Fluid processing devices with multiple sealing mechanisms and automated methods of use thereof
Methods of and an apparatus formed by a combination of components for automated fluid processing through use of structures integrated within plates or cartridges receivable by autosamplers, that include at least one inlet, at least one outlet, and stationary phase material disposed therebetween. An enclosed fluid processing pathway is formed by automatically connecting an autosampler fluid transport connector, such as an autosampler needle, to each of the inlet(s) and outlet(s) and simultaneously injecting a fluid to be processed into the inlet(s) and extracting processed fluid from the outlet(s).
This application is a continuation-in-part of, and claims the benefit of priority to, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/968,296, entitled “Fluid Processing Devices With Multiple Sealing Mechanisms And Automated Methods Of Use Thereof”, filed on 19 Oct. 2004, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
BACKGROUNDMany samples (e.g., of chemical, biological or environmental sample) cannot be injected into chromatographic, nuclear magnetic resonance, or other analytical equipment without prior offline fluid sample processing, including reaction, separation and/or fractionation processing. For example, pre-cleaning steps to remove interferences such as particulate matter and soluble contaminants from some samples is necessary prior to injection to avoid temporary or permanent system contamination. Thus labs dealing with such samples often spend 50-70% of their overall analysis time preparing samples for injection into these delicate instruments, including time for enriching and/or concentrating liquid-soluble samples.
After liquid-soluble samples have undergone reaction, separation (SPE) and/or fractionation processing, they may be injected into the chromatographic instruments manually or by means of autosamplers, any device that can automatically provide and/or retrieve samples to multiple containers in sequence or in parallel. Some autosamplers are additionally adapted to receive and/or grasp and manipulate sample containers, such as well plates, trays or individual vials containing the samples to be injected. Through alignment and movement (typically in multiple dimensions) of one or more injector syringes or probes with respect to indexed positions of the sample containers, metered aliquots may be withdrawn and injected into chromatographic instruments. The movement of one or more of the autosampler syringes is typically guided by a robotic controller executing user programming. Autosamplers that operate on stationary, indexed, multi-well trays or racks of sample vials, such as Series 1100 HPLC Autosamplers manufactured by Agilent Technologies of Palo Alto, Calif., and the Agilent 220 Micro Plate Sampler, are in wide use. Alternatively functioning autosamplers are also well known in the art, including those configured for use with rotatable trays.
In light of the cost of manual labor, it would, therefore, be desirable to automate reaction, separation and/or fractionation liquid-soluble sample processing in a relatively inexpensive manner. A system that accurately, robustly and reproducibly moves such fluid processing into an online, standard analytical workflow, leveraging conventional autosampling equipment, would be of great benefit. A further benefit would accrue to any instrument that enables HPLC (LC/MS) analysis of biological samples, which typically would require prior removal of both particulate matter and soluble contaminants.
SUMMARYThe present invention provides integrated structures that are preferably dimensioned or otherwise adapted for receipt and movement by liquid chromatographic (LC) and mass spectrophotometric (MS) autosampling equipment such as, for example, the Agilent instruments mentioned above. The structures may be integrated within individual cartridges, for example, or within devices such as modified well plates.
The integrated structures each have at least one inlet and at least one outlet connected by an enclosed fluid pathway. Each inlet and outlet is mateable with a respective fluid transport connector to form a pressure-tight fluid communicable connection. By this, it is meant that the seal formed around the connection is able to withstand the fluid pressures typically encountered during autosampler injections and extractions while preventing air bubbles to penetrate the seal into the fluid pathway created, or the fluid being transported to escape the enclosed fluid pathway formed. A stationary phase is disposed downstream from the inlet and upstream from the outlet such that a fluid injected through the inlet traverses the stationary phase prior to transport to the outlet.
The connections formed between the autosampler fluid transport connectors and the inlet and outlet enable a fluid to be processed through the stationary phase in a single step of simultaneous injection and extraction, a process that can be very accurately controlled (e.g., rates and volumes) through use of metered pumping mechanisms of the autosampler. The enclosed fluid pathway formed also prevents fluids from flowing in directions or at times not intended due to, for example, gravity. Suitable stationary phases for use in the fluid processing include reversed phase, normal phase, affinity, chiral, gel filtration, ion exchange, size exclusion, HILIC, digestion, absorbent, non-polar, polar, cation exchange, anion exchange, antibody, enzymatic and reactive media and the like.
Modified well plates incorporating one or more of the integrated structures may be used with well plate autosamplers having the ability to simultaneously engage multiple fluid transport connectors (such as fixed or movable syringes, probes or other types of injection and/or extraction components) with indexed positions (e.g., inlets, outlets and/or reservoirs) on the well plate. For simplifying understanding, some of the descriptions provided herein may refer only to “syringes”, but use of the term is meant to encompass the broader class of fluid transport connectors. Engagement may be achieved by moving the syringes and/or the well plate via one or more robotic arms into engaged positions. The well plate and syringes may engage at positions along the top surface of the well plate, or alternatively on multiple surfaces (e.g., top and bottom) of the well plate.
The well plate may be configured with numerous such integrated structures in an indexed array or network that may additionally include sample positions, waste reservoirs, wash reservoirs, fractionation reservoirs, fraction-pooling reservoirs, reaction reservoirs, and solvent reservoirs. This allows a wide range of fluid processing operations, including solid phase extraction (SPE) and other operations, to be performed in an automated manner through use of existing autosampler capabilities.
In another aspect, the inventive structure may take the form of a stand-alone cartridge. Such a cartridge may similarly be used with well plate autosamplers (e.g., where one or more cartridges are seated in a rack that is transported by the autosampler), but are preferably designed for use with standard autosamplers, wherein robotic fingers operate to grasp the cartridge and transport it into a position of alignment with the autosampler's fluid transport connectors for simultaneous engagement of the inlet(s) and outlet(s). As in the well plate embodiment, multiple fluid transport connectors of the autosampler simultaneously engage the inlet and outlet to form the enclosed fluid pathway for processing the fluid through the stationary phase within the cartridge.
In another aspect, the present invention provides an automated fluid processing system including a standard or well plate autosampler equipped with multiple fluid transport connectors that may be sealably engaged with the inlet and outlet of fluid processing devices such as described above. A wide variety of automated fluid processing methods that employ injections and extractions of fluids (e.g., samples, solvents and waste) to and from the inventive structure are possible utilizing these devices. In SPE processing, for example, a separation material may be conditioned, then a sample loaded onto/through the separation material, after which matrix and analyte fractions may be sequentially eluted from the separation material (and optionally reconstituted in a more aqueous solvent composition.)
Thus, liquid-soluble sample preparation processes that have been performed manually such as, for example, SPE pre-cleaning of complex chemical and biological samples, can be advantageously integrated into a standard analytical workflow with reproducible sample preparation conditions (i.e., precisely controlled flow rates, solvent volumes, and timing between sample preparation and chromatographic analysis.) Driving the liquid-soluble sample flow through the integrated structures described herein with the metering piston of an autosampler, rather than by using a vacuum or gravity eliminates backpressure variations encountered in preexisting fluid processing cartridges or columns. The precise timing also eliminates the possibility that the stationary phase will dry out and lead to irreversible absorption of analytes on the stationary phase.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURESThe various features and aspects of the present invention may be more readily understood with reference to the following figures, wherein:
Referring now to the drawings, wherein like numbers designate like or corresponding parts throughout each of the several views, there is shown in
Each of the embodiments of device 2 described below are intended for use with chromatographic and spectrophotometric autosamplers, only the arms 4 of which are shown in
As noted above, autosamplers that operate on stationary, indexed, multi-well trays or racks of sample vials, such as Series 1100 HPLC Autosamplers manufactured by Agilent Technologies of Palo Alto, Calif., are in wide use. Such autosamplers include a plurality of fluid transport connectors (i.e., needles 6′, 6″) for individually injecting fluid samples into an inlet 8 of a structure 10 integrated within the device 2. In the descriptions that follow, references to “device 2” may be referred to as “plate 2” or “cartridge 2” depending upon the embodiment of device 2 being described, as many of the properties are similar. Each time a different embodiment of device 2 is introduced, however, an attempt will be made to designate it with a distinct alphanumeric reference number of a format “2x”. The needles 6′, 6″ that deliver and extract the liquid-soluble sample are transported on one or more robotic autosampler arms 4, each of which may be equipped with multiple needles for performing simultaneously multiple series of injections and extractions. The autosampler preferably includes a processor for controlling the selection of sample(s) to be processed and the order of processing that is to be accomplished. The precision and reproducibility of such known automatic injection mechanisms is clearly superior to manual injection since variability of injection technique between operators is eliminated.
A stationary phase 22 contained in the inlet chamber 18 serves to process the liquid-soluble sample injected via needle 6′ into inlet chamber 18 as the sample traverses the stationary phase 22 as it flows along the fluid pathway 14 through the outlet chamber 20 to the outlet 12. As used herein, the phrase “stationary phase” includes any material that facilitates separations and/or reactions including, but not limited to, reversed phase, normal phase, affinity-based (for biological sample processing), chiral, size exclusion, HILIC, digestion media, reactive, ion-exchange, etc. Among these are solid phase extraction (SPE) media that cause suspended solids and/or solubles to separate from the solution in which they are suspended. This includes chromatographic sorbents such as porous silica derivatized with octadecyl (C18) or octyl (C8) functional groups, or porous particles based on organic polymer. The stationary phase may consist of a plurality of the materials listed above, arranged so that the liquid-soluble sample traverses the distinct media in a predetermined sequence (such as shown in
Fluid pathway 14 may include a conduit 24, or a plurality of such channels, of any geometry but having sufficient cross-sectional area to permit fluid flow commensurate with the injection rate, connecting respective openings 26, 28 at or near the bottoms of inlet chamber 18 and outlet chamber 20. Note that the fluid pathway is not necessarily limited to conduit connections at the bottoms of the respective chambers. For example, certain embodiments of structure 10 (as shown in
In certain embodiments, such as shown in
Similar configurations may be utilized to form a pressure tight seal between outlet sealing surface 13 and needle 6B (as shown in
Structure 10 may also include a blocking element preventing gravitational flow of fluids between the inlet chamber 18 and outlet chamber 20 that potentially could corrupt the fluid stationary phase processing.
A top view of a well plate 2 in accordance with the present invention is illustrated in
A wide variety of alternative configurations of, and uses for, well plate 2 are within the scope the invention, certain preferred embodiments of which will be described below. If the particular autosampler involved in the fluid processing has the capability, for example, an injection and extraction of a liquid-soluble sample through the inlet/outlet pair 44A can be coupled with injection and extraction of the processed liquid-soluble sample immediately through one or more additional inlet/outlet pairs 44B.
In an example by no means meant to limit the scope of the invention:
-
- the conditioner 46-2, wash 46-3 and elute 46-4 reservoirs each may have 16 ml volumes;up to 0.6 ml may be injected into each inlet 8 from each reservoir (injection volumes often are selected to be roughly three times (3×) the volume of stationary phase media utilized);the stationary phase (e.g., separation material) comprises 100-200 mg of C18, C8, SiOH, or similar media);the waste reservoir may hold a volume equal to the combined volumes of the three other reservoirs (˜50 ml); and the autosampler needle wash can be accomplished in a conventional autosampler wash port.
Although the well plates illustrated in certain of the figures are rectangularly shaped, as noted above, the present invention is by no means limited to such geometries. For example, rotary autosamplers are configured to receive circular trays, and could easily be adapted to receive circular versions of well plate 2. The only requirement is that each position on the plate 2 be individually addressable by the needle controller of the autosampler. In addition,
Referring now to
In an optional but preferable conditioning step shown in
In a loading step shown in
In subsequent steps shown in
As with the other embodiments of device 2, only minor modification of current autosamplers, i.e., providing one or more additional syringe needles to the moving arms, or providing other connectors such as, for example, needle seats adapted to receive a cartridge 2B in a manner that engages a sealing surface of the cartridge for injection and/or extraction. Adding a second metering system would provide the capability of accurately delivering and removing mobile phase and eluted samples.
The inlet chamber 18 and outlet chamber 20 (frit-less in this example) are integrally formed (formed together or securely connected) with, and protrude upwardly from the surface of a base of plate 62. Plate 62 can be sized to be not much larger than the base of the inlet and outlet chambers, or alternatively could be the size of a well plate and integrate numerous inlet/outlet structures (in which case robotic grasping fingers would be unnecessary, as automated fluid processing to operate much like the processing utilizing a modified well plate.)
As with the well plate embodiment of device 2, the cartridge embodiment also lends itself to many applications and/or configurations, certain of which are illustrated in
Multiple cartridges, such as cartridges 2G, for example, shown in
Some embodiments constructed in accordance with the present invention may provide the ability to perform extremely accurate high or low volume separations, fractionations and/or reactions, and is amenable to analyses where the sample is limited and may include samples for genomic or proteomic assays. Although the invention has been described with respect to various SPE embodiments, it should be realized this invention is also capable of a wide variety of further and other embodiments within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Claims
1. An automated method of processing a fluid, comprising the steps of:
- providing a structure having at least one inlet in fluid communication with at least one outlet, and at least one stationary phase disposed downstream from the at least one inlet and upstream from the at least one outlet such that fluid injected through the at least one inlet traverses the at least one stationary phase prior to transport to the at least one outlet;
- automatically connecting one of a plurality of autosampler fluid transport connectors to each of the at least one inlet and the at least one outlet in a relatively pressure-tight, fluid communicable connection so as to form an enclosed fluid pathway through the structure; and
- injecting a fluid through the at least one inlet and simultaneously extracting fluid from the at least one outlet.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the structure is integrated within a plate or cartridge receivable by an autosampler.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein:
- the structure is integrated within a plate; and
- the enclosed fluid pathway between the at least one inlet and the at least one outlet traverses at least one volume disposed below a top surface of the plate.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of accessing via one of the autosampler fluid transport connectors at least one reservoir or liquid soluble sample position.
5. The method of claim 2, wherein each of the at least one inlet and the at least one outlet includes a sealing surface having an opening therein through which fluid may flow, said sealing surface at least partially conforming to the shape of the autosampler fluid transport connectors.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising the steps of:
- providing an additional structure having at least one inlet in fluid communication with at least one outlet, and at least one stationary phase disposed downstream from the at least one inlet and upstream from the at least one outlet such that fluid injected through the at least one inlet traverses the at least one stationary phase prior to transport to the at least one outlet;
- automatically connecting one of the plurality of autosampler fluid transport connectors to each of the at least one inlet and the at least one outlet of the additional structure in a relatively pressure-tight, fluid communicable connection so as to form an enclosed fluid pathway through the additional structure; and
- injecting the fluid extracted from the outlet of the first structure through the at least one inlet of the additional structure and simultaneously extracting fluid from the at least one outlet of the additional structure.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein:
- the structure is integrated within a cartridge; and
- the respective openings of the at least one inlet and the at least one outlet are each disposed on the same side of the cartridge.
8. An apparatus for use in automated fluid processing, comprising the combination of:
- a plurality of fluid transport connectors of an autosampler;
- a plate receivable by an autosampler, the plate having a structure integrated therein including at least one inlet in fluid communication with at least one outlet, each of the at least one inlet and the at least one outlet connectable in a relatively pressure-tight fluid communicable connection with one of the plurality of autosampler fluid transport connectors so as to form an enclosed fluid pathway through the structure; and
- at least one stationary phase disposed downstream from the first inlet and upstream from the first outlet such that a fluid injected through the first inlet traverses the at least one stationary phase prior to transport to the first outlet.
9. The apparatus of claim 8, wherein at least a portion of the structure protrudes upwardly from a top surface of the plate.
10. The apparatus of claim 8, wherein the plate further includes at least one reservoir or liquid-soluble sample position accessible by one of the autosampler fluid transport connectors.
11. The apparatus of claim 8, wherein the at least one stationary phase comprises a plurality of distinct types of stationary phases disposed such that the injected fluid traverses the distinct types of stationary phases in a sequence.
12. The apparatus of claim 8, wherein each of the at least one inlet and the at least one outlet includes a sealing surface having an opening therein through which fluid may flow, said sealing surface at least partially conforming to the shape of the autosampler fluid transport connectors.
13. The apparatus of claim 8, wherein the structure further comprises:
- a first chamber, defined in part by the at least one inlet, a second chamber, defined in part by the at least one outlet; and
- at least one channel providing fluidic communication between the at least one chamber and the second chamber.
14. The apparatus of claim 8, further comprising at least one frit disposed within the structure at a position selected from the group consisting of between the at least one stationary phase and the at least one inlet, between the at least one stationary phase and the at least one outlet, and between two distinct types of stationary phase.
15. The apparatus of claim 8, further comprising at least one element simultaneously connectable in a relatively pressure-tight fluid communicable connection with another of the plurality of autosampler fluid transport connectors and selected from the group consisting of (a) an additional inlet in fluid communication with the at least one outlet and (b) an additional outlet in fluid communication with the at least one inlet.
16. The apparatus of claim 8, wherein the at least one inlet further comprises a plurality of inlets or the at least one outlet further comprises a plurality of outlets.
17. The apparatus of claim 8, wherein the inlet and the outlet are disposed at indexable positions of the plate.
18. An apparatus for use in automated fluid processing, comprising a combination of:
- a plurality of fluid transport connectors of an autosampler;
- a cartridge receivable by an autosampler, the cartridge having a structure integrated therein including at least one inlet in fluid communication with at least one outlet, each of the at least one inlet and the at least one outlet connectable in a relatively pressure-tight fluid communicable connection with one of the plurality of autosampler fluid transport connectors so as to form an enclosed fluid pathway through the structure; and
- at least one stationary phase disposed downstream from the first inlet and upstream from the first outlet such that a fluid injected through the first inlet traverses the at least one stationary phase prior to transport to the first outlet.
19. The apparatus of claim 18, wherein the at least one stationary phase comprises multiple volumes of distinct types of stationary phases arranged such that the injected fluid traverses the multiple volumes in a sequence.
20. The apparatus of claim 18, further comprising at least one frit disposed within the structure at a position selected from the group consisting of between the at least one stationary phase and the inlet, between the at least one stationary phase and the outlet, and between two volumes of distinct types of stationary phase.
21. The apparatus of claim 18, wherein the respective openings of the inlet and the outlet are each disposed on the same side of the cartridge.
22. The apparatus of claim 18, wherein the cartridge further comprises:
- an inlet chamber defined in part by the inlet;
- an outlet chamber defined in part by the outlet; and
- at least one channel providing fluidic communication between the inlet chamber and the outlet chamber.
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 19, 2005
Publication Date: Apr 20, 2006
Inventor: Robert Ricker (Middletown, DE)
Application Number: 11/184,170
International Classification: B01L 3/02 (20060101);