WO2001015193A1 - Systems and methods for high performance scanning - Google Patents

Systems and methods for high performance scanning Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2001015193A1
WO2001015193A1 PCT/US1999/029351 US9929351W WO0115193A1 WO 2001015193 A1 WO2001015193 A1 WO 2001015193A1 US 9929351 W US9929351 W US 9929351W WO 0115193 A1 WO0115193 A1 WO 0115193A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
voice coil
polymer
scanning
anay
lens
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1999/029351
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
David Stern
Original Assignee
Affymetrix, Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US09/383,986 external-priority patent/US6545264B1/en
Application filed by Affymetrix, Inc. filed Critical Affymetrix, Inc.
Priority to JP2001519460A priority Critical patent/JP2003507777A/en
Priority to EP99964213A priority patent/EP1218915A4/en
Priority to AU20501/00A priority patent/AU773664B2/en
Publication of WO2001015193A1 publication Critical patent/WO2001015193A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B21/00Microscopes
    • G02B21/0004Microscopes specially adapted for specific applications
    • G02B21/002Scanning microscopes
    • G02B21/0024Confocal scanning microscopes (CSOMs) or confocal "macroscopes"; Accessories which are not restricted to use with CSOMs, e.g. sample holders
    • G02B21/008Details of detection or image processing, including general computer control
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B21/00Microscopes
    • G02B21/0004Microscopes specially adapted for specific applications
    • G02B21/002Scanning microscopes
    • G02B21/0024Confocal scanning microscopes (CSOMs) or confocal "macroscopes"; Accessories which are not restricted to use with CSOMs, e.g. sample holders
    • G02B21/0036Scanning details, e.g. scanning stages
    • G02B21/0048Scanning details, e.g. scanning stages scanning mirrors, e.g. rotating or galvanomirrors, MEMS mirrors
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B21/00Microscopes
    • G02B21/0004Microscopes specially adapted for specific applications
    • G02B21/002Scanning microscopes
    • G02B21/0024Confocal scanning microscopes (CSOMs) or confocal "macroscopes"; Accessories which are not restricted to use with CSOMs, e.g. sample holders
    • G02B21/0052Optical details of the image generation
    • G02B21/0076Optical details of the image generation arrangements using fluorescence or luminescence
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B21/00Microscopes
    • G02B21/0004Microscopes specially adapted for specific applications
    • G02B21/002Scanning microscopes
    • G02B21/0024Confocal scanning microscopes (CSOMs) or confocal "macroscopes"; Accessories which are not restricted to use with CSOMs, e.g. sample holders
    • G02B21/008Details of detection or image processing, including general computer control
    • G02B21/0084Details of detection or image processing, including general computer control time-scale detection, e.g. strobed, ultra-fast, heterodyne detection
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B21/00Microscopes
    • G02B21/24Base structure
    • G02B21/26Stages; Adjusting means therefor

Definitions

  • the present invention generally relates to the fields of imaging and scanning.
  • the present invention provides scanning systems and methods for high speed scanning and imaging of a sample containing labeled materials, for example scanning arrays of polymer sequences such as oligonucleotide arrays.
  • Polymer arrays for example, DNA arrays, are known as shown in patent application U.S.S.N. 08/81 1 ,829 ('829 and U S. Patent Nos 5.744,305; 5,445,936; and 5,677, 195; which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes.
  • the polymer arrays such as the GeneChip® probe array (Affyrnetrix, Inc., Santa Clara, CA), can be synthesized using light-directed methods desc ⁇ bed, for example, m U.S.
  • an array contaimng synthesized single stranded nucleic acids such as DNA is enclosed in a protective package, as shown in patent applications U.S.S.Nos. 08/528,173 and 08/485,452 which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties for all purposes.
  • the array is contacted with a sample containing single stranded DNA that is labeled using for example fluorescent labels such as fluorescein or phycoeryth ⁇ n, and which hybridizes to the smgle stranded DNA on the array.
  • the array (either packaged or not packaged) is placed into a device generally known as a scanner that obtains a fluorescence image of the array in order to analyze hybridization between the single stranded nucleic acids on the array and in the sample.
  • a scanner may include a confocal microscope with a light source for generating light directed to the polymer array, a photodetection mechanism for detecting light emitted from the polymer array, and a computer controlled translation table that moves the polymer array in three (XYZ) directions.
  • One direction is the fast scan direction (e.g , X direction)
  • another is the slow scan direction (e.g., Y direction)
  • the third direction is a focus direction (e g., Z direction).
  • tne scanner projects a point of light onto a surface ot the poiymer array and is focused by the translation stage m the focus direction, Z direction.
  • the translation stage rectilinearly fast scans the point of light from one side of the polymer array to another by moving the polymer array in for example the X direction, so as to scan one line of the polymer array, point by point.
  • the photodetection mechanism detects the light emitted from the surface of the polymer array so as to obtain a fluorescence image of the polymer array.
  • the translation table moves the polymer array incrementally approximately the thickness of one scan line m the slow scan (Y) direction. This raster scanning continues until the entire surface area of the polymer array has been scanned.
  • the present invention provides systems and methods for image scanning of, for example, polymer arrays
  • the invention provides means for moving a linear translation stage of a scanmng system with a speed of at least 10 scanning lines/second, preferably at least 20 scanning lines/second and more preferably at least 30 scanmng lines/second over a scanning distance of at least 2 mm, preferably at least 5 mm, and more preferably at least 14 mm
  • the scanning system is capable of scanning with pixels having a size of
  • the scanner includes a voice coil to provide scanmng motion for at least one of the X direction, Y direction, and Z direction translation of a polymer array analysis system.
  • the acceleration of the voice-coil-driven axis of the present invention is high (e g , 13 7 G, where G is the acceleration due to gravity) and can not easily be achieved with stepping motors.
  • the high acceleration combined with the high steady-state scan speed of the voice-coil-d ⁇ ven axis (about 22 inches/second), enables the voice coil scanner of the present invention to scan a distance of, for example, 14 mm (length of scan line of one type of polymer array) at 30 lines/second
  • the voice coil scanner ot the present invention can use either stationary optics or a moving scan head
  • the voice-coil-d ⁇ ven axis is the X axis
  • the voice coil d ⁇ ves a hghtweignt linear slide mounted on a 2-ax ⁇ s ( YZ) translation table This linear slide serves as the suppo ⁇ for a polymer array (scanned sample)
  • the voice coil d ⁇ ves a scan head 1 e.
  • a motion control system is provided to momtor and control the motion of the voice coil for fast accurate scanmng of the polymer array.
  • a voice coil for high speed scanmng of polymer arrays in the fast axis (X) direction rather than using a galvanometer d ⁇ ven scanmng mirror, enables the use of a simple low cost objective lens having a high nume ⁇ cal aperture (for example, 0.5 or greater).
  • the objective lens can be, for example. a microscope objective lens or a smgle element asphe ⁇ c lens.
  • This objective lens can have high nume ⁇ cal aperture while being small and inexpensive because it does not have to be co ⁇ ected for off-axis abe ⁇ ations, unlike the objective lens in a galvo scanner All other things being equal (laser power, spot size, etc.), a scanner with an objective nume ⁇ cal aperture of 0 5 operating at 30 lines/second produces images with the same signal-to-noise ratio as a scanner with an objective nume ⁇ cal aperture of 0 25 operating at 7 5 lines/second As a result of using the combination of a voice coil d ⁇ ven translation stage and a simple high efficiency objective lens, the voice coil scanner of the present invention can achieve fast scanmng and high polymer array throughput.
  • the voice coil scanning system of the present invention with an objective lens having a nume ⁇ cal ape ⁇ ure of 0.5 or greater, can achieve accurate and reliable polymer array scanning at a speed of at least 10 lines/second, preferably at least 20 lines/second and more preferably at least 30 lines/second.
  • the present invention provides a scanning system with a simple and inexpensive objective lens and a high acceleration / high speed voice coil driven translation stage that can rapidly scan, for example, 12.8 mm
  • the voice coil provides improved acceleration for fast scanmng of at least one axis of a polymer array.
  • the present invention provides systems and methods for accurate, high speed, low cost scanning of polymer arrays, i.e., high performance cost effective polymer array scanning.
  • FIG. 1 is a top view of one embodiment of a voice-coil-d ⁇ ven translation stage for the scanning system according to the present invention
  • Fig. 2 is an end view of one embodiment of a voice-coil-d ⁇ ven translation stage with an encoder readhead for the scanning system according to the present invention
  • Fig. 3 is a top view of another embodiment of a voice-coil-d ⁇ ven translation stage for the scanning system according to the present invention
  • Fig. 4 is an end view of another embodiment of a voice-coil-d ⁇ ven translation stage and an encoder readhead for the scanning system according to the present invention
  • Fig. 5 is an illustration of a scanmng system according to the present invention having a 3-ax ⁇ s XYZ translation system with one fast axis (X axis) driven by a voice-coil.
  • Fig. 6 is an illustration of a scanning system according to the present invention having a turning prism and objective lens mounted on a single axis voice-coil driven translation stage.
  • Fig. 7 is a block diagram of one embodiment of a motion control system according to the present invention.
  • Scanners may be characte ⁇ zed in one or more of a number of categories.
  • a point-scanning confocal microscope with stationary optics focuses a beam of light to a stationary point and obtains a 2-d ⁇ mens ⁇ onal image by moving the sample (e.g., a polymer array substrate) in 2 dimensions, for example X and Y directions (there may also be a 3 rd dimension, the Z direction, for focusing).
  • Minsky uses a simple magnetic solenoid without computer control to move a flexure translation stage.
  • H.T.M. Van der Voort et al. descnbe a similar but more modern system in Scanning 7, 66-78 (1985). The details for their scanning system is provided in the article HJ.B.
  • confocal microscope scanner is illustrated by a Molecular Dynamics (Sunnyvale, CA) scanner as shown in U.S. Patent No. 5,459,325.
  • This can be called a "pomt-scanning confocal microscope with a moving scan head.”
  • the scan head consists of a turning mirror (or turning pnsm) and objective lens mounted on a single-axis translation stage. As the scan head moves in this confocal microscope scanner, the focused laser beam moves along with it.
  • the sample is mounted on a separate translation table that moves perpendicular to the scan head.
  • the system obtains a 2- dimensional image by oscillating the scan head rapidly in one dimension and moving the sample slowly in another.
  • the scan head is made small and light so that it can move fast.
  • the scan head is actuated with a stepper motor it suffers from a similar limitation in scanning speed as the point- scanning confocal microscope w ith stationary optics due to the stepper motor's slow acceleration
  • the laser beam is always coaxial with the optical axis of the objective lens, and so is the reflected or emitted light (e.g., fluorescent light) that is collected by the objective lens.
  • the objective lens can be relatively simple and inexpensive because it doesn't have to be corrected for off-axis aberrations
  • a na ⁇ ow- angle lens i.e. a lens that only has to focus light onto or nearly onto its optical axis, is easier to design and manufacture and contains fewer optical elements than a wide-angle lens having the same focal length, f number, resolution, etc.
  • an inexpensive 1 or 2-element lens system may be capable of focusing a laser beam to a 3-micron-diameter spot when the laser beam is coaxial with the optical axis of the lens. If the laser beam enters the lens several degrees off axis and consequently focuses several millimeters off axis, it will probably focus to a much larger spot size. If a 3 -micron-diameter spot several millimeters off axis is needed, a more complicated and expensive lens will be required.
  • galvo scanner Another scanner used for polymer array analysis is a galvanometer- scanning confocal microscope ("galvo scanner") as disclosed in patent application U.S.S.N. 08/856,642 ('642), which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
  • the galvo (galvanometer) scanner includes a radial direction system with a galvanometer actuating a minor to rapidly scan a laser light spot across a substrate (e.g., a polymer a ⁇ ay)
  • the galvo scanner is much faster than the scanners desc ⁇ bed above, achieving scanning speed of approximately 30 lines/second, but requires a large and expensive objective lens.
  • the galvo scanner uses an angularly oscillating minor (a minor mounted on a galvanometer) to direct the laser beam into an objective lens.
  • the lens focuses the laser beam to a soot that moves back and forth over a distance of 14 mm as the minor oscillates.
  • the objective lens must therefore be conected for abenations up to 7 mm off axis.
  • the same lens is used to collect fluorescence from the sample polymer anay.
  • the sample is mounted on a translation table and the scanner obtams a 2-dimens ⁇ onal image by moving the focused laser spot rapidly back and forth in one dimension and stepping the sample slowly in another.
  • the galvo scanner is potentially very fast because galvanometers can oscillate at tens or hundreds of cycles per second.
  • the objective lens is large and expensive because must be conected for off-axis abenations.
  • the objective lens in the '642 galvo scanner for example, is 4 inches long and 2.5 inches in diameter and contains 6 optical elements. This objective lens has a numerical aperture of only 0.25, which means that it collects only about 1 out of 100 photons emitted by the sample. A higher numerical aperture is desirable.
  • Another galvanometer-scanning confocal microscope is provided by Hewlett-Packard as disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 5,585,639. It is a galvanometer-scanning confocal microscope but contains three multi-element lenses: one lens focuses the laser beam onto the sample, and a pair of lenses collects the fluorescence. Thus, this scanner is also expensive to build.
  • Line scanner Another type of scanner is the "line scanner” which is different from all of the "point scanners” discussed above.
  • Line scanners image an entire scan line at one time.
  • a “line scanner” is disclosed in U.S. Patent Nos. 5,578,832 and 5,834,758, which are hereby incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
  • This scanner focuses the laser beam not to a point, but to a line a few microns wide and, for example, 14 mm long, so as to image one entire line of the polymer anay sample at a time.
  • An objective lens (or a pair of objectives back to back) collects fluorescence and images the fluorescence onto a linear CCD having 1024 or more pixels.
  • the polymer array sample is mounted on a translation table.
  • the line scanner obtains a 1 -dimensional image with no motion and a 2-d ⁇ mens ⁇ onal image with only one axis of motion. Therefore, the line scanner can potentially be very fast because there is no need for a fast scan axis - scan speed is limited not by mechanical considerations such as the acceleration of a stepping motor connected to a translation table or scan head, but by the speed of the electronics or software.
  • a linear-CCD-based scanner is optically complicated.
  • the present invention provides systems an methods for achieving high speed cost effective scanmng and imaging of a sample containing labeled materials, for example scanmng anays of polymer sequences such as oligonucleotide anays.
  • the invention has a wide range of uses, particularly those requiring quantitative study of a microscopic region from within a larger region. For example, the invention can obtain a fluorescence image of a 14
  • mm x 14 mm area with 1.5 ⁇ m or 3.5 ⁇ m . or smaller pixels.
  • the invention may find application in the field of histology (for studying histochemical stained and immunological fluorescent stained images), or fluorescence in situ hybridization.
  • the invention herein is used to image a packaged polymer anay, for example a GeneChip® probe anay.
  • the invention provides a scanning system capable of
  • Such a system may include, for example, a voice coil that provides increased acceleration and resulting fast scanning speed.
  • a scanner employing a voice coil d ⁇ ven translation stage may combine the speed of a galvo scanner with the optical simplicity of a point-scanning confocal microscope with stationary optics (e.g., the scanner disclosed in USPN 5,631.734 hereby incorporated by reference herein) to obtain accurate
  • Voice coil actuators are direct drive, limited motion devices that utilize a permanent magnet field and a coil winding (conductor) to produce a force proportional to the cunent applied to the coil.
  • an appropriate voice coil is linear actuator voice coil Model No. LA14-24-000 offered by Kimco Magnetics Division of BEI Technologies Inc.
  • Another example of an appropriate voice coil is linear actuator voice coil Model No. LA34-37-000A also offered by Kimco
  • voice coil actuators An applications guide provided by Kimco Magnetics Division, BEI Technologies Inc, San Marcos CA.
  • voice coil actuators An applications guide provided by Kimco Magnetics Division, BEI Technologies Inc, San Marcos CA.
  • voice coils that are useful in the present invention for driving a translation stage.
  • voice coils readily available that can work in the present invention.
  • voice coils could work as well.
  • a voice coil for driving a translation stage in the present invention could be custom designed (i.e., by BEI Kimco or another company) if necessary
  • a voice-coil-d ⁇ ven stage scans 14 mm at a speed of 560 mm/sec, then the time to scan 14 mm is 25 msec. If we allow 4.166 msec for acceleration and another 4.166 msec for deceleration, then the acceleration or deceleration is 134 4 rrvsec ( 13 7 g, where g is the acceleration due to gravity) and the total time to scan one line is 33.333 msec. If the moving parts weigh 0.5 lb. then the force required for 13.7 g of acceleration is 6.85 lb.
  • the BEI Kimco LA14-24-000 voice coil for example, has a force constant of 1.6 lb/amp.
  • the cunent required for 6.85 lb of force is therefore 4.28 A.
  • the coil has a resistance of 7 ohms when hot.
  • the power dissipated in the coil at 4.28 A is therefore 128 W.
  • the cunent is zero, which means that the average power dissipated in the coil is 32 W.
  • the coil has a thermal resistance of 3.4°C W, which means that the coil temperature is 134°C if the ambient temperature is 25°C.
  • the coil is rated for a maximum temperature of 130°C.
  • the scanning system should be constructed so as to take advantage of the fast acceleration of the voice coil while ensuring that the weight the voice coil must move is less than the weignt w hich will cause the voice coil to overheat and fail due to excessive power dissipation
  • the moving part of, for example, an NB Corporation of Ame ⁇ ca (Wood Dale, IL) model SER9A slide weighs approximately 20 grams (see illustration in Fig 2, item 10 and Fig 4 item 25)
  • a va ⁇ ety of linear slides, using either linear or recirculating ball bea ⁇ ngs, linear or recirculating crossed roller bea ⁇ ngs, or air bea ⁇ ngs, may be suitable
  • a packaged DNA anav weighs, for example, 16 grams
  • the moving part of the LAI 4-24-000 voice coil weighs approximately 22 grams If the bracketry that holds all of these moving parts together is designed to weigh, for example, 55 grams, and the scanner is designed so that these are the pnmary components that the voice coil must move, then the total
  • the LA 14-24-000 can provide improved scanning time over conventional scanners that use stepper motors to d ⁇ ve the fast scan axis, i.e., a decrease in the amount of time it takes to scan each line of the fast scan axis when scanning a polymer anay
  • the steady-state scan speed of a scanner using the LA 14-24-000 in inches/second is about 22 inches/second and the acceleration is very high, about 13 7 G (where G is the acceleration due to gravity), enabling the device to scan 14 mm at 30 lines/second This speed is comparable to the maximum scan speed of the galvo scanner
  • the galvo scanner having a low nume ⁇ cal aperture objective lens, may be operated at considerably less than this maximum speed because of lower signal-to-noise ratio at the higher speeds.
  • the voice coil scanner can be designed so that a voice-coil-d ⁇ ven translation stage operates to move either the polymer anay (i.e., similar to the point-scanning confocal microscope with stationary optics previously discussed) or the objective lens and turning minor (similar to the Molecular Dynamics scanner previously discussed) in the fast axis (X) direction.
  • the slow axis (Y direction) and the focus axis (Z direction) can be driven by stepping motors, although voice coils also can be used for these axes.
  • FIG. 1 a first prefened embodiment of the invention having a voice coil d ⁇ ven translation stage mechanized to move the polymer anay in the fast X axis direction is illustrated.
  • This embodiment uses a slide type voice coil.
  • the voice coil scanner of this embodiment has a voice coil translation stage 15 which includes a voice coil magnet and mounting bracket 1 mounted in a stationary manner to the top surface 13 of a 2-ax ⁇ s (YZ) translation table.
  • the voice coil has a moving coil 2 that moves along a slide in the fast axis (X axis) direction in response to cunent provided to wires 3.
  • the voice coil used in this embodiment may be, for example, a BEI Kimco Magnetics Division Voice Coil Linear Actuation Model No.
  • Bracket 4 The moving coil 2 of the voice coil is connected to the movable part 10 of a linear slide by bracket 4.
  • This bracket should be made of a design ana mate ⁇ al so that it is light weight so as to require minimal translation force and strong enough to remain rigid during oscillation of the linear slide.
  • the bracket may be made of steel or aluminum and have a weight of up to 55 grams.
  • bracket 4 is illustrated as one piece it may be made of multiple pieces.
  • Bracket 4 has a surface 5 upon which an encoder scale 8 is mounted. The encoder scale 8 operates with the encoder readhead 11 to monitor the position of a polymer anay sample 9 mounted to the sample mounting surface 6 of bracket 4.
  • the weight of the encoder scale should also be minimized as much as possible since it is connected to the moving parts of the voice coil translation stage.
  • the readhead 1 1 is mounted to the top surface 13 of the 2-ax ⁇ s translation stage by readhead mounting bracket 12.
  • the readhead 11 and the scale 8 may be, for example, a Remshaw Inc. (Schaumburg, IL) RGH22Z readhead and a Renishaw RGS-S scale, respectively.
  • the stationary guide portion 7 of the linear slide is mounted to the top surface 13 of the 2-ax ⁇ s translation table.
  • the linear slide should be selected so that the weight of the moving part 10 and friction coefficient of the linear slide is minimized so that the force require by the voice coil and thereby the power dissipation of the voice coil are within the thermal capability of the voice coil
  • the linear slide may be, for example. NB Corporation of Ame ⁇ ca crosse ⁇ roller bea ⁇ ng linear slide, model SER9A. or any other call bearing, crossed roller bea ⁇ ng, or air beanng linear slide that meets the mechanical and operational qualities for reliable fast axis translation of the polymer array
  • the 2-axis translation table having top surface 13 may be, for example, a JMAR Precision System 2-ax ⁇ s Slimline or Microlme translation table or any other translation table that can provide reliable 2-axis translation. As illustrated in Fig.
  • the translation table will provide movement in the slow axis (Y axis) direction and the focus axis (Z axis) direction. If a 3-ax ⁇ s translation table with sufficiently long travel is used, the present invention has the capability of scanning an entire wafer of polymer anays sequentially, one anay at a time.
  • the voice coil translation stage 15 is provided a d ⁇ ving cunent from an amplifier (e.g., a servoamplifier) through wires 3
  • the moving part 2 of the voice coil moves the bracket 4, encoder scale 8, polymer anay 9, and moving part 10 of the linear slide in the fast axis x direction along the guide part 7 of the linear slide.
  • a control system senses the location of the polymer array 9 using information from the encoder readhead 1 1 and indicates when one complete translation in the x direction is complete. Once one complete x direction fast axis scan is complete the translation table will index approximately the width of one fast scan line in the slow axis Y direction and the controller will trigger another fast scan by the voice coil. This sequence occurs repeatedly until the entire polymer anay, or a predefined portion thereof, has been scanned by a confocal microscope image system.
  • FIG. 3 and 4 illustrates another prefened embodiment of the invention having a voice coil driven translation stage mechanized to move a scanning beam of light across a polymer anay in the fast X axis direction.
  • This embodiment uses a plunger type voice coil, for example, a BEI Kimco model LA34-37-000A or any other voice coil having similar mechanical and elect ⁇ cal characteristics.
  • the voice coil scanner of this embodiment has a voice coil translation stage 30 which includes a voice coil mounting bracket 16, a voice coil magnet and housing 17 (stationary part of the voice coil), an elect ⁇ cal coil winding section 18 (moving part of the voice coil), and wires 19 connecting to the coil 18.
  • the voice coil mounting bracket 16 is not mounted to the top surface 13 of the 2-axis translation stage. Rather, the voice coil mounting bracket 16 can be mounted to another structure which is preferably stationary relative to the confocal microscope image system used in the scanmng system.
  • the moving coil 18 of the voice coil is connected to the moveable part 25 of a linear slide by bracket 20.
  • This bracket should be made of a design and material so that it is lightweight so as to require minimal translation force and strong enough to remain ⁇ gid during oscillation of the linear slide.
  • the bracket may be made of steel or aluminum and have a weight in the range of up to 0.5 lb.
  • bracket 20 is illustrated as one piece it may be made of multiple pieces.
  • Bracket 20, like bracket 4 of the previous embodiment, has a surface upon which an encoder scale 21 is mounted. A turning minor, penta-prism, or ⁇ ght-angle p ⁇ sm 22 (reflector) and objective lens 23 are mounted on the bracket 20 opposite the encoder scale 21.
  • the encoder scale 21 operates with the encoder readhead 27 to monitor the position of the scan head. To minimize image distortion due to pitch and yaw of the linear slide, encoder scale 21 should be as close as possible to the focal point of lens 23.
  • the encoder scale 21, turning prism 22, and objective lens 23, should be light weight to ensure the voice coil does not overheat.
  • the readhead 27 and the scale 21 may be, for example, a Renishaw RGH22Z readhead and a Renishaw RGS-S scale. However, another type of position sensing system may be used, for example a Zeiss encoder.
  • the readhead 27 is mounted to the top surface 26 of an optical breadboard, for example a Newport Corp (Irvine, CA) RG se ⁇ es breadboard, by read head mounting bracket 28.
  • the guide portion 24 of the linear slide is mounted to the top surface 26 of the optical breadboard.
  • the linear slide should be selected so that the weight of the moving part 25 is minimized to minimize the force required by the voice coil and thereby the power dissipation of the voice coil are within the thermal capability of the voice coil.
  • the linear slide may be, for example, Parker/Daedel (Harrison City, PA) crossed roller bearing linear slide model CR4501, or any other ball bearing, crossed roller bearing, or air bearing linear slide with sufficient straightness and flatness of travel and sufficiently light weight that it can operate at the desired speed.
  • the moving parts are much heavier (for example, 2 lb) than in the previous embodiment.
  • the voice-coil-driven linear stage is still able to scan 14 mm at 30 lines/second without overheating because of the thermal and electrical characteristics of the LA34-37-000A voice coil (the force constant is 5.4 lb/amp, the resistance is 1.4 ohms, and the thermal resistance is 2.2 degrees C per watt).
  • the guide portion 24 of the linear slide is not directly connected to the top surface 13 of the 2-axis (or 3 axis) translation table. Rather the 2-axis translation table having top surface 13 has the polymer anay sample 9 mounted directly to it and is adjacent to the voice coil d ⁇ ven translation stage. The surface of polymer anay 9 is perpendicular to the optical axis of scan head objective lens 23.
  • the 2-axis translation table having top surface 13. may be for example, JMAR Precision System 2-axis Slimline or Microline translation table or any other translation table that can provide reliable 2-axis translation. As illustrated in Fig 4, the translation table will provide movement of the polymer anay m the slow axis (Y) direction and the focus axis (Z) direction.
  • the voice coil translation stage 30 is provided a driving cunent from an amplifier (e.g., a servoamplifier) through wires 19.
  • the moving part 18 of the voice coil moves the bracket 20, encoder scale 21, turning mirror or prism 22, objective lens 23, and moving part 25 of the linear slide in the fast axis (X) direction along the guide part 24 of the linear slide.
  • the scan head comprised of the turning minor or prism 22 and the objective lens 23 mounted on the bracket 20 will scan a point of light from a laser light beam on to the surface of the polymer anay 9 in a linear manner in the fast axis (X) direction.
  • a control system senses the location of the scan head using information from the encoder readhead 27 and indicates when one complete translation in the X direction has been completed.
  • the translation table will index approximately the width of one fast scan line in the slow axis (Y) direction and the controller will t ⁇ gger another fast scan by the voice coil. This sequence occurs repeatedly until the entire polymer anay. or a predefined po ⁇ ion thereof, has been scanned.
  • the x direction axis of the 3-axis translation table will then move to the next polymer anay on the wafer and the above desc ⁇ bed polymer anay scanmng sequence will be repeated.
  • the translation table will move in the slow axis (Y) direction to the next row of anays to be scanned. These steps will be repeated until the entire wafer of polymer anays has been scanned.
  • Figures 5 and 6 illustrate two alternative confocal imaging systems that may be used for the present invention in detecting, for example, florescence emitted by targets bound to the polymer anays.
  • Alternative confocal imaging systems that may be modified to use a voice coil fast axis translation stage include those found in USPN 5,631,734 and U.S. Application Ser. No. 08/856,642, which are hereby incorporated herein for all purposes.
  • the system of U.S. Application Ser. No. 08/856,642 would be further modified to eliminate the galvo scanning minor and to have a simple inexpensive objective lens mounted in a stationary position or within a scan head.
  • a brief desc ⁇ ption of the configuration and operation of the confocal imaging systems shown in Figs. 4 and 5 follows. A more detailed understanding of the overall operation of the confocal imaging systems desc ⁇ bed herein can be obtained by reading USPN 5.63 1 ,734 and U.S Application Ser. No 08/856,642, herein incorporated by reference
  • Figure 5 illustrates a confocal imaging system having a stationary (fixed position) objective lens 1 15.
  • the sample 9 is mounted on a 3-axis translation stage 15 having a voice-coil-d ⁇ ven fast (X) axis.
  • the confocal imaging system includes a laser 103 for generating a laser light beam that is transmitted through beamsplitter 104, reflected by dichroic beamsplitter 1 14, and focused by objective lens 1 15 onto the surface of polymer anay sample 9.
  • the laser light that is reflected by the surface of polymer anay sample 9 is collimated by objective lens 115, reflected by dichroic beamsplitter 114 and beamsplitter 104, and focused by lens 102 onto pinhole 101.
  • the portion of the reflected laser light that is transmitted through pinhole 101 is detected by photodiode 100.
  • Photodiode 100 provides a signal to a controller to adjust the position of the sample so that the laser beam is focused on the surface of the polymer anay sample 9.
  • the controller will activate, for example, a stepper motor m the 2-axis (YZ) translation table so as to move the translation table in the focus axis (Z) direction until the laser light beam is properly focused on the surface of the polymer anay sample 9.
  • the sample is mounted on a 2-axis (XY) translation stage having a voice-coil-driven fast (X) axis
  • the objective lens is mounted on a separate single-axis (Z) translation stage.
  • the Z translation stage can be very small and light (for example, the "PIFOC" piezoelectric microscope focusing device available from Polytec PI. Inc., Auburn, MA) because only the objective lens is mounted to it.
  • the confocal imaging system of Fig. 5 also includes two photomultiplier tubes (PMT) 105 and 1 12. each one for detecting fluorescence having a particular range of wavelengths emitted from the surface of the polymer anay sample.
  • PMT 112 may detect fluorescence from fluorescein-labeled target molecules
  • PMT 105 may detect fluorescence from phycoerythrin-labeled target molecules.
  • the PMT may be, for example, a Hamamatsu R4457 or R6357 photomultiplier tube , or any other PMT having sufficiently high quantum efficiency at the wavelengths of interest and sufficiently low dark cunent.
  • Various types of light detectors other than a PMT also may be used, including photodiodes, avalanche photodiodes, phototransistors, vacuum photodiodes, and other light detectors.
  • the confocal imaging system of Fig. 5 further includes optical trains to separate, for example, two unique colors of fluorescent light.
  • a first color fluorescent light is emitted from a particular marked target on the polymer anay sample 9 surface, collimated by objective lens 1 15, transmitted through dichroic beam splitters 113 and 114, lens 110, pinhole 108, and bandpass filter 106, and sensed by PMT 105.
  • a second color fluorescent light different from the first color fluorescent light is emitted from a different particular marked target on the polymer a ⁇ ay sample 9 surface, collimated by objective lens 1 15, transmitted through dichroic beam splitter 1 14, reflected by dichroic beamsplitter 1 13, transmitted through lens 1 1 1 1 , pinhole 109, and bandpass filter 107, and sensed by PMT 1 12.
  • Figure 6 illustrates a confocal imaging system having an objective lens
  • the sample 9 is mounted on a separate 2-axis (YZ) translation stage.
  • Laser 103 produces a laser light beam that is transmitted through beamsplitter 104, reflected by dichroic beamsplitter 114 and turning minor or p ⁇ sm 22, and focused by objective lens 23 onto the polymer anay sample 9 surface.
  • the scan head moves back and forth in the X direction, the laser beam and the collected fluorescence remain centered on minor or prism 22 and objective lens 23.
  • Lens 102, pinhole 101, and photodiode 100 are used for detection of reflected laser light and provide the sensing capability for adjusting the focus of the laser light beam.
  • Lens 110, pinhole 108, bandpass filter 106 (or longpass filter), and PMT 105 enable sensing of, for example, one color fluorescent light emitted by one type of target on the polymer anay 9 surface.
  • this confocal imaging system can only detect, for example, one color fluorescent light emitted from one type of target on the polymer anay surface because it does not include dichroic beamsplitter 1 13, lens 1 1 1, pinhole 109, and PMT 1 12
  • the voice coil translation stage 30 has a turning p ⁇ sm 2 and objective lens 23 securely mounted on a scan head.
  • the laser light beam from laser 103 is reflected by dichroic beamsplitter 1 14 onto turning p ⁇ sm 22 and through the objective lens coaxial with the objective lens's optical axis.
  • the laser light beam st ⁇ kes the turning p ⁇ sm 22 surface at the same location and remains coaxial with the optical axis of the objective lens 23 throughout the fast axis (X) translation of the scanmng head.
  • the laser light beam scans a line on the surface of the polymer anay in the fast axis (X) direction using the movement of the scan head rather than the movement of the polymer anay sample 9.
  • a system having 2 PMTs as shown in Fig 5 can be used with a moving scan head instead of stationary optics.
  • a system having one PMT as shown in Fig 6 can be used with stationary optics instead of a moving scan head.
  • the confocal imaging system of the present invention could have any number of lasers, PMTs and related optical trains, as many as the number of different types of light to be uniquely detected.
  • a slide-type voice coil can be used to operate a moving scan head and a plunger-type voice coil can be used with stationary optics, or vice versa.
  • the objective lens for a voice coil polymer anay scanner can be a microscope objective (for example Rolyn Optics, Covina CA, model 80.3090, 0 65 nume ⁇ cal aperture) or a single-element asphe ⁇ c lens (for example ThorLabs. Newton NJ, model 350330-A, 0.68 nume ⁇ cal aperture)
  • a single- element asphe ⁇ c lens is significantly smaller and lighter than a microscope objective and thus may be better for the scan head embodiment of the present invention.
  • a single-element asphe ⁇ c objective lens is not conected for chromatic abenations, but if the focal length is small enough, chromatic conection may not be necessary
  • the ThorLabs 350330-A has a focal length of 3.1 mm, and the axial color at 580 run (approximately the phycoeryth ⁇ n emission peak) is only about 0.33 microns per nanometer (i.e. 0.33 micron change in focal length per 1 nm change in wavelength).
  • a custom 2-element cemented doublet (for example, a biconvex BK7 element cemented to a biconcave SF6 element) can be used to conect for the axial color introduced by the single-element asphe ⁇ c lens.
  • the doublet can be placed either between lens 23 and minor or p ⁇ sm 22 or between dichroic beamsplitter 114 and mirror or prism 22.
  • objective lenses can also be used, for example a refractive/diffractive hybrid lens (i.e. a lens having at least one refractive surface and at least one diffractive surface), or a 2-element asphe ⁇ c lens having a nume ⁇ cal aperture of 0.85 (Sony patent 5,880,893).
  • An objective lens with a nume ⁇ cal aperture of 0.68 has about 8 times the collection efficiency of a lens with a nume ⁇ cal aperture of 0.25.
  • the galvo scanner is capable of scanning at 30 lines/sec, it is often operated at 7 5 lines/sec because the collection efficiency of its objective lens and signal-to-noise ratio at 30 lines/sec is insufficient for some assays.
  • a voice coil scanner running at 30 lines/sec provides a better signal-to-noise ratio than a galvo scanner that is running at 7.5 lines/sec because the voice coil scanner's objective lens can have a much higher collection efficiency.
  • the control system includes a computer 200, for example, a 400 MHz Pentium II PC, with a (servo) motion controller 201.
  • the motion controller 201 installed in (or connected to) the computer 200 accepts digital commands from the computer and produces an analog output in the range of -10 V to +10 V.
  • the motion controller may be, for example, the Galil Motion Control (Mountain View, CA) model DMC-1710, the Delta Tau Systems (North ⁇ dge, CA) model PMAC-Lite, or various other controllers from other companies such as Motion Engineering Inc., etc.
  • An amplifier 206 (e.g., a linear or pulse-width-modulated servoamplifier), for example a Galil MSA- 12-80, accepts the analog signal from the motion controller 201 via an interconnection module 204, for example Galil ICM-1900, and outputs the approp ⁇ ate cunent to the voice coil 201.
  • the amplifier 202 is provided with power by power supply 205, for example Galil CPS- 15-40.
  • An encoder system with a readhead 208 provides position feedback to the controller
  • Suitable encoder systems ith readhead 208 are quadrature-output encoders with resolutions of 1 micron to 0 1 micron
  • the encoder system may be, tor example, Renishaw RGH22Z readhead and RGS-S scale Other suitable encoders are manufactured by Zeiss and other companies
  • Some motion controllers can be programmed to pro ⁇ uce TTL outputinstalles when certain positions are reacne ⁇
  • the controller can produce a "line clock" pulse, which instructs the data acquisition board to begin acqui ⁇ ng a block of data, and a se ⁇ es of "pixel clock” pulses (for example, one pulse for every 1.5 micron change in position), each of which triggers one A/D conversion
  • pixel clock for example, one pulse for every 1.5 micron change in position
  • the 7 includes a translation table controller (mdexer) 202, for example a JMAR mdexer, connected to the computer 200 via an RS-232 cable
  • the translation table controller 202 is connected to the translation table 203, for example a JMAR Precision Systems 2-axis Slimline translation table
  • the same computer may be used to control the movement of the voice coil 207 linear slide and the translation table 203 for quick and coordinated scanning of the polymer anay 9
  • Data acquisition with the voice coil scanner is similar to data acquisition with the galvo scanner desc ⁇ bed in U.S. patent application No. 08/856,642.
  • Photomultiplier output cunent is converted to voltage by an op- amp circuit, low-pass filtered by, for example, a 4-pole Bessel filter, and digitized by a 12-bit or 16-bit data acquisition board, for example a Computer Boards Inc. (Middleboro, MA) model CIO-DAS 16/M1.
  • a Computer Boards Inc. (Middleboro, MA) model CIO-DAS 16/M1.
  • odd- numbered scan lines are taken while the voice-coil-driven axis is moving in the +X direction and even-numbered scan lines are taken while the voice-coil- driven axis is moving in the -X direction.
  • two or more data points are summed if coarser resolution is desired. Data are displayed on a computer screen as gray-scale images and are written to disk as 16-bit binary files.
  • the voice coil can be applied to move the polymer anay in a fixed objective lens system or to move a scan head having the objective lens.
  • the scan speed including acceleration is improved and the confocal microscope lens system is simple, efficient, and inexpensive. Therefore, a high performance, high throughput scanner is provided by the voice coil scanner of the present invention. All other things (e g , pixel size, scan speed, laser power, etc ) being equal, a voice coil scanner of the present invention will provide about 8 times as many detected photons per feature as a galvo scanner Therefore, the oice coil scanner of the present invention will prove very useful as feature sizes of polymer anays are reduced
  • the present invention provides improved systems and methods for detection of fluorescence images on a substrate It is to be understood that the above description is intended to be illustrative and not rest ⁇ ctive Many embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art upon reviewing the above desc ⁇ ption. Although the above desc ⁇ bed systems and methods has been described p ⁇ ma ⁇ ly herein with regard to the detection of fluorescent marked targets, it will readily find application to other areas. For example, the detection apparatus disclosed herein could be used in the fields of catalysis, DNA or protein gel scanmng, and the like. The scope of the invention should therefore be determined not only with reference to the above desc ⁇ ption but should also be determined with reference to the appended claims along with a full scope of equivalents to which the claims are entitled

Landscapes

  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Analytical Chemistry (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Optics & Photonics (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Vision & Pattern Recognition (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Microscoopes, Condenser (AREA)
  • Mechanical Optical Scanning Systems (AREA)

Abstract

The present invention provides a scanning confocal microscope image detection system having a simple and inexpensive objective lens (115) and a high acceleration/high speed voice coil driven translation system (15). The objective lens provides high light collection efficiency at low cost. The voice coil provides improved acceleration for fast scanning of at least one axis (scanning direction; fast scan axis) of a polymer array (9) that can be used effectively with the inexpensive objective lens having high light collection efficiency. In one embodiment the translation stage (15) includes a voice coil (2), a linear slide (10), and a light weight bracket (4) connecting the voice coil to the linear slide. The bracket is rigid and designed to support a polymer array (9) to be scanned or a turning prism (22) and objective lens (23). Thus, the present invention provides systems and methods for high speed low cost scanning of, for example, polymer arrays, i.e., high performance cost effective polymer array scanning using a voice coil driven translation stage.

Description

SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR HIGH PERFORMANCE SCANNING
The present application relates to provisional U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 60/106.397. filed October 30, 1998. the complete disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
GOVERNMENT RIGHTS NOTICE Portions of the mateπal in this specification arose as a resuit of Government support under contract number 70NANBG5H1031 between Afrymetrix and the U.S. Department of Commerce. The Government has certain πghts in this invention.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION Technical Field of the Invention The present invention generally relates to the fields of imaging and scanning. In particular, the present invention provides scanning systems and methods for high speed scanning and imaging of a sample containing labeled materials, for example scanning arrays of polymer sequences such as oligonucleotide arrays.
Description of the Related Art
Polymer arrays, for example, DNA arrays, are known as shown in patent application U.S.S.N. 08/81 1 ,829 ('829 and U S. Patent Nos 5.744,305; 5,445,936; and 5,677, 195; which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes. The polymer arrays, such as the GeneChip® probe array (Affyrnetrix, Inc., Santa Clara, CA), can be synthesized using light-directed methods descπbed, for example, m U.S.
Patent Nos. 5, 143,854; 5,424.186; 5,510,270; and PCT published application no. WO 95/1 1995, which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes. In one method, an array contaimng synthesized single stranded nucleic acids such as DNA, is enclosed in a protective package, as shown in patent applications U.S.S.Nos. 08/528,173 and 08/485,452 which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties for all purposes. The array is contacted with a sample containing single stranded DNA that is labeled using for example fluorescent labels such as fluorescein or phycoerythπn, and which hybridizes to the smgle stranded DNA on the array. After hybridization, the array (either packaged or not packaged) is placed into a device generally known as a scanner that obtains a fluorescence image of the array in order to analyze hybridization between the single stranded nucleic acids on the array and in the sample.
Systems (scanners) and methods for detecting marked targets on polymer arrays are generally known. Typically the polymer array is scanned using a scanner that directs a point of light in a rectilinear raster fashion so as to image the entire polymer array. A scanner may include a confocal microscope with a light source for generating light directed to the polymer array, a photodetection mechanism for detecting light emitted from the polymer array, and a computer controlled translation table that moves the polymer array in three (XYZ) directions. One direction is the fast scan direction (e.g , X direction), another is the slow scan direction (e.g., Y direction) and the third direction is a focus direction (e g., Z direction).
As an example, tne scanner projects a point of light onto a surface ot the poiymer array and is focused by the translation stage m the focus direction, Z direction. Next, the translation stage rectilinearly fast scans the point of light from one side of the polymer array to another by moving the polymer array in for example the X direction, so as to scan one line of the polymer array, point by point. During the fast scan the photodetection mechanism detects the light emitted from the surface of the polymer array so as to obtain a fluorescence image of the polymer array. Once one line in the fast scan (X) direction has been scanned the translation table moves the polymer array incrementally approximately the thickness of one scan line m the slow scan (Y) direction. This raster scanning continues until the entire surface area of the polymer array has been scanned. (See for example U.S. Patent No. 5,631,734 issued to Stem et al., which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.)
There is a need for a polymer array scanner which is reasonable in cost and provides high polymer array scanning throughput and high resolution, e g 1 5 μm , 3 5 μm, or smaller pixel size over a 14 mm x 14 mm field
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention provides systems and methods for image scanning of, for example, polymer arrays The invention provides means for moving a linear translation stage of a scanmng system with a speed of at least 10 scanning lines/second, preferably at least 20 scanning lines/second and more preferably at least 30 scanmng lines/second over a scanning distance of at least 2 mm, preferably at least 5 mm, and more preferably at least 14 mm The scanning system is capable of scanning with pixels having a size of
approximately 3.5 μm or less, preferably having a size of approximately 2 μm
or less, and more preferably having a size of approximately 1.5 μm or less,
while maintaining the fast scanning speeds indicated above and accurately detecting an image. In some embodiments, the scanner includes a voice coil to provide scanmng motion for at least one of the X direction, Y direction, and Z direction translation of a polymer array analysis system. The acceleration of the voice-coil-driven axis of the present invention is high (e g , 13 7 G, where G is the acceleration due to gravity) and can not easily be achieved with stepping motors. The high acceleration, combined with the high steady-state scan speed of the voice-coil-dπven axis (about 22 inches/second), enables the voice coil scanner of the present invention to scan a distance of, for example, 14 mm (length of scan line of one type of polymer array) at 30 lines/second The voice coil scanner ot the present invention can use either stationary optics or a moving scan head In either case, the voice-coil-dπven axis is the X axis In one embodiment, the voice coil dπves a hghtweignt linear slide mounted on a 2-axιs ( YZ) translation table This linear slide serves as the suppoπ for a polymer array (scanned sample) In another embodiment, the voice coil dπves a scan head, 1 e. a lightweight linear slide that suppoπs a Mimmg pπsm or turning minor ana an obiective lens, while the Dolvmer aπav is suppoπeα by the 2-axιs ( YZ) translation table Fuπher. a motion control system is provided to momtor and control the motion of the voice coil for fast accurate scanmng of the polymer array.
Using a voice coil for high speed scanmng of polymer arrays in the fast axis (X) direction, rather than using a galvanometer dπven scanmng mirror, enables the use of a simple low cost objective lens having a high numeπcal aperture (for example, 0.5 or greater). The objective lens can be, for example. a microscope objective lens or a smgle element aspheπc lens. This objective lens can have high numeπcal aperture while being small and inexpensive because it does not have to be coπected for off-axis abeπations, unlike the objective lens in a galvo scanner All other things being equal (laser power, spot size, etc.), a scanner with an objective numeπcal aperture of 0 5 operating at 30 lines/second produces images with the same signal-to-noise ratio as a scanner with an objective numeπcal aperture of 0 25 operating at 7 5 lines/second As a result of using the combination of a voice coil dπven translation stage and a simple high efficiency objective lens, the voice coil scanner of the present invention can achieve fast scanmng and high polymer array throughput. For example, the voice coil scanning system of the present invention, with an objective lens having a numeπcal apeπure of 0.5 or greater, can achieve accurate and reliable polymer array scanning at a speed of at least 10 lines/second, preferably at least 20 lines/second and more preferably at least 30 lines/second.
Therefore, the present invention provides a scanning system with a simple and inexpensive objective lens and a high acceleration / high speed voice coil driven translation stage that can rapidly scan, for example, 12.8 mm
x 12.8 mm polymer arrays using a pixel size of, for example, about 3.5 μm or
smaller, more preferably 2 μm or smaller and most preferably 1.5 μm or
smaller. The voice coil provides improved acceleration for fast scanmng of at least one axis of a polymer array. As a result, the present invention provides systems and methods for accurate, high speed, low cost scanning of polymer arrays, i.e., high performance cost effective polymer array scanning.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS Fig. 1 is a top view of one embodiment of a voice-coil-dπven translation stage for the scanning system according to the present invention
Fig. 2 is an end view of one embodiment of a voice-coil-dπven translation stage with an encoder readhead for the scanning system according to the present invention
Fig. 3 is a top view of another embodiment of a voice-coil-dπven translation stage for the scanning system according to the present invention Fig. 4 is an end view of another embodiment of a voice-coil-dπven translation stage and an encoder readhead for the scanning system according to the present invention
Fig. 5 is an illustration of a scanmng system according to the present invention having a 3-axιs XYZ translation system with one fast axis (X axis) driven by a voice-coil.
Fig. 6 is an illustration of a scanning system according to the present invention having a turning prism and objective lens mounted on a single axis voice-coil driven translation stage.
Fig. 7 is a block diagram of one embodiment of a motion control system according to the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Scanners may be characteπzed in one or more of a number of categories. A point-scanning confocal microscope with stationary optics focuses a beam of light to a stationary point and obtains a 2-dιmensιonal image by moving the sample (e.g., a polymer array substrate) in 2 dimensions, for example X and Y directions (there may also be a 3rd dimension, the Z direction, for focusing). As descπbed above in the Background section, it scans a single point of light from one side of a sample to another side in one direction, e.g , X direction, (i.e., scanning one line) then moves the sample incrementally in another direction, e.g., Y direction, until all points of the sample are scanned.
One early example of such a scanner with limited application was developed by Marvin Minsky in 1955. (See the "Memoir on inventing the confocal scanmng microscope," Scanmng 10, 128-138 (1988), at web site http://www.ai.mit.edu/people/minsky/papers/confocal.microscope.txt.) Minsky uses a simple magnetic solenoid without computer control to move a flexure translation stage. H.T.M. Van der Voort et al. descnbe a similar but more modern system in Scanning 7, 66-78 (1985). The details for their scanning system is provided in the article HJ.B. Marsman et al., "Mechanical scan system for biological applications," Rev Sci Instrum 54, 1047-1052 (1983). Like Minsky, this point scanner uses flexure stages. Flexure translation stages are well suited for scanmng small distances, for example 1 mm, but not for the larger distances, for example 14 mm, required for scanning polymer arrays.
One point-scannmg confocal microscope with stationary optics useful for point scanning polymer arrays was disclosed by the present inventor in U.S. Patent No. 5,631,734, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes. Since this system needs to scan polymer aπays it is provided with a large scan length sufficient to scan one dimension ot a polvmer aπay (e g , scan length is 14 mm when aπay size is 12 8 mm x 12 8 mm) and thus uses a crossed roller beaπng XYZ translation table, tor example a JMAR Precision Systems (Chatswoπh, CA) "Slimline" or "Microhne" table, instead of a flexure stage This XYZ translation table is stepper motor dπven and moves the polymer array relative to the fixed microscope objective lens to scan the polymer aπay along one scan line at a time Either a lead screw or a ball screw converts the rotary motion of the stepper motor to linear motion Scan speed with this system is limited because of the limited acceleration possible with stepping-motor-dπven translation stages.
Another type of confocal microscope scanner is illustrated by a Molecular Dynamics (Sunnyvale, CA) scanner as shown in U.S. Patent No. 5,459,325. This can be called a "pomt-scanning confocal microscope with a moving scan head." The scan head consists of a turning mirror (or turning pnsm) and objective lens mounted on a single-axis translation stage. As the scan head moves in this confocal microscope scanner, the focused laser beam moves along with it. The sample is mounted on a separate translation table that moves perpendicular to the scan head. The system obtains a 2- dimensional image by oscillating the scan head rapidly in one dimension and moving the sample slowly in another. The scan head is made small and light so that it can move fast. However, if the scan head is actuated with a stepper motor it suffers from a similar limitation in scanning speed as the point- scanning confocal microscope w ith stationary optics due to the stepper motor's slow acceleration
In all of the confocal microscopes described above, the laser beam is always coaxial with the optical axis of the objective lens, and so is the reflected or emitted light (e.g., fluorescent light) that is collected by the objective lens. The objective lens can be relatively simple and inexpensive because it doesn't have to be corrected for off-axis aberrations A naπow- angle lens, i.e. a lens that only has to focus light onto or nearly onto its optical axis, is easier to design and manufacture and contains fewer optical elements than a wide-angle lens having the same focal length, f number, resolution, etc. For example, an inexpensive 1 or 2-element lens system may be capable of focusing a laser beam to a 3-micron-diameter spot when the laser beam is coaxial with the optical axis of the lens. If the laser beam enters the lens several degrees off axis and consequently focuses several millimeters off axis, it will probably focus to a much larger spot size. If a 3 -micron-diameter spot several millimeters off axis is needed, a more complicated and expensive lens will be required.
Another scanner used for polymer array analysis is a galvanometer- scanning confocal microscope ("galvo scanner") as disclosed in patent application U.S.S.N. 08/856,642 ('642), which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes. The galvo (galvanometer) scanner includes a radial direction system with a galvanometer actuating a minor to rapidly scan a laser light spot across a substrate ( e.g., a polymer aπay) The galvo scanner is much faster than the scanners descπbed above, achieving scanning speed of approximately 30 lines/second, but requires a large and expensive objective lens. In operation, the galvo scanner ('642) uses an angularly oscillating minor (a minor mounted on a galvanometer) to direct the laser beam into an objective lens. The lens focuses the laser beam to a soot that moves back and forth over a distance of 14 mm as the minor oscillates. The objective lens must therefore be conected for abenations up to 7 mm off axis. The same lens is used to collect fluorescence from the sample polymer anay. The sample is mounted on a translation table and the scanner obtams a 2-dimensιonal image by moving the focused laser spot rapidly back and forth in one dimension and stepping the sample slowly in another. Thus, the galvo scanner is potentially very fast because galvanometers can oscillate at tens or hundreds of cycles per second. However, the objective lens is large and expensive because must be conected for off-axis abenations.
The objective lens in the '642 galvo scanner, for example, is 4 inches long and 2.5 inches in diameter and contains 6 optical elements. This objective lens has a numerical aperture of only 0.25, which means that it collects only about 1 out of 100 photons emitted by the sample. A higher numerical aperture is desirable. Higher numeπcal aperture results in higher collection efficiency and therefore better signal-to-noise ratio, all other things (laser power, scan speed, etc ) being equal Unfortunately, a lens with the same resolution as the cunent lens (about 3 microns), but a significantly higher numeπcal aperture (e g 0.5) either would have a much smaller field of view (in which case a 12.8 mm x 12.8 mm polymer anay would have to be scanned in 2 or more sections) or would be even more complicated and expensive.
Another galvanometer-scanning confocal microscope is provided by Hewlett-Packard as disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 5,585,639. It is a galvanometer-scanning confocal microscope but contains three multi-element lenses: one lens focuses the laser beam onto the sample, and a pair of lenses collects the fluorescence. Thus, this scanner is also expensive to build.
Another type of scanner is the "line scanner" which is different from all of the "point scanners" discussed above. Line scanners image an entire scan line at one time. For example, a "line scanner" is disclosed in U.S. Patent Nos. 5,578,832 and 5,834,758, which are hereby incorporated herein by reference for all purposes. This scanner focuses the laser beam not to a point, but to a line a few microns wide and, for example, 14 mm long, so as to image one entire line of the polymer anay sample at a time. An objective lens (or a pair of objectives back to back) collects fluorescence and images the fluorescence onto a linear CCD having 1024 or more pixels. The polymer array sample is mounted on a translation table. Thus, the line scanner obtains a 1 -dimensional image with no motion and a 2-dιmensιonal image with only one axis of motion. Therefore, the line scanner can potentially be very fast because there is no need for a fast scan axis - scan speed is limited not by mechanical considerations such as the acceleration of a stepping motor connected to a translation table or scan head, but by the speed of the electronics or software. However, a linear-CCD-based scanner is optically complicated.
The present invention provides systems an methods for achieving high speed cost effective scanmng and imaging of a sample containing labeled materials, for example scanmng anays of polymer sequences such as oligonucleotide anays. The invention has a wide range of uses, particularly those requiring quantitative study of a microscopic region from within a larger region. For example, the invention can obtain a fluorescence image of a 14
mm x 14 mm area with 1.5 μm or 3.5 μm . or smaller pixels. For example,
the invention may find application in the field of histology (for studying histochemical stained and immunological fluorescent stained images), or fluorescence in situ hybridization. In one application, the invention herein is used to image a packaged polymer anay, for example a GeneChip® probe anay.
In general, the invention provides a scanning system capable of
scanning an image with pixels having a size of approximately 3.5 μm or less
with a means for moving a linear translation stage that can attain a speed of at least 10 scanning lines/second, and preferably at least 30 scanning lines/second, while accurately detecting the image. Such a system may include, for example, a voice coil that provides increased acceleration and resulting fast scanning speed.
A scanner employing a voice coil dπven translation stage may combine the speed of a galvo scanner with the optical simplicity of a point-scanning confocal microscope with stationary optics (e.g., the scanner disclosed in USPN 5,631.734 hereby incorporated by reference herein) to obtain accurate
and reliable image detection using, for example, a 1.5 or 3.5 μm or smaller
pixel size. Voice coil actuators are direct drive, limited motion devices that utilize a permanent magnet field and a coil winding (conductor) to produce a force proportional to the cunent applied to the coil.
One example of an appropriate voice coil is linear actuator voice coil Model No. LA14-24-000 offered by Kimco Magnetics Division of BEI Technologies Inc. Another example of an appropriate voice coil is linear actuator voice coil Model No. LA34-37-000A also offered by Kimco
Magnetics Division of BEI Technologies Inc. (See "Voice coil actuators: An applications guide" provided by Kimco Magnetics Division, BEI Technologies Inc, San Marcos CA.) These are two examples of voice coils that are useful in the present invention for driving a translation stage. These are merely examples of voice coils readily available that can work in the present invention. Many other voice coils could work as well. For example, a voice coil for driving a translation stage in the present invention could be custom designed (i.e., by BEI Kimco or another company) if necessary
The use of the readily available standard voice coils for dπving a translation table could cause the voice coil to overheat and fail if it is required to move too much weight. For example, if a voice-coil-dπven stage scans 14 mm at a speed of 560 mm/sec, then the time to scan 14 mm is 25 msec. If we allow 4.166 msec for acceleration and another 4.166 msec for deceleration, then the acceleration or deceleration is 134 4 rrvsec ( 13 7 g, where g is the acceleration due to gravity) and the total time to scan one line is 33.333 msec. If the moving parts weigh 0.5 lb. then the force required for 13.7 g of acceleration is 6.85 lb. The BEI Kimco LA14-24-000 voice coil, for example, has a force constant of 1.6 lb/amp. The cunent required for 6.85 lb of force is therefore 4.28 A. The coil has a resistance of 7 ohms when hot. The power dissipated in the coil at 4.28 A is therefore 128 W. When the stage is not accelerating or decelerating, the cunent is zero, which means that the average power dissipated in the coil is 32 W. The coil has a thermal resistance of 3.4°C W, which means that the coil temperature is 134°C if the ambient temperature is 25°C. The coil is rated for a maximum temperature of 130°C.
The previous example calculations ignore friction and do not include a safety margin. However, it is conservative in that there is probably no need for the moving parts to weigh 0.5 lb if the system is properly constructed.
The scanning system should be constructed so as to take advantage of the fast acceleration of the voice coil while ensuring that the weight the voice coil must move is less than the weignt w hich will cause the voice coil to overheat and fail due to excessive power dissipation The moving part of, for example, an NB Corporation of Ameπca (Wood Dale, IL) model SER9A slide weighs approximately 20 grams (see illustration in Fig 2, item 10 and Fig 4 item 25) A vaπety of linear slides, using either linear or recirculating ball beaπngs, linear or recirculating crossed roller beaπngs, or air beaπngs, may be suitable A packaged DNA anav weighs, for example, 16 grams The moving part of the LAI 4-24-000 voice coil weighs approximately 22 grams If the bracketry that holds all of these moving parts together is designed to weigh, for example, 55 grams, and the scanner is designed so that these are the pnmary components that the voice coil must move, then the total weight of the moving parts is approximately 0.25 lb, and the power dissipated in the coil is only 25% of what was calculated above (actually less than 25% of what was calculated above, because the voice coil resistance is only 5 ohms when operating cool). Furthermore, the voice coil can be cooled with forced air (e.g. a fan, or a jet of compressed air) if additional cooling is needed to improve performance
The LA 14-24-000 can provide improved scanning time over conventional scanners that use stepper motors to dπve the fast scan axis, i.e., a decrease in the amount of time it takes to scan each line of the fast scan axis when scanning a polymer anay The steady-state scan speed of a scanner using the LA 14-24-000 in inches/second is about 22 inches/second and the acceleration is very high, about 13 7 G (where G is the acceleration due to gravity), enabling the device to scan 14 mm at 30 lines/second This speed is comparable to the maximum scan speed of the galvo scanner However, in practice the galvo scanner, having a low numeπcal aperture objective lens, may be operated at considerably less than this maximum speed because of lower signal-to-noise ratio at the higher speeds.
The voice coil scanner can be designed so that a voice-coil-dπven translation stage operates to move either the polymer anay (i.e., similar to the point-scanning confocal microscope with stationary optics previously discussed) or the objective lens and turning minor (similar to the Molecular Dynamics scanner previously discussed) in the fast axis (X) direction. The slow axis (Y direction) and the focus axis (Z direction) can be driven by stepping motors, although voice coils also can be used for these axes.
Referring now to Figures 1 and 2, a first prefened embodiment of the invention having a voice coil dπven translation stage mechanized to move the polymer anay in the fast X axis direction is illustrated. This embodiment uses a slide type voice coil. The voice coil scanner of this embodiment has a voice coil translation stage 15 which includes a voice coil magnet and mounting bracket 1 mounted in a stationary manner to the top surface 13 of a 2-axιs (YZ) translation table. The voice coil has a moving coil 2 that moves along a slide in the fast axis (X axis) direction in response to cunent provided to wires 3. The voice coil used in this embodiment may be, for example, a BEI Kimco Magnetics Division Voice Coil Linear Actuation Model No. LA 14-24-000 or any other voice coil having similar or better thermal, mechanical, and electπcal characteπstics. All else being equal, the weight of the moving coil should be minimized, the force constant of the coil (in pounds per amp) should be as large as possible, and the thermal resistance of the coil (in degrees per watt) should be as small as possible.
The moving coil 2 of the voice coil is connected to the movable part 10 of a linear slide by bracket 4. This bracket should be made of a design ana mateπal so that it is light weight so as to require minimal translation force and strong enough to remain rigid during oscillation of the linear slide. For example, the bracket may be made of steel or aluminum and have a weight of up to 55 grams. Although bracket 4 is illustrated as one piece it may be made of multiple pieces. Bracket 4 has a surface 5 upon which an encoder scale 8 is mounted. The encoder scale 8 operates with the encoder readhead 11 to monitor the position of a polymer anay sample 9 mounted to the sample mounting surface 6 of bracket 4. The weight of the encoder scale should also be minimized as much as possible since it is connected to the moving parts of the voice coil translation stage. The readhead 1 1 is mounted to the top surface 13 of the 2-axιs translation stage by readhead mounting bracket 12. The readhead 11 and the scale 8 may be, for example, a Remshaw Inc. (Schaumburg, IL) RGH22Z readhead and a Renishaw RGS-S scale, respectively. The stationary guide portion 7 of the linear slide is mounted to the top surface 13 of the 2-axιs translation table. The linear slide should be selected so that the weight of the moving part 10 and friction coefficient of the linear slide is minimized so that the force require by the voice coil and thereby the power dissipation of the voice coil are within the thermal capability of the voice coil The linear slide may be, for example. NB Corporation of Ameπca crosseα roller beaπng linear slide, model SER9A. or any other call bearing, crossed roller beaπng, or air beanng linear slide that meets the mechanical and operational qualities for reliable fast axis translation of the polymer array The 2-axis translation table having top surface 13 may be, for example, a JMAR Precision System 2-axιs Slimline or Microlme translation table or any other translation table that can provide reliable 2-axis translation. As illustrated in Fig. 2, the translation table will provide movement in the slow axis (Y axis) direction and the focus axis (Z axis) direction. If a 3-axιs translation table with sufficiently long travel is used, the present invention has the capability of scanning an entire wafer of polymer anays sequentially, one anay at a time.
In operation the voice coil translation stage 15 is provided a dπving cunent from an amplifier (e.g., a servoamplifier) through wires 3 The moving part 2 of the voice coil moves the bracket 4, encoder scale 8, polymer anay 9, and moving part 10 of the linear slide in the fast axis x direction along the guide part 7 of the linear slide. A control system senses the location of the polymer array 9 using information from the encoder readhead 1 1 and indicates when one complete translation in the x direction is complete. Once one complete x direction fast axis scan is complete the translation table will index approximately the width of one fast scan line in the slow axis Y direction and the controller will trigger another fast scan by the voice coil. This sequence occurs repeatedly until the entire polymer anay, or a predefined portion thereof, has been scanned by a confocal microscope image system.
If a 3-axιs translation table is being used to scan a wafer of polymer anays, the x direction axis of the 3-axis translation table will then move to the next polymer anay on the wafer and the above described polymer array scanning sequence will be repeated. Once all anays in a row on the wafer have been scanned the translation table will move in the slow axis Y direction to the next row of arrays to be scanned. These steps will be repeated until the entire wafer of polymer anays has been scanned. Figures 3 and 4 illustrates another prefened embodiment of the invention having a voice coil driven translation stage mechanized to move a scanning beam of light across a polymer anay in the fast X axis direction. This embodiment uses a plunger type voice coil, for example, a BEI Kimco model LA34-37-000A or any other voice coil having similar mechanical and electπcal characteristics. The voice coil scanner of this embodiment has a voice coil translation stage 30 which includes a voice coil mounting bracket 16, a voice coil magnet and housing 17 (stationary part of the voice coil), an electπcal coil winding section 18 (moving part of the voice coil), and wires 19 connecting to the coil 18.
Unlike the previous embodiment, the voice coil mounting bracket 16 is not mounted to the top surface 13 of the 2-axis translation stage. Rather, the voice coil mounting bracket 16 can be mounted to another structure which is preferably stationary relative to the confocal microscope image system used in the scanmng system.
The moving coil 18 of the voice coil is connected to the moveable part 25 of a linear slide by bracket 20. This bracket should be made of a design and material so that it is lightweight so as to require minimal translation force and strong enough to remain πgid during oscillation of the linear slide. For example, the bracket may be made of steel or aluminum and have a weight in the range of up to 0.5 lb. Although bracket 20 is illustrated as one piece it may be made of multiple pieces. Bracket 20, like bracket 4 of the previous embodiment, has a surface upon which an encoder scale 21 is mounted. A turning minor, penta-prism, or πght-angle pπsm 22 (reflector) and objective lens 23 are mounted on the bracket 20 opposite the encoder scale 21. The encoder scale 21 operates with the encoder readhead 27 to monitor the position of the scan head. To minimize image distortion due to pitch and yaw of the linear slide, encoder scale 21 should be as close as possible to the focal point of lens 23. The encoder scale 21, turning prism 22, and objective lens 23, should be light weight to ensure the voice coil does not overheat. The readhead 27 and the scale 21 may be, for example, a Renishaw RGH22Z readhead and a Renishaw RGS-S scale. However, another type of position sensing system may be used, for example a Zeiss encoder. The readhead 27 is mounted to the top surface 26 of an optical breadboard, for example a Newport Corp (Irvine, CA) RG seπes breadboard, by read head mounting bracket 28. The guide portion 24 of the linear slide is mounted to the top surface 26 of the optical breadboard. The linear slide should be selected so that the weight of the moving part 25 is minimized to minimize the force required by the voice coil and thereby the power dissipation of the voice coil are within the thermal capability of the voice coil. The linear slide may be, for example, Parker/Daedel (Harrison City, PA) crossed roller bearing linear slide model CR4501, or any other ball bearing, crossed roller bearing, or air bearing linear slide with sufficient straightness and flatness of travel and sufficiently light weight that it can operate at the desired speed. In this embodiment, the moving parts are much heavier (for example, 2 lb) than in the previous embodiment. However, the voice-coil-driven linear stage is still able to scan 14 mm at 30 lines/second without overheating because of the thermal and electrical characteristics of the LA34-37-000A voice coil (the force constant is 5.4 lb/amp, the resistance is 1.4 ohms, and the thermal resistance is 2.2 degrees C per watt).
Unlike the previous embodiment, the guide portion 24 of the linear slide is not directly connected to the top surface 13 of the 2-axis (or 3 axis) translation table. Rather the 2-axis translation table having top surface 13 has the polymer anay sample 9 mounted directly to it and is adjacent to the voice coil dπven translation stage. The surface of polymer anay 9 is perpendicular to the optical axis of scan head objective lens 23. The 2-axis translation table having top surface 13. may be for example, JMAR Precision System 2-axis Slimline or Microline translation table or any other translation table that can provide reliable 2-axis translation. As illustrated in Fig 4, the translation table will provide movement of the polymer anay m the slow axis (Y) direction and the focus axis (Z) direction. In operation, the voice coil translation stage 30 is provided a driving cunent from an amplifier (e.g., a servoamplifier) through wires 19. The moving part 18 of the voice coil moves the bracket 20, encoder scale 21, turning mirror or prism 22, objective lens 23, and moving part 25 of the linear slide in the fast axis (X) direction along the guide part 24 of the linear slide. The scan head comprised of the turning minor or prism 22 and the objective lens 23 mounted on the bracket 20 will scan a point of light from a laser light beam on to the surface of the polymer anay 9 in a linear manner in the fast axis (X) direction. A control system senses the location of the scan head using information from the encoder readhead 27 and indicates when one complete translation in the X direction has been completed. Once one complete X direction fast axis scan is complete the translation table will index approximately the width of one fast scan line in the slow axis (Y) direction and the controller will tπgger another fast scan by the voice coil. This sequence occurs repeatedly until the entire polymer anay. or a predefined poπion thereof, has been scanned.
As with the first embodiment, if a 3-axis translation table is being used to scan a wafer of polymer anays, the x direction axis of the 3-axis translation table will then move to the next polymer anay on the wafer and the above descπbed polymer anay scanmng sequence will be repeated. Once ail anays in a row on the wafer have been scanned the translation table will move in the slow axis (Y) direction to the next row of anays to be scanned. These steps will be repeated until the entire wafer of polymer anays has been scanned.
Figures 5 and 6 illustrate two alternative confocal imaging systems that may be used for the present invention in detecting, for example, florescence emitted by targets bound to the polymer anays. Alternative confocal imaging systems that may be modified to use a voice coil fast axis translation stage include those found in USPN 5,631,734 and U.S. Application Ser. No. 08/856,642, which are hereby incorporated herein for all purposes. The system of U.S. Application Ser. No. 08/856,642 would be further modified to eliminate the galvo scanning minor and to have a simple inexpensive objective lens mounted in a stationary position or within a scan head. A brief descπption of the configuration and operation of the confocal imaging systems shown in Figs. 4 and 5 follows. A more detailed understanding of the overall operation of the confocal imaging systems descπbed herein can be obtained by reading USPN 5.63 1 ,734 and U.S Application Ser. No 08/856,642, herein incorporated by reference.
Figure 5 illustrates a confocal imaging system having a stationary (fixed position) objective lens 1 15. The sample 9 is mounted on a 3-axis translation stage 15 having a voice-coil-dπven fast (X) axis.
As illustrated in Fig. 5, the confocal imaging system includes a laser 103 for generating a laser light beam that is transmitted through beamsplitter 104, reflected by dichroic beamsplitter 1 14, and focused by objective lens 1 15 onto the surface of polymer anay sample 9. The laser light that is reflected by the surface of polymer anay sample 9 is collimated by objective lens 115, reflected by dichroic beamsplitter 114 and beamsplitter 104, and focused by lens 102 onto pinhole 101. The portion of the reflected laser light that is transmitted through pinhole 101 is detected by photodiode 100. Photodiode 100 provides a signal to a controller to adjust the position of the sample so that the laser beam is focused on the surface of the polymer anay sample 9. The controller will activate, for example, a stepper motor m the 2-axis (YZ) translation table so as to move the translation table in the focus axis (Z) direction until the laser light beam is properly focused on the surface of the polymer anay sample 9. In another embodiment (not shown in a figure), the sample is mounted on a 2-axis (XY) translation stage having a voice-coil-driven fast (X) axis, and the objective lens is mounted on a separate single-axis (Z) translation stage. In this embodiment the Z translation stage can be very small and light (for example, the "PIFOC" piezoelectric microscope focusing device available from Polytec PI. Inc., Auburn, MA) because only the objective lens is mounted to it. The confocal imaging system of Fig. 5 also includes two photomultiplier tubes (PMT) 105 and 1 12. each one for detecting fluorescence having a particular range of wavelengths emitted from the surface of the polymer anay sample. For example, PMT 112 may detect fluorescence from fluorescein-labeled target molecules and PMT 105 may detect fluorescence from phycoerythrin-labeled target molecules. The PMT (105, 112) may be, for example, a Hamamatsu R4457 or R6357 photomultiplier tube , or any other PMT having sufficiently high quantum efficiency at the wavelengths of interest and sufficiently low dark cunent. Various types of light detectors other than a PMT also may be used, including photodiodes, avalanche photodiodes, phototransistors, vacuum photodiodes, and other light detectors. The confocal imaging system of Fig. 5 further includes optical trains to separate, for example, two unique colors of fluorescent light. A first color fluorescent light is emitted from a particular marked target on the polymer anay sample 9 surface, collimated by objective lens 1 15, transmitted through dichroic beam splitters 113 and 114, lens 110, pinhole 108, and bandpass filter 106, and sensed by PMT 105. Similarly, a second color fluorescent light different from the first color fluorescent light is emitted from a different particular marked target on the polymer aπay sample 9 surface, collimated by objective lens 1 15, transmitted through dichroic beam splitter 1 14, reflected by dichroic beamsplitter 1 13, transmitted through lens 1 1 1 , pinhole 109, and bandpass filter 107, and sensed by PMT 1 12. Figure 6 illustrates a confocal imaging system having an objective lens
23 and turning minor or pπsm 22 mounted on a voice-coil-driven translation stage 30 that moves in the fast-scan (X) direction. The sample 9 is mounted on a separate 2-axis (YZ) translation stage.
Laser 103 produces a laser light beam that is transmitted through beamsplitter 104, reflected by dichroic beamsplitter 114 and turning minor or pπsm 22, and focused by objective lens 23 onto the polymer anay sample 9 surface. As the scan head moves back and forth in the X direction, the laser beam and the collected fluorescence remain centered on minor or prism 22 and objective lens 23. Lens 102, pinhole 101, and photodiode 100 are used for detection of reflected laser light and provide the sensing capability for adjusting the focus of the laser light beam. Lens 110, pinhole 108, bandpass filter 106 (or longpass filter), and PMT 105 enable sensing of, for example, one color fluorescent light emitted by one type of target on the polymer anay 9 surface. Thus, this confocal imaging system can only detect, for example, one color fluorescent light emitted from one type of target on the polymer anay surface because it does not include dichroic beamsplitter 1 13, lens 1 1 1, pinhole 109, and PMT 1 12 In this embodiment, the voice coil translation stage 30 has a turning pπsm 2 and objective lens 23 securely mounted on a scan head. The laser light beam from laser 103 is reflected by dichroic beamsplitter 1 14 onto turning pπsm 22 and through the objective lens coaxial with the objective lens's optical axis. The laser light beam stπkes the turning pπsm 22 surface at the same location and remains coaxial with the optical axis of the objective lens 23 throughout the fast axis (X) translation of the scanmng head. As a result, the laser light beam scans a line on the surface of the polymer anay in the fast axis (X) direction using the movement of the scan head rather than the movement of the polymer anay sample 9.
Many alternative configurations of the confocal imaging systems described above are possible. For example, a system having 2 PMTs as shown in Fig 5 can be used with a moving scan head instead of stationary optics. A system having one PMT as shown in Fig 6 can be used with stationary optics instead of a moving scan head. It is to be understood that the confocal imaging system of the present invention could have any number of lasers, PMTs and related optical trains, as many as the number of different types of light to be uniquely detected. Furthermore, a slide-type voice coil can be used to operate a moving scan head and a plunger-type voice coil can be used with stationary optics, or vice versa.
The objective lens for a voice coil polymer anay scanner can be a microscope objective (for example Rolyn Optics, Covina CA, model 80.3090, 0 65 numeπcal aperture) or a single-element aspheπc lens ( for example ThorLabs. Newton NJ, model 350330-A, 0.68 numeπcal aperture) A single- element aspheπc lens is significantly smaller and lighter than a microscope objective and thus may be better for the scan head embodiment of the present invention. A single-element aspheπc objective lens is not conected for chromatic abenations, but if the focal length is small enough, chromatic conection may not be necessary For example, the ThorLabs 350330-A has a focal length of 3.1 mm, and the axial color at 580 run (approximately the phycoerythπn emission peak) is only about 0.33 microns per nanometer (i.e. 0.33 micron change in focal length per 1 nm change in wavelength).
Alternatively, a custom 2-element cemented doublet (for example, a biconvex BK7 element cemented to a biconcave SF6 element) can be used to conect for the axial color introduced by the single-element aspheπc lens. The doublet can be placed either between lens 23 and minor or pπsm 22 or between dichroic beamsplitter 114 and mirror or prism 22.
Other types of objective lenses can also be used, for example a refractive/diffractive hybrid lens (i.e. a lens having at least one refractive surface and at least one diffractive surface), or a 2-element aspheπc lens having a numeπcal aperture of 0.85 (Sony patent 5,880,893). An objective lens with a numeπcal aperture of 0.68 has about 8 times the collection efficiency of a lens with a numeπcal aperture of 0.25. As discussed above, although the galvo scanner is capable of scanning at 30 lines/sec, it is often operated at 7 5 lines/sec because the collection efficiency of its objective lens and signal-to-noise ratio at 30 lines/sec is insufficient for some assays. A voice coil scanner running at 30 lines/sec provides a better signal-to-noise ratio than a galvo scanner that is running at 7.5 lines/sec because the voice coil scanner's objective lens can have a much higher collection efficiency.
A control system to control a voice coil and translation table in the polymer anay analysis system of the present invention is illustrated in Figure 7. The control system includes a computer 200, for example, a 400 MHz Pentium II PC, with a (servo) motion controller 201. The motion controller 201 installed in (or connected to) the computer 200 accepts digital commands from the computer and produces an analog output in the range of -10 V to +10 V. The motion controller may be, for example, the Galil Motion Control (Mountain View, CA) model DMC-1710, the Delta Tau Systems (Northπdge, CA) model PMAC-Lite, or various other controllers from other companies such as Motion Engineering Inc., etc.
An amplifier 206 (e.g., a linear or pulse-width-modulated servoamplifier), for example a Galil MSA- 12-80, accepts the analog signal from the motion controller 201 via an interconnection module 204, for example Galil ICM-1900, and outputs the appropπate cunent to the voice coil 201. The amplifier 202 is provided with power by power supply 205, for example Galil CPS- 15-40. An encoder system with a readhead 208 provides position feedback to the controller Suitable encoder systems ith readhead 208 are quadrature-output encoders with resolutions of 1 micron to 0 1 micron The encoder system may be, tor example, Renishaw RGH22Z readhead and RGS-S scale Other suitable encoders are manufactured by Zeiss and other companies
Some motion controllers (e g , the Galil DMC-1710) can be programmed to proαuce TTL output puises when certain positions are reacneα For every scan line, the controller can produce a "line clock" pulse, which instructs the data acquisition board to begin acquiπng a block of data, and a seπes of "pixel clock" pulses (for example, one pulse for every 1.5 micron change in position), each of which triggers one A/D conversion These clock pulses can be used to prevent the jitter that might otherwise appear in the images. Using this procedure, it is possible to take data bi-directionally and have the odd and even lmes of the image aligned within a fraction of a pixel Finally, the control system of Fig. 7 includes a translation table controller (mdexer) 202, for example a JMAR mdexer, connected to the computer 200 via an RS-232 cable The translation table controller 202 is connected to the translation table 203, for example a JMAR Precision Systems 2-axis Slimline translation table Thus, the same computer may be used to control the movement of the voice coil 207 linear slide and the translation table 203 for quick and coordinated scanning of the polymer anay 9 Data acquisition with the voice coil scanner is similar to data acquisition with the galvo scanner descπbed in U.S. patent application No. 08/856,642. Photomultiplier output cunent is converted to voltage by an op- amp circuit, low-pass filtered by, for example, a 4-pole Bessel filter, and digitized by a 12-bit or 16-bit data acquisition board, for example a Computer Boards Inc. (Middleboro, MA) model CIO-DAS 16/M1. Cunently two versions of the data acquisition software exist. One version takes 9216 data points per scan line, one data point every 1.5 microns. The other takes 4096 data points per scan line, one data point every 3.5 microns. Data are taken at the rate of 30 scan lines per second. Data are taken bidirectionally, i.e. odd- numbered scan lines are taken while the voice-coil-driven axis is moving in the +X direction and even-numbered scan lines are taken while the voice-coil- driven axis is moving in the -X direction. With either version of the software, two or more data points are summed if coarser resolution is desired. Data are displayed on a computer screen as gray-scale images and are written to disk as 16-bit binary files.
As illustrated above, the voice coil can be applied to move the polymer anay in a fixed objective lens system or to move a scan head having the objective lens. In either case, the scan speed including acceleration is improved and the confocal microscope lens system is simple, efficient, and inexpensive. Therefore, a high performance, high throughput scanner is provided by the voice coil scanner of the present invention. All other things (e g , pixel size, scan speed, laser power, etc ) being equal, a voice coil scanner of the present invention will provide about 8 times as many detected photons per feature as a galvo scanner Therefore, the oice coil scanner of the present invention will prove very useful as feature sizes of polymer anays are reduced
The present invention provides improved systems and methods for detection of fluorescence images on a substrate It is to be understood that the above description is intended to be illustrative and not restπctive Many embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art upon reviewing the above descπption. Although the above descπbed systems and methods has been described pπmaπly herein with regard to the detection of fluorescent marked targets, it will readily find application to other areas. For example, the detection apparatus disclosed herein could be used in the fields of catalysis, DNA or protein gel scanmng, and the like. The scope of the invention should therefore be determined not only with reference to the above descπption but should also be determined with reference to the appended claims along with a full scope of equivalents to which the claims are entitled
All publications, patents, and patent applications cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS
1 A scanning system compπsing- a translation stage including a voice coil, a linear slide and a bracket connecting said voice coil to said linear slide, said bracket having a surface for mounting a polymer anay.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein said scanning system further compπses a translation table having a surface and a guide portion of said linear slide is mounted to said surface of said translation table.
3. The system of claim 2, wherein a polymer anay is mounted to said surface of said bracket and said polymer anay is a packaged polymer anay.
4. The system of claim 1, wherein said bracket is connected to said moving part of said linear slide at another surface of said bracket.
5. The system of claim 4, wherein said translation stage further compπses a scale on said bracket.
6. The system of claim 4, wherein said translation stage further compπses a reflector and an objective lens, instead of said polymer anay, mounted to said surface of said bracket.
7 The system of claim 6, wherein said reflector is selected from the i group consisting of a minor and a turning pπsm
1 8. The system of claim 5, further compπsing a confocal microscope
2 image detection device having an objective lens, and the system provides
3 accurate and reliable image recognition using a pixel size of 3.5 μm or
4 smaller.
1 9. The system of claim 8, wherein said objective lens is selected from the
2 group consisting of a microscope objective lens, an aspheπc lens with a
3 doublet lens, an aspheric lens without a doublet lens, and a
4 refractive/diffractive hybrid lens.
1 10. The system of claim 7, wherein said objective lens is selected from the
2 group consisting of a microscope objective lens, an aspheric lens with a
3 doublet lens, an aspheric lens without a doublet lens, and a
4 refractive/diffractive hybrid lens.
1 11. The system of claim 5, further comprising a control system for
2 controlling the motion of said translation stage.
1 12. The system of claim 11, wherein said control system includes an
~> amplifier connected to said voice coil
1 13. The system of claim 12, wherein said control system includes a motion
2 controller and a computer for controlling scanning.
14 The system of claim 13, wherein said control svstem includes a readhead for sensing location of said translation stage
15 The system of claim 14, wherein said control system includes an interconnection module connected to said readhead, said voice coil, and said motion controller
16. The system of claim 5, wherein said surface for mounting a polymer anay is a planar surface and perpendicular to said another surface which is also a planar surface.
17. The system of claim 6, wherein said surface for mounting a polymer anay is a planar surface and parallel to said another surface which is also a planar surface.
18. The system of claim 9. wherein said system scans a polymer anay image size of 1 cm x 1 cm or larger.
19. A scanmng system comprising: a translation stage including a means for linear translation, and a means for connecting a voice coil to said means for linear translation, said means for connecting said voice coil to said means for linear translation includes a surface for securely mounting a polymer anay
20 The system of claim 19, wherein said means for linear translation is a crossed roller beaπng linear slide that provides single axis translation and said means for connecting said voice coil to said linear slide is a bracket made of a light weight πgid mateπal
21 A polymer anay scanning system compπsing a linear actuator having a permanent magnet portion and coil winding portion, a linear slide, and a bracket connecting said linear actuator to said linear shde, said bracket having a surface for mounting a polymer anay
22 The system of claim 21 , wherein said linear actuator is a voice coil
23. The system of claim 22, wherein said voice coil is selected from the group consisting of a slide type voice coil and a plunger type voice coil.
24. The system of claim 23, wherein said slide type of voice coil is a BEI Kimco LA 14-24-000 voice coil and said plunger type voice coil is a BEI Kimco LA34-37-000A.
25 The system of claim 23, further including a scan head, instead of said polymer anay, mounted to said second surface of said bracket, for scanning a laser light beam in a fast axis direction across a surface of a substrate
26 The system of claim 25, wherein said scan head includes a reflector and an objective lens
27. The system of claim 26, wherein said reflector is selected from the group consisting of a minor and a turning pπsm
28. A method of scanning compnsmg the steps of: providing a translation stage having a linear slide, a voice coil, and a bracket, said bracket connecting said linear slide to said voice coil and for mounting a polymer anay thereon; and increasing scanmng acceleration and scan line speed using a voice coil.
29. The method of claim 28, further compπsing the step of providing the increased scanning acceleration movement to a polymer anay.
30. The method of claim 29, further comprising the step of providing increased scanmng acceleration movement to a scan head, instead of said polymer array, mounted to said bracket.
31. The method of claim 30, wherein said scan head includes a reflector and a lens selected from the group consisting of a microscope objective lens, an aspheric lens with a doublet lens, an aspheπc lens without a doublet lens, and a refractive/diffractive hybπd lens.
32. A confocal microscope image detection system compnsmg: a light source; an optical train for directing light from said light source to a substrate and separating reflected light from said substrate from an emitted light from said substrate; a focusing system for focusing the light from said light source on said substrate, a detector for detecting said emitted light from said substrate; a translation table for translating said substrate in a slow axis direction and a focus axis direction; and a translation stage including a bracket having at least two mounting surfaces, said translation stage for scanning in the fast axis direction using a linear actuator with acceleration greater than that of a stepper motor so that time needed for scanning a scan line in the fast axis direction is reduced and thereby the amount of time to scan a predetermined anay size is reduced.
33. The system of claim 32, wherein said translation stage is mounted to a surface of said translation table
34. The system of claim 33, wherein said linear actuator is a voice coil and a polymer anay is fastened to at least one of said mounting surfaces.
35. A scanning system comprising means for moving a linear translation stage with a speed of at least 10 lines per second over a distance of at least 2 mm wherein said scanning system scans with a pixel size of 3.5 microns or less.
36. The scanning system of claim 35 wherein said speed is at least 20 lines per second.
37 The scanning system of claim 35 wherein said speed is at least 30 lines per second.
38. The scanning system of claim 37 wherein said pixel size is 2 microns or less.
39. The scanning system of claim 37 wherein said pixel size is 1.5 microns or less.
40. The scanning system of claim 35, 36, 37 or 38 wherein said distance is at least 5 mm.
41. The scanmng system of claim 35, 36, 37 or 38 wherein said distance is at least 14 mm.
42. The scanning system of claim 35 wherein said means is a voice coil driven translation stage.
PCT/US1999/029351 1998-10-30 1999-12-10 Systems and methods for high performance scanning WO2001015193A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP2001519460A JP2003507777A (en) 1999-08-26 1999-12-10 Apparatus and method for performing high performance scanning
EP99964213A EP1218915A4 (en) 1999-08-26 1999-12-10 Systems and methods for high performance scanning
AU20501/00A AU773664B2 (en) 1998-10-30 1999-12-10 Systems and methods for high performance scanning

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US09/383,986 1999-08-26
US09/383,986 US6545264B1 (en) 1998-10-30 1999-08-26 Systems and methods for high performance scanning

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2001015193A1 true WO2001015193A1 (en) 2001-03-01

Family

ID=23515571

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1999/029351 WO2001015193A1 (en) 1998-10-30 1999-12-10 Systems and methods for high performance scanning

Country Status (3)

Country Link
EP (1) EP1218915A4 (en)
JP (1) JP2003507777A (en)
WO (1) WO2001015193A1 (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2002059677A1 (en) * 2001-01-26 2002-08-01 Tecan Trading Ag Optisches system und verfahren zum anregen und messen von fluoreszenz an oder in mit fluoreszensfarbstoffen behandelten proben
EP1298479A2 (en) * 2001-09-28 2003-04-02 Leica Microsystems Wetzlar GmbH Microscope having a contrast enhancing image pickup device
WO2003054610A1 (en) * 2001-10-25 2003-07-03 MAX-PLANCK-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der Wissenschaften e.V. Optical microscope comprising a displaceable objective
US7863831B2 (en) 2008-06-12 2011-01-04 3M Innovative Properties Company AC illumination apparatus with amplitude partitioning
WO2011098303A1 (en) * 2010-02-12 2011-08-18 Leica Microsystems Cms Gmbh Device for scanning an object, method for operating the device and scanning microscope
CN113074917A (en) * 2021-04-01 2021-07-06 南京信息工程大学 Micro-nano structure characteristic parameter measuring method and device based on Bessel beam defocusing scanning

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE102004058565B4 (en) * 2004-10-18 2022-04-21 Leica Microsystems Cms Gmbh scanning microscope
JP4905139B2 (en) * 2007-01-11 2012-03-28 株式会社ニコン Scanning laser microscope
CN104597590B (en) * 2014-12-30 2018-02-02 深圳先进技术研究院 A kind of super-resolution fluorescence light spectrum image-forming microscope

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5459325A (en) * 1994-07-19 1995-10-17 Molecular Dynamics, Inc. High-speed fluorescence scanner
US5631734A (en) * 1994-02-10 1997-05-20 Affymetrix, Inc. Method and apparatus for detection of fluorescently labeled materials
US5880465A (en) * 1996-05-31 1999-03-09 Kovex Corporation Scanning confocal microscope with oscillating objective lens
US5981956A (en) * 1996-05-16 1999-11-09 Affymetrix, Inc. Systems and methods for detection of labeled materials

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3013467A (en) * 1957-11-07 1961-12-19 Minsky Marvin Microscopy apparatus
JPH0527177A (en) * 1991-07-25 1993-02-05 Fuji Photo Film Co Ltd Scanning type microscope
US6545264B1 (en) * 1998-10-30 2003-04-08 Affymetrix, Inc. Systems and methods for high performance scanning

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5631734A (en) * 1994-02-10 1997-05-20 Affymetrix, Inc. Method and apparatus for detection of fluorescently labeled materials
US5459325A (en) * 1994-07-19 1995-10-17 Molecular Dynamics, Inc. High-speed fluorescence scanner
US5981956A (en) * 1996-05-16 1999-11-09 Affymetrix, Inc. Systems and methods for detection of labeled materials
US5880465A (en) * 1996-05-31 1999-03-09 Kovex Corporation Scanning confocal microscope with oscillating objective lens

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
See also references of EP1218915A4 *

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2002059677A1 (en) * 2001-01-26 2002-08-01 Tecan Trading Ag Optisches system und verfahren zum anregen und messen von fluoreszenz an oder in mit fluoreszensfarbstoffen behandelten proben
CH697814B1 (en) * 2001-01-26 2009-02-27 Tecan Trading Ag Optical system and method for exciting and measuring fluorescence on or in samples treated with fluorescent dyes.
EP1298479A2 (en) * 2001-09-28 2003-04-02 Leica Microsystems Wetzlar GmbH Microscope having a contrast enhancing image pickup device
EP1298479A3 (en) * 2001-09-28 2003-05-07 Leica Microsystems Wetzlar GmbH Microscope having a contrast enhancing image pickup device
WO2003054610A1 (en) * 2001-10-25 2003-07-03 MAX-PLANCK-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der Wissenschaften e.V. Optical microscope comprising a displaceable objective
US7863831B2 (en) 2008-06-12 2011-01-04 3M Innovative Properties Company AC illumination apparatus with amplitude partitioning
WO2011098303A1 (en) * 2010-02-12 2011-08-18 Leica Microsystems Cms Gmbh Device for scanning an object, method for operating the device and scanning microscope
US9036232B2 (en) 2010-02-12 2015-05-19 Leica Microsystems Cms Gmbh Device for scanning an object, method for operating the device and scanning microscope
CN113074917A (en) * 2021-04-01 2021-07-06 南京信息工程大学 Micro-nano structure characteristic parameter measuring method and device based on Bessel beam defocusing scanning

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JP2003507777A (en) 2003-02-25
EP1218915A4 (en) 2002-10-09
EP1218915A1 (en) 2002-07-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US6545264B1 (en) Systems and methods for high performance scanning
JP4022255B2 (en) High speed fluorescent scanner
US7615758B2 (en) Laser confocal microarray scanner
EP0733225B1 (en) Scanning beam laser microscope with wide range of magnification
US6586750B2 (en) High performance substrate scanning
US7567346B2 (en) System and method for multimode imaging
EP2663890B1 (en) Compact microscopy system and method
US6909540B2 (en) Microscope objective, microscope, and method for imaging a specimen
JP2002507763A (en) Wide field of view, high-speed scanning microscopy
JPH11503230A (en) Scanning probe and scanning energy combined microscope
JP2004507710A5 (en)
CN1300563C (en) Minisize three-dimensional self-scanning confocal microscope
US6580554B2 (en) Method for beam control in a scanning microscope, arrangement for beam control in a scanning microscope, and scanning microscope
JP2013533513A (en) Method and apparatus for acquiring a microscopic image of a sample structure
EP1218915A1 (en) Systems and methods for high performance scanning
CN1176367C (en) Automatic focus regulator for laser cofocal scanner
AU773664B2 (en) Systems and methods for high performance scanning
JP4163301B2 (en) Scanning cytometer
CN114994892A (en) Laser confocal microscopic imaging system and method
US20030184882A1 (en) Variable diaphragm, and confocal scanning microscope
JP2004361086A (en) Biomolecule analyzer
CN221446380U (en) Confocal rapid scanning imaging system based on piezoelectric stage control technology
CN2578803Y (en) Scanner for laser confocal biological chip
Wang et al. Detection apparatus for fluorescent microarray slides
JP2004333334A (en) Scanning probe microscope

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AE AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BY CA CH CN CR CU CZ DE DK DM EE ES FI GB GD GE GH GM HR HU ID IL IN IS JP KE KG KP KR KZ LC LK LR LS LT LU LV MA MD MG MK MN MW MX NO NZ PL PT RO RU SD SE SG SI SK SL TJ TM TR TT TZ UA UG US UZ VN YU ZA ZW

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): GH GM KE LS MW SD SL SZ TZ UG ZW AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GW ML MR NE SN TD TG

121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 1999964213

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 20501/00

Country of ref document: AU

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 1999964213

Country of ref document: EP

REG Reference to national code

Ref country code: DE

Ref legal event code: 8642

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 20501/00

Country of ref document: AU

WWW Wipo information: withdrawn in national office

Ref document number: 1999964213

Country of ref document: EP