WO2001011338A1 - Particle characterisation apparatus - Google Patents
Particle characterisation apparatus Download PDFInfo
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- WO2001011338A1 WO2001011338A1 PCT/EP2000/007537 EP0007537W WO0111338A1 WO 2001011338 A1 WO2001011338 A1 WO 2001011338A1 EP 0007537 W EP0007537 W EP 0007537W WO 0111338 A1 WO0111338 A1 WO 0111338A1
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- Prior art keywords
- chamber
- sensor unit
- orifice
- docking station
- electrode
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Classifications
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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
- G01N15/1031—Investigating individual particles by measuring electrical or magnetic effects
- G01N15/12—Investigating individual particles by measuring electrical or magnetic effects by observing changes in resistance or impedance across apertures when traversed by individual particles, e.g. by using the Coulter principle
- G01N15/131—Details
Definitions
- the present invention relates to particle characterisation apparatus in which particles suspended in a liquid are passed through an orifice, in principle in single file, to enable the characterisation of the particles, for instance by Coulter counting.
- the particles can be characterised with respect to size, concentration and conductivity by the use of an electrical impedance technique, widely known as the Coulter sizing (see V. Kachel, “Electrical Resistance Pulse Sizing: Coulter Sizing", Flow Cytometry and Sorting, Second Edition, pp. 45- 80, 1990 iley-Liss) .
- Coulter sizing an electrical impedance technique
- Different methods involving optical and electrical ways of sizing particles are frequently used for diagnostics and are employed in sophisticated instruments, such as Flow cytometers and Coulter sizing equipment.
- there have been only a few instruments available for particle counting and sizing which still needs fairly expensive equipment that requires trained personnel to perform the measurements.
- Counting and sizing of particles by the Coulter principle is an internationally respected method that is being used in most haematology-analysers and particle counting equipment (see figure 3) .
- the method is based on measurable changes in the electrical impedance produced by non-conductive particles in an electrolyte.
- a small opening called the “aperture” or “orifice” connects two electrically isolated chambers, where electrodes has been provided to contact the electrolyte.
- the orifice applies an restriction to the electrical path, whereby a sensing zone is established through which the particles are aspirated. In the sensing zone each particle will give rise to a displacement of the surrounding electrolyte, thus blocking part of the current- path and giving rise to a voltage pulse.
- this method several thousand particles per second can be characterised with high precision. As opposed to optical methods, this method is not depending on the particle morphology, colour or density.
- haemocytometer see Stevens, "Fundamentals of Clinical Haematology” , W.B. Saunders Company, 1997, ISBN 0-7216-4177- 6) ;
- the sample is injected in between the gap from the haemocytometer and a cover glass placed on top of the markings.
- the haemocytometer is placed under a microscope and particles are counted manually. Manual counts are performed until a number of between 100-300 cells has been reached - a method carrying an error of approximately 10%. By electronic counting more than 10,000 cells can be counted within 1 minute, giving an error of 1% or better.
- timing is critical when counting with haemocytometers, since particles need a little time to settle, but waiting too long will cause an uneven distribution of cells due to evaporation from the open edges. It is not really possible to perform a measurement of cell size with a standard haemocytometer, but with an addition of a high resolution CCD-camera, cross-sectional cell size can be determined (see patent application WO 98/50777) .
- the cross-sectional area found by 2D images does not necessary relate to the volume of the particles, but depends on the axial symmetry. With the electrical impedance technique it is possible to resolve the particle volume from the measurement. By maintaining a constant current across the orifice, the recorded voltage pulse from particles displacing the electrolyte in the orifice will have a height proportional to the volume of the particle.
- the present invention provides apparatus for characterising particles suspended in a liquid, said apparatus comprising: a sensor unit which comprises a housing comprising a collection chamber bounded by a wall containing an orifice for the passage of said particles, said collection chamber having an inlet/outlet for connection to a source of positive or negative gas pressure, wherein said sensor unit further comprises components of a particle characterisation device for characterising particles passing through said orifice in use, which components are functionally addressable from outside said housing, a docking station for receiving said sensor unit, a source of positive or negative gas pressure operatively connected to a port in said docking station, said port being such that when said sensor unit is received in said docking station said port forms a gas connection with said collection chamber inlet/outlet, means in said docking station for functionally addressing said components of a particle characterisation device of said sensor unit, and further components of said particle characterisation device located remotely from said sensor unit and operatively connected to said component addressing means of the docking station.
- a sensor unit which comprises a housing compris
- the housing is divided into a first chamber and said collection chamber by said wall containing the orifice.
- the first chamber may then have a breather inlet/outlet for communication with the atmosphere.
- the sensor unit is designed to be disposable after a single use. It is desirable that after use there is no need to clean the remainder of the apparatus before it can be used in a new assay procedure with a new sensor unit.
- the positioning of the orifice with respect to the breather inlet/outlet, the second chamber inlet/outlet and said particle characterisation device components is preferably such that a volume of liquid sufficient for the desired particle characterisation can be drawn or pumped through the orifice without the liquid passing out of the housing.
- a volume of liquid which is at least 1 ml, e.g. 5 ml, through the orifice whilst particle characterisation measurements are being made without the liquid overflowing out of the housing.
- said components of the particle characterisation device associated with the sensor unit include a first electrode in said first chamber and a second electrode in said second chamber, each said electrode being electrically connected to a terminal member accessible from the exterior of said sensor unit, and said means in said docking station for functionally addressing said components comprises respective electrical connector members for connecting to said terminal members.
- said means in said docking station for functionally addressing said components comprises respective electrical connector members for connecting to said terminal members.
- all necessary electrical and fluid connections to the sensor unit can be established by fitting the sensor unit into the docking station, preferably by a simple push fit.
- the inlet/outlet of the second chamber of the sensor unit leads from a head space in said second chamber through a conduit formed in said housing to a port positioned at the bottom of said housing which cooperates with said port of the docking station.
- the sensor unit may then be a push fit downwards into the docking station.
- the inlet/outlet of the second chamber of the sensor unit leads from a head space in said second chamber through a conduit formed in said housing to a port positioned at the top of said housing which co-operates with said port of the docking station.
- the sensor unit may then be a push fit upwards into the docking station.
- said orifice is formed by a process of photo-lithography, e.g. in a silicon wafer.
- the orifice wafers also known as 'count wafers'
- these become much cheaper than orifice wafers for conventional counters on the market.
- The allows the manufacturing of a sensor unit cheaply integrating the necessary chamber, aperture and electrodes.
- the sensor unit can be used as a disposable unit, which removes the need for the washing and rinsing of the aperture as in conventional instruments.
- the disposable chamber may contain a standard solution (a liquid with known concentration of particles) that can be used for calibrating the sizes and for determination of concentrations.
- the chambers can be constructed such that the liquids will remain inside the chamber, such that the instrument in which it will be placed will not require rinsing after use.
- said apparatus includes means for determining the beginning and end of a period during which a predetermined volume of liquid has passed through said orifice.
- This may include the provision of a secondary electrode in the first or the second chamber positioned for sensing when liquid in said chamber is at or above a first level, which secondary electrode is connected to a terminal member accessible from the exterior of said sensor unit, and said docking station may then comprise an electrical connector member for connecting to said terminal member of the secondary electrode.
- a further secondary electrode in the same chamber as said secondary electrode and positioned for sensing when liquid in said chamber is at or above a second level, which further secondary electrode is connected to a terminal member accessible from the exterior of said sensor unit, and said docking station may comprise an electrical connector member for connecting to said terminal member of the further secondary electrode.
- These secondary electrodes may be used for sensing when the level of the liquid is such that the respective secondary electrodes are or are not immersed in the liquid and may therefore serve for determining the beginning and end of a period during which a fixed volume of liquid has passed through the orifice. For instance, particle characterisation may begin when the level of the liquid just falls below the level of a first said secondary electrode and may end when the level of the liquid just falls to below a second of the secondary electrodes, the volume of liquid passing out of the chamber containing the secondary electrodes during this period being defined by the separation of the secondary electrodes.
- the secondary electrodes be in the chamber from which liquid passes through the orifice, they could equally well be in the chamber into which the liquid flows and both secondary electrodes do not need to be in the same chamber.
- each of the first and second chambers (or at least that chamber from which liquid passes) has a transverse cross sectional area at the level of said orifice which is substantially less than the transverse cross sectional area of said chamber over a substantial part of the height of the chamber above said orifice .
- the invention includes a sensor unit for apparatus for characterising particles suspended in a liquid which sensor unit comprises: a housing divided into a first chamber and a second chamber separated by a wall containing an orifice for the passage of said particles, said first chamber having a breather inlet/outlet for communication between a head space in said first chamber and the atmosphere and said second chamber having an inlet/outlet for connection to a source of positive or negative gas pressure which leads from a head space in said second chamber through a conduit formed in said housing to a port positioned at the bottom of said housing,
- Said sensor unit may comprise components of a particle characterisation device for characterising particles passing through said orifice in use, which components are functionally addressable from outside said housing, e.g. a respective electrode in each chamber.
- said components of the particle characterisation device associated with the sensor unit include a first electrode in said first chamber and a second electrode in said second chamber, each said electrode being electrically connected to a terminal member accessible from the exterior of said sensor unit .
- said orifice is formed by a process comprising photo-lighography, e.g. in a silicon wafer.
- the sensor unit comprises a secondary electrode in the first or the second chamber positioned for sensing when liquid in said chamber is at or above a first level, which secondary electrode is connected to a terminal member accessible from the exterior of said sensor unit and preferably the sensor unit comprises: a further secondary electrode in the same chamber as said secondary electrode and positioned for sensing when liquid in said chamber is at or above a second level, which further secondary electrode is connected to a terminal member accessible from the exterior of said sensor unit .
- each of the first and second chambers has a transverse cross sectional area at the level of said orifice which is substantially less than the transverse cross sectional area of said chamber over a substantial part of the height of the chamber above said orifice.
- the invention provides particle characterising apparatus in which particles are characterised as they are passed through an orifice, wherein said orifice is formed by a process comprising photolithography, e.g. in a silicon wafer.
- An orifice may suitably be formed in a photo-reactive polymer by photo-lithography and subsequent development.
- a free standing sheet of polymer of the kind used conventionally as a photoresist material may be exposed to light to solubilise a spot to be removed to define an orifice (or to insolubilise the non-spot forming areas) followed by development with solvent to remove material to form the orifice.
- Suitable photoresist polymers are described in e.g. M. Madou "Fundamentals of Microfabrication; CRC Press LLC, 1997, ISBN 0-8493-9451-1. They include AZ-5214E, SU8, polyimides and others.
- the photoresist polymer may be used as a protecting layer over a substrate such as silicon or any other etchable material in which the orifice is formed by etching regions exposed by development of the photoresist. If the etched substrate is electrically conducting it may be insulated prior to use by the formation of a suitable insulating layer thereover.
- the photoresist polymer may be used as such a layer.
- the invention provides a method of operating particle characterisation apparatus comprising a demountable sensor unit containing a count orifice serving as an inlet to a chamber initially containing a volume of air and having a connection to an air pump whereby air may be pumped to induce flow of sample liquid through said orifice into said chamber, said method comprising passing liquid containing particles through said orifice into said chamber and making particle characterising measurements for a period such that said liquid does not fill said chamber, disconnecting said sensor unit from said apparatus with all of the liquid that has passed into said chamber and discarding said sensor unit.
- the invention includes apparatus for characterising particles suspended in a liquid, said apparatus comprising: a sensor unit which comprises a tubular housing defining a chamber which has a wall containing an orifice for the passage of said particles and which extends upwardly from the level of said orifice, a docking station for receiving said sensor unit, a source of positive or negative gas pressure operatively connected to a port in said docking station, said port being located such that when said sensor unit is received in said docking station said port forms a gas connection with said chamber above said orifice, a first electrode extending inside said chamber when said sensor unit is in place in said docking station, and a second electrode disposed outside of said chamber when said sensor unit is in place in said docking station, wherein, said chamber has a volume of at least 1 ml.
- a sensor unit which comprises a tubular housing defining a chamber which has a wall containing an orifice for the passage of said particles and which extends upwardly from the level of said orifice, a docking station for receiving
- Figure 1 is a cross sectional side view through a sensor unit and docking station of apparatus according to a first preferred embodiment of the invention
- Figure 2 is a graph showing results obtained in Example 1.
- Figure 3 is a graph showing results obtained in Example 2.
- Figure 4 is a graph showing results obtained in Example 3
- Figure 5 is a graph showing results obtained in Example 4;
- Figure 6 is a table of results obtained in Example 4.
- Figure 7 is a side cross sectional view of a sensor unit for use in a second preferred embodiment of the invention
- Figure 8 is a side cross sectional view of a sensor unit for use in a third preferred embodiment of the invention, shown in three stages (A, B and C) of use;
- Figure 9 is a side cross sectional view of a sensor unit for use in a fourth preferred embodiment of the invention, shown in two stages (A and B) of use;
- Figure 10 is a longitudinal cross-section of a sensor unit and docking station of a fifth preferred embodiment of apparatus of the invention.
- Figure 11 is a longitudinal cross-section of a sensor unit and docking station of a sixth preferred embodiment of apparatus of the invention.
- the apparatus shown in Figure 1 comprises a sensor unit 10 and a docking station 12.
- the sensor unit comprises a housing 14 having a base wall 16 and a circumambient side wall 18 with a wall 20 rising from the base and separating the housing into two chambers; a first or 'open' chamber 22 and a second or 'closed' chamber 24.
- a removable membrane seal 26 At the upper end of first chamber 22 there is provided a removable membrane seal 26, providing a temporary closure which is removed for use.
- a top wall 28 At the top of the second chamber there is a top wall 28 which closes the chamber.
- An orifice in the bottom wall of the housing forms an outlet/inlet 30 from which ascends a conduit 32 formed in the wall of the chamber. Conduit 32 ends short of the top wall 28 and so communicates with a head space 34 within said chamber 24.
- the dividing wall 20 has a count wafer (not shown) received over a through hole therein and defining a count orifice 36 positioned somewhat above but quite close to the base wall 16.
- Each chamber has an electrode 38,40 extending from an external terminal 42,44 through the base wall 16 and up to a level within its respective chamber which is somewhat above the level of the count orifice 36.
- the docking station 12 has a cup shaped housing having a base 46 and a circumambient side wall 48. In the base 46 there are respective spring loaded electrical connectors 50,52 for contacting the terminals 42,44 of the sensor unit automatically when the sensor unit is received as a push fit into the docking station. There is also a conduit 54 passing through the base wall 46 aligned with the conduit 32 of the sensor unit . Conduit 54 at its opening into the upper face of the wall 46 has an O-ring seal for forming a gas tight connection with the lower face of the base wall 16 of the sensor unit .
- a vacuum pump 58 is connected by a line 60 to the lower end of the conduit 54.
- the vacuum pump 60 can be reversed so as to apply positive gas pressure to the conduit 54.
- Schematically indicated at 62 are the further conventional components of a Coulter counter including all the electronic circuitry and display equipment needed for the operation of the apparatus.
- the docking station is embodied in a portable instrument into which the sensor unit is a disposable plug- in component.
- the sensor unit is easily interconnected with the docking station by placing it in the docking station receptacle as illustrated in figure 1.
- the sensor unit is placed in the docking station and fixed with a easy pressure downwards.
- the electrical contacts to the electrodes are established automatically upon insertion and hermetic sealing to the opening of the suction conduit 32 is automatically established so that suction can be applied by the small air pump 58.
- the sensor unit housing can be partly fabricated with cheap mass-production techniques such as polymer injection moulding. Electrodes can be made of small rods of metal or graphite.
- the orifice can be made very precisely with Silicon photolithography and various etching techniques (wet etching and dry etching, see e.g. "Fundamentals of micro- fabrication", Marc Madou, CRC Press LLC, ISBN 0-8493-9451-1) and placed in the separating wall.
- the surface of the silicon wafer containing the orifice may be made electrically insulating by forming a layer of silicon dioxide or silicon nitride over the wafer by baking in an oven in a suitable atmosphere .
- Sample liquid with particles in suspension can be applied to the open chamber of the sensor unit. Applying a negative pressure difference to the closed chamber through the conduit 32, will cause the liquid to be sucked through the orifice and into the closed chamber.
- the suction outlet is led from the head space near the top of the closed chamber, so that only air is sucked out as long as the liquid is below this level. This implies that the docking station and the remainder of the instrument does not have to be cleaned as would be the case after contact with biological material .
- the concentration of particles in the sample can be determined by control of the volume sucked through the orifice.
- the apparatus can be configured so that one can determine when a known volume of liquid has been passed through the orifice. This can be done by constructing the container in a way, that would allow the liquid to be removed essentially totally from the open chamber to the closed chamber or at least such that the volume removed by lowering the level in the open chamber to the level of the count orifice is reasonably precise. A way to do this is illustrated in figure 7.
- the electrodes 38,40 will be present as in Figure 1, but are not shown.
- a high level secondary electrode 64 placed in the open chamber of the housing indicates when the electrolyte 66 is above this level by measurement of the conductivity towards a reference electrode 68.
- a low level secondary electrode 70 indicates when the level of the electrolyte is above this level by measurement of conductivity towards the reference electrode.
- the beginning and the end of the passage of the controlled volume is indicated by zero conductivity between reference electrode and respective level electrodes.
- the volume will be the volume between the two level electrodes. In situation (A) the liquid covers both level electrodes.
- the electrodes 38,40 are conductive from a certain level and up, which can be established by making the lower part of the electrode non-conductive, e.g. by a non-conductive sleeve 72.
- a measured volume of the electrolyte 66 is added to the open chamber 22 of the housing 14 there is no contact between the electrodes. In this situation no pulses will be counted.
- the level in the closed chamber will reach the conducting portion of the electrode 40 (situation (A) ) .
- the counting will start automatically and end when the level in the open chamber is below the level of the non-conductive sleeve of the electrode 38 (situation (B) ) .
- This method allows different amounts of sample to be used, and the counting will be of particles in the volume applied less the volume below the conductive part of the electrode 40.
- This method is somewhat similar to the first method described with reference to Figure 7 in which the chambers each had a sloped bottom, but in this case the chambers are not empty when the counting starts and ends, which may be of importance, when the electronic path should be established before the measurement. If the electronic path has not been established, the signals from the impedance measurement may be quite noisy in the beginning and the end, which will then have to be disregarded in the counting by electronics .
- FIG. 10 An alternative form of disposable sensor unit and its associated docking station is shown in Figure 10. It illustrates at least the second and third aspects of the invention.
- the first or open chamber 22 is vestigial and could be omitted entirely.
- the sensor unit has a housing in the form of a cylindrical tube 14 divided into an upper second chamber 24 and a lower said first chamber 22 by a partition wall 20 containing a count wafer defining a count orifice 36.
- the count orifice is formed in a silicon wafer attached in the centre of the wall 20.
- the partition wall 20 can be positioned as low in the tube 14 as desired, even at its extreme lower end.
- the docking station 12 comprises a tubular body having a side wall 48 defining a socket at its lower end into which the sensor unit is an interference push fit. At its upper end the body of the docking station 12 encloses two conduits, one (54) being for the application of suction and being connected to a suction pump (not shown) and the other (76) , being for the passage of electrical connecting wires to a first and a second measuring electrode and to a third, stop electrode.
- the first electrode 38 is tubular and is concentric with and outside of the tube 14. It is held in a downwardly facing circular slot 78 in the end of the wall 48.
- the second electrode 40 is a coiled wire electrode which extends within the tube 14 to just above the count orifice 36.
- the third or stop electrode 70 is positioned above electrode 40 and serves to indicate when liquid has been sucked into the space within the tube 14 to a desired maximum level. This embodiment may be used by dipping the tube 14 into an open reservoir of sample and drawing sample up through the count orifice by suction. The sensor unit is easily disconnected and replaced.
- both the sensor unit 10 and the docking station 12 can form part of a disposable assembly, in which case the sensor unit can be permanently fixed in the docking station.
- the connecting wires of the electrodes can be terminated at connectors such that the whole assembly illustrated in Figure 10 can be received in a separate further docking station (not shown) with connection automatically being made to the electrode terminal connectors and the vacuum line 54 upon insertion into the further docking station.
- a suitable electrolyte for use in apparatus according to the invention is 0.1 m KC1 in filtered water.
- Sample preparation should preferably result in between 10 3 to 10 5 particles per ml.
- a vortexing of the sample before and after adding electrolyte is recommended.
- Particle diameters should be within 10 to 30 percent of the orifice diameter. Volume flow should normally be from 100 ⁇ L to 1 ml per minute.
- a constant electrical current of approximately 1 mA should preferably be applied.
- the source of electrical current should preferably have a signal to noise ratio (S/N) better than 50000.
- the response from the electrode should be filtered electronically by a band-pass filter.
- a second order Chebyscheff filter with centre frequencies around 1kHz is suggested. The use of the apparatus described above is further illustrated by the following examples.
- the volumes of the particles are assumed to be proportional to the pulse height, which is only true within a certain interval. Because non-linearity is reproducible, particles that are out of range may be sized by using standard beads with known volumes. As can be seen from figure 2 the size of the 9.1 ⁇ m particle is determined to be approximately 0.8 ⁇ m larger than the specification. This may be explained by non-linearity of the scale and the existence of doublets and triplets.
- the doublets are double the volume, thus resulting in a mean diameter of 11.5 ⁇ m and in the same way triplets results in a mean diameter of 13.2 ⁇ m. Since the Gaussian distribution of single particles, doublets and triplets overlap, the exact number of these can not be found directly, and some mathematical calculations must be done. In this case approximately 20% of the counts were doublets and approximately 10 % were triplets. This gives a multiplication factor to the number of single particles of 1.4. In biological samples doublets and triplets are not that common and will generally not cause problems.
- Red blood cells are normally around 5 to 7 ⁇ m in diameter and are the most frequent in whole blood, as can be seen on the figure. Less frequent are white blood cells that are 6-10 ⁇ m in diameter. The distribution is a Gaussian curve, as it should be expected. Blood counts can be used in clinical diagnostics. It is fairly simple to count erythrocytes, leukocytes and thrombocytes by impedance measurements, which is considered the basic parameters for hematology (see “Fundamentals of Clinical Hematology", Stevens, W.B. Saunders Company, ISBN 0-7216-4177-6) .
- Milk quality is essential for farmers, diary producers and consumers. Farmer have to deliver milk of a certain quality which is controlled by the so-called Somatic Cell Count (SCC) .
- SCC Somatic Cell Count
- somatic cells in the milk are counted to determine infections (clinical mastitis) .
- a limit of 400.000 cells pr. ml. has to be met by the farmers for dairy resale.
- Change of diet, stress or mastitis lead to higher SCC levels, thus lowering the quality of the milk and consequently lowering the price per unit volume.
- a cheap cell counter will help farmers and diary producers monitor SCC-levels . Samples of milk were obtained through the laboratory of the Danish Dairy Board in Ladelund.
- the impedance method differentiates the Somatic cells from their size. However, a small overlapping of fat particles and Somatic cells are present and must be compensated. By subtraction of 10% of the fat count from the Somatic cell count the impedance counting will detect occurrences of mastitis just as well as the Fossomatic (see figure 6) .
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- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
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- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Analytical Chemistry (AREA)
- Biochemistry (AREA)
- General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Immunology (AREA)
- Dispersion Chemistry (AREA)
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Investigating Or Analyzing Materials By The Use Of Electric Means (AREA)
- Medicines Containing Plant Substances (AREA)
- Apparatus Associated With Microorganisms And Enzymes (AREA)
- Pharmaceuticals Containing Other Organic And Inorganic Compounds (AREA)
- Feeding, Discharge, Calcimining, Fusing, And Gas-Generation Devices (AREA)
- Farming Of Fish And Shellfish (AREA)
- Medicinal Preparation (AREA)
- Glass Compositions (AREA)
- Transition And Organic Metals Composition Catalysts For Addition Polymerization (AREA)
- Investigating Or Analysing Biological Materials (AREA)
Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (6)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US10/048,835 US6959618B1 (en) | 1999-08-06 | 2000-08-03 | Particle characterization apparatus |
DK00949449T DK1206692T3 (en) | 1999-08-06 | 2000-08-03 | Particle characterizer |
DE60040915T DE60040915D1 (en) | 1999-08-06 | 2000-08-03 | TEILCHENBESTIMMUNGSVORRICHTUNG |
AU62800/00A AU778225C (en) | 1999-08-06 | 2000-08-03 | Particle characterisation apparatus |
CA2381285A CA2381285C (en) | 1999-08-06 | 2000-08-03 | Particle characterisation apparatus |
EP00949449A EP1206692B1 (en) | 1999-08-06 | 2000-08-03 | Particle characterisation apparatus |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
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DK199901108 | 1999-08-06 | ||
DKPA199901108 | 1999-08-06 |
Publications (1)
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WO2001011338A1 true WO2001011338A1 (en) | 2001-02-15 |
Family
ID=8101099
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2000/007537 WO2001011338A1 (en) | 1999-08-06 | 2000-08-03 | Particle characterisation apparatus |
Country Status (9)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US6959618B1 (en) |
EP (1) | EP1206692B1 (en) |
AT (1) | ATE415620T1 (en) |
AU (1) | AU778225C (en) |
CA (1) | CA2381285C (en) |
DE (1) | DE60040915D1 (en) |
DK (1) | DK1206692T3 (en) |
ES (1) | ES2316376T3 (en) |
WO (1) | WO2001011338A1 (en) |
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JP2005534896A (en) * | 2002-06-11 | 2005-11-17 | ケムパック エイ/エス | Disposable cartridge for characterizing particles suspended in liquid |
WO2006042555A2 (en) * | 2004-10-20 | 2006-04-27 | Chempaq A/S | Lysing reagent for simultaneous enumeration of different types of blood cells in a blood sample |
US7928718B2 (en) | 2004-10-01 | 2011-04-19 | Chempaq A/S | Method for calibrating a particle counting apparatus |
US7964142B2 (en) | 2003-06-26 | 2011-06-21 | Sysmex Corporation | Sample analyzer |
US8028566B2 (en) | 2005-02-10 | 2011-10-04 | Chempaq A/S | Dual sample cartridge and method for characterizing particles in liquid |
US8573033B2 (en) | 2005-02-10 | 2013-11-05 | Koninklijke Philips N.V. | Method for characterizing particles in liquid using a dual sample cartridge |
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- 2000-08-03 AU AU62800/00A patent/AU778225C/en not_active Ceased
- 2000-08-03 AT AT00949449T patent/ATE415620T1/en active
- 2000-08-03 CA CA2381285A patent/CA2381285C/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 2000-08-03 DK DK00949449T patent/DK1206692T3/en active
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WO2003104772A1 (en) | 2002-06-01 | 2003-12-18 | Chempaq A/S | A disposable cartridge for characterizing particles suspended in a liquid |
JP2005534896A (en) * | 2002-06-11 | 2005-11-17 | ケムパック エイ/エス | Disposable cartridge for characterizing particles suspended in liquid |
US8227250B2 (en) | 2002-06-11 | 2012-07-24 | Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. | Lysing reagent, cartridge and automatic electronic cell counter for simultaneous enumeration of different types of white blood cells |
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JP2004257768A (en) * | 2003-02-24 | 2004-09-16 | Horiba Ltd | Micro blood cell counter |
US7964142B2 (en) | 2003-06-26 | 2011-06-21 | Sysmex Corporation | Sample analyzer |
US7928718B2 (en) | 2004-10-01 | 2011-04-19 | Chempaq A/S | Method for calibrating a particle counting apparatus |
WO2006042555A3 (en) * | 2004-10-20 | 2006-06-01 | Chempaq As | Lysing reagent for simultaneous enumeration of different types of blood cells in a blood sample |
WO2006042555A2 (en) * | 2004-10-20 | 2006-04-27 | Chempaq A/S | Lysing reagent for simultaneous enumeration of different types of blood cells in a blood sample |
US8028566B2 (en) | 2005-02-10 | 2011-10-04 | Chempaq A/S | Dual sample cartridge and method for characterizing particles in liquid |
US8573033B2 (en) | 2005-02-10 | 2013-11-05 | Koninklijke Philips N.V. | Method for characterizing particles in liquid using a dual sample cartridge |
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
AU6280000A (en) | 2001-03-05 |
AU778225C (en) | 2005-07-14 |
EP1206692B1 (en) | 2008-11-26 |
EP1206692A1 (en) | 2002-05-22 |
DK1206692T3 (en) | 2009-03-16 |
ES2316376T3 (en) | 2009-04-16 |
CA2381285A1 (en) | 2001-02-15 |
ATE415620T1 (en) | 2008-12-15 |
DE60040915D1 (en) | 2009-01-08 |
CA2381285C (en) | 2010-04-27 |
US6959618B1 (en) | 2005-11-01 |
AU778225B2 (en) | 2004-11-25 |
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