Analytic substrate coating apparatus and method
US-9255863-B2 · Feb 9, 2016 · US
US9568401B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9568401-B2 |
| Application number | US-201615018237-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Feb 8, 2016 |
| Priority date | Apr 15, 2005 |
| Publication date | Feb 14, 2017 |
| Grant date | Feb 14, 2017 |
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An apparatus and method for producing a coated analytic substrate using a compact and portable automated instrument located in the laboratory setting at the point of use which can consistently produce one or a plurality of coated analytic substrates “on demand” for using the analytic substrate immediately after coating, preferably without a step of rinsing the coated analytic substrate before use. The apparatus preferably uses applicator cartridges having a reservoir containing the coating compositions used to form the coatings. Preferably the cartridges are removable and interchangeable to facilitate the production of individual analytic substrates having different coatings or different coating patterns. These coated analytic substrates have superior specimen adhesion characteristics due to the improved quality of the coatings applied by the coating apparatus and due to the quickness with which the coated analytic substrates can be used in the lab after production.
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What is claimed is: 1. A method of applying a paraffin-embedded biological specimen to an analytic substrate, comprising: wiping a coating composition on an analytic substrate to form a coated surface on at least a portion of the analytic substrate, wherein the coating composition comprises an organofunctional silane; and applying a paraffin-embedded biological specimen to the coated surface of the analytic substrate in a histologic floatation water bath in a way that a hydrolytic area is produced between the paraffin-embedded biological specimen and the analytic substrate wherein in situ hydrolysis of the coating composition is initiated by water from the histologic floatation water bath to produce an alcohol thereby causing a flattening of the paraffin-embedded biological specimen upon the coated surface by removal of water trapped underneath the paraffin-embedded biological specimen and to cause the paraffin-embedded biological specimen to bind to the analytic substrate. 2. The method of claim 1 wherein, when the paraffin-embedded biological specimen is placed on the coated analytic substrate, the organofunctional silane in the coating composition becomes bound by in situ hydrolysis and condensation of at least one reactive silyl group thereof to the analytic substrate, and wherein the paraffin-embedded biological specimen binds to at least one functional group of the organofunctional silane whereby the paraffin-embedded biological specimen becomes bound to the analytic substrate. 3. The method of claim 2 wherein the in situ hydrolysis and condensation does not occur until that time when the paraffin-embedded biological specimen is applied to the coated surface. 4. The method of claim 1 further comprising applying a quantity of a second coating composition on the analytic substrate after the paraffin-embedded biological specimen has been bound thereto, thereby forming an overcoat upon the paraffin-embedded biological specimen for preserving the paraffin-embedded biological specimen on the analytic substrate. 5. The method of claim 1 wherein when the paraffin-embedded biological specimen is placed upon the coated surface, an alcohol is produced by the situ hydrolysis of the coating composition resulting in increased adhesion of the paraffin-embedded biological specimen to the coated surface. 6. The method of claim 1 wherein in the step of applying a paraffin-embedded biological specimen, an alcohol is produced by in situ hydrolysis of the coating composition during binding of the paraffin-embedded biological specimen to the analytic substrate thereby causing a flattening of the paraffin-embedded biological specimen upon the analytic substrate by removal of water trapped underneath the paraffin-embedded biological specimen thereby decreasing the drying time necessary before further processing. 7. A method of applying a paraffin-embedded biological specimen to an analytic substrate, comprising: wiping a coating composition on an analytic substrate to form a coated surface on at least a portion of the analytic substrate, wherein the coating composition comprises organofunctional silane; and applying a paraffin-embedded biological specimen to the coated surface of the analytic substrate in a histologic floatation water bath in a way that a hydrolytic area is produced between the paraffin-embedded biological specimen and the analytic substrate wherein in situ hydrolysis of the coating composition is initiated by water from the histologic floatation water bath to cause the paraffin-embedded biological specimen to bind to the analytic substrate. 8. The method of claim 7 wherein when the paraffin-embedded biological specimen is placed upon the coated surface, an alcohol is produced by the situ hydrolysis of the coating composition resulting in increased adhesion of the paraffin-embedded biological specimen to the coated surface. 9. The method of claim 7 wherein in the step of applying a paraffin-embedded biological specimen, an alcohol is produced by in situ hydrolysis of the coating composition during binding of the paraffin-embedded biological specimen to the analytic substrate thereby causing a flattening of the paraffin-embedded biological specimen upon the analytic substrate by removal of water trapped underneath the paraffin-embedded biological specimen thereby decreasing the drying time necessary before further processing. 10. The method of claim 7 wherein in the step of applying a paraffin-embedded biological specimen, an alcohol is produced by in situ hydrolysis of the coating composition during binding of the paraffin-embedded biological specimen to the analytic substrate thereby causing a flattening of the paraffin-embedded biological specimen upon the analytic substrate by removal of water trapped underneath the paraffin-embedded biological specimen. 11. The method of claim 7 wherein, when the paraffin-embedded biological specimen is placed on the coated analytic substrate, the organofunctional silane in the coating composition becomes bound by in situ hydrolysis and condensation of at least one reactive silyl group thereof to the analytic substrate, and wherein the paraffin-embedded biological specimen binds to at least one functional group of the organofunctional silane whereby the paraffin-embedded biological specimen becomes bound to the analytic substrate. 12. The method of claim 7 wherein the in situ hydrolysis and condensation does not occur until that time when the paraffin-embedded biological specimen is applied to the coated surface. 13. The method of claim 7 further comprising applying a quantity of a second coating composition upon the analytic substrate after the paraffin-embedded biological specimen has been bound thereto, thereby forming an overcoat upon the paraffin-embedded biological specimen for preserving the paraffin-embedded biological specimen on the analytic substrate.
for applying two different liquids or other fluent materials, or the same liquid or other fluent material twice, to the same side of the work · CPC title
Surface properties and coatings · CPC title
the auxiliary operation involving heating {or cooling} · CPC title
of definite length in a continuous process · CPC title
Subject matter not provided for in other groups of this subclass · CPC title
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