04B43/095 take precedence) · CPC title
characterised by the means or forces applied to move the fluids · CPC title
Selection of specific absorption or adsorption materials · CPC title
Adhesion-type liquid-lifting devices · CPC title
Multiple sequential chambers · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.