US20070236682A9 - Cytometer having telecentric optics - Google Patents
Cytometer having telecentric optics Download PDFInfo
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- US20070236682A9 US20070236682A9 US10/953,197 US95319704A US2007236682A9 US 20070236682 A9 US20070236682 A9 US 20070236682A9 US 95319704 A US95319704 A US 95319704A US 2007236682 A9 US2007236682 A9 US 2007236682A9
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- 230000003287 optical effect Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 28
- 238000005286 illumination Methods 0.000 claims description 8
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 claims description 8
- 239000002245 particle Substances 0.000 description 8
- 238000001514 detection method Methods 0.000 description 4
- 238000000684 flow cytometry Methods 0.000 description 3
- 238000010586 diagram Methods 0.000 description 2
- 239000012530 fluid Substances 0.000 description 2
- 238000012986 modification Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000004048 modification Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000003491 array Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000000694 effects Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000007789 gas Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000007788 liquid Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000007787 solid Substances 0.000 description 1
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N15/00—Investigating characteristics of particles; Investigating permeability, pore-volume or surface-area of porous materials
- G01N15/10—Investigating individual particles
- G01N15/14—Optical investigation techniques, e.g. flow cytometry
- G01N15/1456—Optical investigation techniques, e.g. flow cytometry without spatial resolution of the texture or inner structure of the particle, e.g. processing of pulse signals
- G01N15/1459—Optical investigation techniques, e.g. flow cytometry without spatial resolution of the texture or inner structure of the particle, e.g. processing of pulse signals the analysis being performed on a sample stream
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N15/00—Investigating characteristics of particles; Investigating permeability, pore-volume or surface-area of porous materials
- G01N15/10—Investigating individual particles
- G01N15/14—Optical investigation techniques, e.g. flow cytometry
- G01N15/1434—Optical arrangements
- G01N2015/1452—Adjustment of focus; Alignment
Definitions
- the present invention relates generally to flow cytometers. More particularly, the present invention relates to flow cytometers that sense optical properties of microscopic particles or components in a flow stream with light.
- the invention may be a mechanism for moving and positioning a light source so that its light impinges a target as it moves on or off axis of an optical system.
- a detector may receive scattered light at a same position whether the light impinging the target is on or off axis due to, as an illustrative example, a telecentric optical system. Further, the light may be positioned so that the detector is maximally impinged with scattered light.
- An output may go to a processor that sends a signal to the light source to move the emitted light so as to continually impinge the target as it moves on or off axis.
- An array of light sources may used in lieu of the moving light source. To move the light beam, another light at another position in the array may be selected to replace a previously selected light source.
- FIGS. 1 a and 1 b are diagrams of a beam position adjuster along with associated optics for a channel of a cytometer or similar mechanism
- FIG. 2 shows another view of the beam adjuster along with a computer in conjunction with the channel to be illuminated by the beam.
- FIG. 1 a is a schematic of a device that may provide for the use of an optical telecentricity condition in an optical layout of a flow cytometer.
- the condition may allow the use of off-axis field points for a light source 11 such that the illumination conditions at the flow channel are similar to that of an on-axis source.
- the same may be true for the detector or detectors 12 collecting the scattered light from the flow channel.
- This condition may allow the use of an array or moving source to illuminate the flow channel and maintain similar optical conditions at the detector as those for the on-axis source position. By allowing the source to move, it allows one to track the position of the flow activity, especially particles in the flow stream of a cytometer, and yet keep the same position of the light impinging the detector 12 .
- the telecentric condition is where the aperture stop 22 of an optical system 10 is located at the focal point or focus of the lens 21 and the focal point of lens 23 . Having the optical system meet this condition on both the source 11 side and the detector 12 side of the flow cytometer allows equivalence of the optical system for off-axis field points.
- the optical system 10 of FIG. 1 a is shown as a setup for the telecentric condition for both the source 11 and detector 12 legs.
- the case for the source 11 on axis is the solid line optical path 13 .
- the dotted line 14 and dashed line 15 optical paths may indicate source 11 off-axis light beams.
- the focused spot at the flow channel 16 is displaced laterally but the cone angle and orientation remain the same as for the on-axis case.
- the same scattering angle, solid, dotted or dashed line paths 13 , 14 or 15 , respectively, of the light of any position of the source 11 may be mapped to the same positions 41 , 42 , and 43 on the detector array 12 .
- Illumination along the solid line paths 13 may emanate on axis from a source 17 of array 11 and proceed through a collimating lens 21 .
- Source 17 illumination may proceed through an aperture stop 22 onto a lens 23 .
- a source 17 light beam may be focused on flow channel 16 and detector 12 , along solid-line paths 13 .
- Scattered light due to the beam along paths 13 may proceed through a lens 24 to be focused on detector array 12 at places 44 and 45 of detector 12 .
- the illumination may be shifted to off-axis dotted-line paths 14 .
- Light from a source 18 may proceed along the light paths 14 through lens 21 , aperture 22 and lens 23 to channel 16 .
- Illumination from paths 14 may be scattered in channel 16 and focused on detector array 12 at positions 44 and 45 of detector 12 .
- the focus of illumination may be shifted to position 26 of the channel.
- Illumination from a source 19 of array 11 may proceed along dashed-line paths 15 through lens 21 , aperture 22 and lens 23 to position 26 of channel 16 .
- Scattered light from position 26 may proceed along paths 15 through lens 24 to be focused on detector array 12 at positions 44 and 45 .
- lens 21 is a focal length (f 1 ) 31 from the light source or array 11 and focal length (f 1 ) 32 from aperture stop 22 .
- the lengths 31 and 32 may each be the focal length (f 1 ) of lens 21 .
- Lengths 33 and 34 of lens 23 from the aperture stop 22 and channel 16 respectively, may each be the focal length (f 2 ) of lens 23 .
- Lengths 35 and 36 of lens 24 from channel 16 may each be the focal length (f 3 ) of lens 24 .
- Line 46 indicates the conjugate planes 11 and 16 at the light source and the channel.
- Line 47 indicates the conjugate planes 22 and 12 at the aperture and detector, respectively.
- Light array 11 may have light sources 17 , 18 and 19 which are turned on one at a time according to the location of the core stream in channel 16 . There may be more light sources in the array for a more refined adjustment of the location of the light beam impinging the channel 16 .
- Array 11 may be two-dimensional.
- detector array 11 may have one source, e.g., source 17 , which moves across the array structure in an x and/or y direction to provide an adjustment of the location of the light impinging the channel 16 .
- the light source may be incremented with a stepper motor like mechanism 37 laterally across the array to move the location of impinging light in channel 16 laterally.
- Light beams along paths 13 , 14 and 15 may be scattered by particles in channel 16 to portions 44 and 45 of detector 12 .
- Detector 12 may convert the light detected at portions 44 and 45 , and positions 41 , 42 and 43 , into electrical signals which may be sent to a processor 10 which may process the electrical signals into information about the particles of flow stream 38 in the channel 16 .
- FIG. 1 b shows the light, without the light cones, from the light sources 17 , 18 and 19 along paths 13 , 14 and 15 , respectively.
- the light beams may be scattered by particles in channel 16 as shown by cones 51 , 52 and 53 .
- Scattered light may impinge locations 48 and 49 on detector 12 .
- FIG. 2 is a diagram showing the optical system 10 with a computer/processor 20 for control of the light source 11 .
- One version of control is to select from an array 11 of light sources to determine the position of the impingement of light in the channel 16 of a cytometer.
- the other version is having a light source that is moved to provide impingement of the light beam in alignment with the core stream 38 even though the core stream may be off the axis 28 (which may be perpendicular to the surface of the paper of FIG. 2 ) of the optical system 10 and channel 16 .
- a stepper motor 37 may move the light sources, say, source 17 , from side-to-side to stay aligned with the core stream 38 .
- Detector 12 may be a scattered light detector and a direct light detector, such as a linear array or an annular-shaped detector array. Detector 12 may have independent detector portions for various angles of scattered light and for non-scattered light. The annular array may provide a 360 range of detection by the various portions for the telecentricity system. Detector 12 may provide an electrical signal representative of the scattered light impinging the detector. If the light beam from the light source of assembly 11 is not impinging particles of the core stream 38 , then there may be little scattered light detected by detector 12 with little electrical signal from this detector but rather non-scattered light. Detector 12 may detect forward-angle light scatter (FALS), small-angle light scatter (SALS), and large-angle light scatter (LALS).
- FALS forward-angle light scatter
- SALS small-angle light scatter
- LALS large-angle light scatter
- the electrical signal from detector 12 may go to a computer/processor 20 .
- the computer/processor 20 may send a signal to light source array 11 to indicate the selection of another light source or the movement of a single light source to shift the position of where the light beam is impinging in the channel 11 .
- the position may be located and the light beam moved so that there is a maximum signal at the output of detector 12 . That may mean that the light beam is creating a maximum scattering signal at detector 12 .
- the computer 20 may send a signal that changes the position or location of the light beam in channel 16 by selecting a different light source of array 11 or moving a light source to seek out a maximum scattering signal from detector 12 to computer 20 .
- a feedback loop consisting of computer 20 to light source 11 , light beam from the source scattering in the channel 16 , a detector 12 providing the electrical representation of the scattered light to the computer.
- the computer 20 may send a signal to light source 11 to maximize the scattering signal which tends to keep the light beam focused on the core stream 38 , whether on-axis or not.
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- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Dispersion Chemistry (AREA)
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- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Analytical Chemistry (AREA)
- Biochemistry (AREA)
- General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Immunology (AREA)
- Pathology (AREA)
- Investigating Or Analysing Materials By Optical Means (AREA)
- Investigating, Analyzing Materials By Fluorescence Or Luminescence (AREA)
- Lenses (AREA)
Abstract
Description
- The present invention relates generally to flow cytometers. More particularly, the present invention relates to flow cytometers that sense optical properties of microscopic particles or components in a flow stream with light.
- This invention is related to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/225,325, by Bernard Fritz et al., filed Aug. 21, 2002, and entitled “Optical Alignment Detection System”, which is incorporated herein by reference; and the invention is related to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/304,773, by Aravind Padmanabhan et al., filed Nov. 26, 2002, and entitled “Portable Scattering and Fluorescence Cytometer”, which is incorporated herein by reference. This invention also is related to U.S. Pat. No. 6,549,275 B1, by Cabuz et al., issued Apr. 15, 2003, and entitled “Optical Detection System for Flow Cytometry”; U.S. Pat. No. 6,597,438 B1, by Cabuz et al., issued Jul. 22, 2003, and entitled “Portable Flow Cytometer”; U.S. Pat. No. 6,382,228 B1, by Cabuz et al., issued May 7, 2002, and entitled “Fluid Driving System for Flow Cytometry”; U.S. Pat. No. 6,700,130 B2, issued Mar. 2, 2004, by Fritz, and entitled “Optical Detection System for Flow Cytometry”; and U.S. Pat. No. 6,240,944 B1, by Ohnstein et al., issued Jun. 5, 2001, and entitled “Addressable Valve Arrays for Proportional Pressure or Flow Control”; all of which are incorporated herein by reference. The above-noted applications and patents are owned by the same entity. The term “fluid” may be used here as a generic term that includes gases and liquids as species.
- The invention may be a mechanism for moving and positioning a light source so that its light impinges a target as it moves on or off axis of an optical system. A detector may receive scattered light at a same position whether the light impinging the target is on or off axis due to, as an illustrative example, a telecentric optical system. Further, the light may be positioned so that the detector is maximally impinged with scattered light. An output may go to a processor that sends a signal to the light source to move the emitted light so as to continually impinge the target as it moves on or off axis. An array of light sources may used in lieu of the moving light source. To move the light beam, another light at another position in the array may be selected to replace a previously selected light source.
-
FIGS. 1 a and 1 b are diagrams of a beam position adjuster along with associated optics for a channel of a cytometer or similar mechanism; and -
FIG. 2 shows another view of the beam adjuster along with a computer in conjunction with the channel to be illuminated by the beam. -
FIG. 1 a is a schematic of a device that may provide for the use of an optical telecentricity condition in an optical layout of a flow cytometer. The condition may allow the use of off-axis field points for alight source 11 such that the illumination conditions at the flow channel are similar to that of an on-axis source. The same may be true for the detector ordetectors 12 collecting the scattered light from the flow channel. This condition may allow the use of an array or moving source to illuminate the flow channel and maintain similar optical conditions at the detector as those for the on-axis source position. By allowing the source to move, it allows one to track the position of the flow activity, especially particles in the flow stream of a cytometer, and yet keep the same position of the light impinging thedetector 12. - The telecentric condition is where the aperture stop 22 of an
optical system 10 is located at the focal point or focus of thelens 21 and the focal point oflens 23. Having the optical system meet this condition on both thesource 11 side and thedetector 12 side of the flow cytometer allows equivalence of the optical system for off-axis field points. - The
optical system 10 ofFIG. 1 a is shown as a setup for the telecentric condition for both thesource 11 anddetector 12 legs. The case for thesource 11 on axis is the solid lineoptical path 13. Thedotted line 14 and dashedline 15 optical paths may indicatesource 11 off-axis light beams. In going from the on-axis to an off-axis source 11, the focused spot at theflow channel 16 is displaced laterally but the cone angle and orientation remain the same as for the on-axis case. At thedetector array 12, the same scattering angle, solid, dotted or dashedline paths source 11, may be mapped to thesame positions 41, 42, and 43 on thedetector array 12. - Illumination along the
solid line paths 13 may emanate on axis from asource 17 ofarray 11 and proceed through acollimating lens 21.Source 17 illumination may proceed through an aperture stop 22 onto alens 23. Asource 17 light beam may be focused onflow channel 16 anddetector 12, along solid-line paths 13. Scattered light due to the beam alongpaths 13 may proceed through alens 24 to be focused ondetector array 12 atplaces detector 12. - If a core stream in the
cytometer channel 16 is shifted off axis to aposition 25 ofchannel 16, the illumination may be shifted to off-axis dotted-line paths 14. Light from asource 18 may proceed along thelight paths 14 throughlens 21,aperture 22 andlens 23 tochannel 16. Illumination frompaths 14 may be scattered inchannel 16 and focused ondetector array 12 atpositions detector 12. - If the
core stream 38 in thecytometer channel 16 is at aposition 26 of the channel, the focus of illumination may be shifted toposition 26 of the channel. Illumination from asource 19 ofarray 11 may proceed along dashed-line paths 15 throughlens 21,aperture 22 andlens 23 toposition 26 ofchannel 16. Scattered light fromposition 26 may proceed alongpaths 15 throughlens 24 to be focused ondetector array 12 atpositions - The optical elements of
system 10 are coincident focal lengths apart. For instance,lens 21 is a focal length (f1) 31 from the light source orarray 11 and focal length (f1) 32 fromaperture stop 22. Thelengths lens 21.Lengths lens 23 from theaperture stop 22 andchannel 16, respectively, may each be the focal length (f2) oflens 23.Lengths lens 24 fromchannel 16 may each be the focal length (f3) oflens 24.Line 46 indicates theconjugate planes Line 47 indicates theconjugate planes -
Light array 11 may havelight sources channel 16. There may be more light sources in the array for a more refined adjustment of the location of the light beam impinging thechannel 16.Array 11 may be two-dimensional. - Instead,
detector array 11 may have one source, e.g.,source 17, which moves across the array structure in an x and/or y direction to provide an adjustment of the location of the light impinging thechannel 16. The light source may be incremented with a stepper motor likemechanism 37 laterally across the array to move the location of impinging light inchannel 16 laterally. - Light beams along
paths channel 16 toportions detector 12.Detector 12 may convert the light detected atportions processor 10 which may process the electrical signals into information about the particles offlow stream 38 in thechannel 16. -
FIG. 1 b shows the light, without the light cones, from thelight sources paths channel 16 as shown bycones locations detector 12. -
FIG. 2 is a diagram showing theoptical system 10 with a computer/processor 20 for control of thelight source 11. One version of control is to select from anarray 11 of light sources to determine the position of the impingement of light in thechannel 16 of a cytometer. The other version is having a light source that is moved to provide impingement of the light beam in alignment with thecore stream 38 even though the core stream may be off the axis 28 (which may be perpendicular to the surface of the paper ofFIG. 2 ) of theoptical system 10 andchannel 16. Astepper motor 37 may move the light sources, say,source 17, from side-to-side to stay aligned with thecore stream 38. - When the light sensor is aligned with the
core stream 38, the light beam impinging particles in thecore stream 38 may be scattered by the particles.Detector 12 may be a scattered light detector and a direct light detector, such as a linear array or an annular-shaped detector array.Detector 12 may have independent detector portions for various angles of scattered light and for non-scattered light. The annular array may provide a 360 range of detection by the various portions for the telecentricity system.Detector 12 may provide an electrical signal representative of the scattered light impinging the detector. If the light beam from the light source ofassembly 11 is not impinging particles of thecore stream 38, then there may be little scattered light detected bydetector 12 with little electrical signal from this detector but rather non-scattered light.Detector 12 may detect forward-angle light scatter (FALS), small-angle light scatter (SALS), and large-angle light scatter (LALS). - The electrical signal from
detector 12 may go to a computer/processor 20. The computer/processor 20 may send a signal tolight source array 11 to indicate the selection of another light source or the movement of a single light source to shift the position of where the light beam is impinging in thechannel 11. The position may be located and the light beam moved so that there is a maximum signal at the output ofdetector 12. That may mean that the light beam is creating a maximum scattering signal atdetector 12. Thecomputer 20 may send a signal that changes the position or location of the light beam inchannel 16 by selecting a different light source ofarray 11 or moving a light source to seek out a maximum scattering signal fromdetector 12 tocomputer 20. Effectively, there is a feedback loop consisting ofcomputer 20 tolight source 11, light beam from the source scattering in thechannel 16, adetector 12 providing the electrical representation of the scattered light to the computer. Thecomputer 20 may send a signal tolight source 11 to maximize the scattering signal which tends to keep the light beam focused on thecore stream 38, whether on-axis or not. - Although the invention has been described with respect to at least one illustrative embodiment, many variations and modifications will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading the present specification. It is therefore the intention that the appended claims be interpreted as broadly as possible in view of the prior art to include all such variations and modifications.
Claims (43)
Priority Applications (8)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US10/953,197 US7283223B2 (en) | 2002-08-21 | 2004-09-28 | Cytometer having telecentric optics |
JP2007534690A JP4733136B2 (en) | 2004-09-28 | 2005-09-28 | Cytometer with telecentric optical element |
EP05799673A EP1794569B1 (en) | 2004-09-28 | 2005-09-28 | A cytometer having telecentric optics |
DE602005017914T DE602005017914D1 (en) | 2004-09-28 | 2005-09-28 | CYTOMETER WITH TELECENTRIC OPTICS |
PCT/US2005/034435 WO2006036896A1 (en) | 2004-09-28 | 2005-09-28 | A cytometer having telecentric optics |
CN200580040772.7A CN101065656B (en) | 2004-09-28 | 2005-09-28 | A cytometer having telecentric optics |
US11/306,508 US20060263888A1 (en) | 2000-06-02 | 2005-12-30 | Differential white blood count on a disposable card |
US11/618,502 US7553453B2 (en) | 2000-06-02 | 2006-12-29 | Assay implementation in a microfluidic format |
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US10/225,325 US6970245B2 (en) | 2000-08-02 | 2002-08-21 | Optical alignment detection system |
US10/304,773 US7978329B2 (en) | 2000-08-02 | 2002-11-26 | Portable scattering and fluorescence cytometer |
US10/953,197 US7283223B2 (en) | 2002-08-21 | 2004-09-28 | Cytometer having telecentric optics |
Related Parent Applications (2)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US10/225,325 Continuation-In-Part US6970245B2 (en) | 2000-06-02 | 2002-08-21 | Optical alignment detection system |
US10/304,773 Continuation-In-Part US7978329B2 (en) | 2000-06-02 | 2002-11-26 | Portable scattering and fluorescence cytometer |
Related Child Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US10/908,014 Continuation-In-Part US7420659B1 (en) | 2000-06-02 | 2005-04-25 | Flow control system of a cartridge |
Publications (3)
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US20060066840A1 US20060066840A1 (en) | 2006-03-30 |
US20070236682A9 true US20070236682A9 (en) | 2007-10-11 |
US7283223B2 US7283223B2 (en) | 2007-10-16 |
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Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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US10/953,197 Expired - Lifetime US7283223B2 (en) | 2000-06-02 | 2004-09-28 | Cytometer having telecentric optics |
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US (1) | US7283223B2 (en) |
EP (1) | EP1794569B1 (en) |
JP (1) | JP4733136B2 (en) |
CN (1) | CN101065656B (en) |
DE (1) | DE602005017914D1 (en) |
WO (1) | WO2006036896A1 (en) |
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
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JP2008514958A (en) | 2008-05-08 |
EP1794569B1 (en) | 2009-11-25 |
EP1794569A1 (en) | 2007-06-13 |
CN101065656B (en) | 2014-05-07 |
US20060066840A1 (en) | 2006-03-30 |
WO2006036896A1 (en) | 2006-04-06 |
CN101065656A (en) | 2007-10-31 |
JP4733136B2 (en) | 2011-07-27 |
DE602005017914D1 (en) | 2010-01-07 |
US7283223B2 (en) | 2007-10-16 |
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