scholarly journals A Novel Method to Gently Mix and Uniformly Suspend Particulates for Automated Assays

Author(s):  
Kristi K. Myers ◽  
John P. Herich ◽  
John E. Chavez ◽  
Kathryn G. Berkey ◽  
Alan J. Loi ◽  
...  

The SpinVessel system provides a methodology using pulsed radial flow to gently mix and uniformly suspend particulates (cells, magnetic beads, silica beads, and microcarrier beads) for automated assays. SpinVessels are well suited for aliquoting on robotic liquid handlers and with robotic reagent dispensers, as well as manually. The SpinVessel system combines two critical features: (1) special internal side fins and projections in the bottom of the vessels and (2) an instrument that quickly spins the vessels and repeatedly reverses the spin direction. This rapid reversing motion sends multiple pulses of fluid up the side walls of the SpinVessel, creating a circular radial flow pattern. We tested five different particulates and six different SpinVessels with volume capacities varying from 50 mL to 1200 mL. SpinVessels are compatible with either single-, 8-, 12-, 96-, or 384-channel pipettors or with siphon tubing on robotic reagent dispensers. Experiments have demonstrated high viability of cells and undamaged morphology of microcarrier beads even after hours of constant agitation. The uniformity of aliquots collected at various vertical depths and horizontally across the SpinVessels demonstrated that cells, magnetic beads, and silica beads were uniformly suspended throughout the height and breadth of the SpinVessels, and uniformity of samples was consistent from the beginning to the end of the aliquoting procedure. Only 5 min of mixing is required to resuspend settled particulates. This novel mixing methodology has many applications in laboratory automation where particulate aliquot uniformity and/or particulate integrity are important to automating assays.

2018 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 308-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antoine Fort ◽  
Michael D. Guiry ◽  
Ronan Sulpice
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 248 ◽  
pp. 03042
Author(s):  
Xiaoguang Li ◽  
Changhong Li ◽  
Chun Feng

Excavation of tunnel in rock mass refers to complex continuum-discontinuous processes. For capturing the damages of side walls and the supports of bolts/cables, different types of elements shall be used in the same framework. In this work, a novel method is proposed which couples block, particle, and bar elements for simulating the intact rock mass, the broken rock mass, and the supporting system respectively during tunnel excavation. Brittle Mohr-Coulomb fracture constitutive law and tensile fracture constitutive law are introduced for describing the contact behavior between different parts. Penalty springs are adopted for accounting the pre-stresses effects. Moreover, for assuring the proper transitions of forces and displacements between different types of elements, an interpolation coupling approach is presented. Cases considering different tunnel sections and supporting strategies are numerically studied, indicating the reliability of the method.


2007 ◽  
Vol 1108 (1) ◽  
pp. 203-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. PAVLOVIC ◽  
R. CHEN ◽  
A. M. KATS ◽  
M. F. CAVALLO ◽  
S. SACCOCIO ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
M.A. Gregory ◽  
G.P. Hadley

The insertion of implanted venous access systems for children undergoing prolonged courses of chemotherapy has become a common procedure in pediatric surgical oncology. While not permanently implanted, the devices are expected to remain functional until cure of the primary disease is assured. Despite careful patient selection and standardised insertion and access techniques, some devices fail. The most commonly encountered problems are colonisation of the device with bacteria and catheter occlusion. Both of these difficulties relate to the development of a biofilm within the port and catheter. The morphology and evolution of biofilms in indwelling vascular catheters is the subject of ongoing investigation. To date, however, such investigations have been confined to the examination of fragments of biofilm scraped or sonicated from sections of catheter. This report describes a novel method for the extraction of intact biofilms from indwelling catheters.15 children with Wilm’s tumour and who had received venous implants were studied. Catheters were removed because of infection (n=6) or electively at the end of chemotherapy.


Author(s):  
D.M. Vanderwalker

There is a fundamental interest in electrochemical fusion of deuterium in palladium and titanium since its supposed discovery by Fleischmann and Pons. Their calorimetric experiments reveal that a large quantity of heat is released by Pd after hours in a cell, suggesting fusion occurs. They cannot explain fusion by force arguments, nor can it be an exothermic reaction on the formation of deuterides because a smaller quantity of heat is released. This study examines reactions of deuterium in titanium.Both iodide titanium and 99% pure titanium samples were encapsulated in vacuum tubes, annealed for 2h at 800 °C. The Ti foils were charged with deuterium in a D2SO4 D2O solution at a potential of .45V with respect to a calomel reference junction. Samples were ion beam thinned for transmission electron microscopy. The TEM was performed on the JEOL 200CX.The structure of D charged titanium is α-Ti with hexagonal and fee deuterides.


1998 ◽  
Vol 62 (8) ◽  
pp. 584-586
Author(s):  
GH Bauman ◽  
TJ Creamer ◽  
LA Cohen ◽  
JF Hasler
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 205-206
Author(s):  
Ramya Punati ◽  
Serena Cardillo ◽  
Jeffrey Kroopnick ◽  
Susan Mandel

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