Hoang Shane, Shehada Mabel, Karydis Konstantinos, Brisk Philip, Grover William H
Department of Bioengineering, University of California, Riverside, CA, USA.
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California, Riverside, CA, USA.
Ann Biomed Eng. 2025 Jan;53(1):207-216. doi: 10.1007/s10439-024-03628-4. Epub 2024 Oct 8.
Many biomedical devices are powered and controlled by electrical components. These electronics add to the cost of a device (possibly making the device too expensive for use in resource-limited or point-of-care settings) and can also render the device unsuitable for use in some environments (for example, high-humidity areas such as incubators where condensation could cause electrical short circuits, ovens where electronic components may overheat, or explosive or flammable environments where electric sparks could cause serious accidents). In this work, we show that pneumatic logic can be used to power and control biomedical devices without the need for electricity or electric components. Originally developed for controlling microfluidic "lab-on-a-chip" devices, these circuits use microfluidic valves like transistors in air-powered logic "circuits." We show that a modification to the basic valve design-adding additional air channels in parallel through the valve-creates a "high-flow" valve that is suitable for controlling a broad range of bioinstruments, not just microfluidics. As a proof-of-concept, we developed a high-flow pneumatic oscillator that uses five high-flow Boolean NOT gates arranged in a loop. Powered by a single constant vacuum source, the oscillator provides five out-of-phase pneumatic outputs that switch between vacuum and atmospheric pressure every 1.3 s. Additionally, a user can adjust the frequency of the oscillator by squeezing a bellows attached to one of the pneumatic outputs. We then used the pneumatic oscillator to power a low-cost 3D-printed laboratory rocker/shaker commonly used to keep blood products, cell cultures, and other heterogeneous samples in suspension. Our air-powered rocker costs around $12 USD to build and performs as well as conventional electronic rockers that cost $1000 USD or more. This is the first of many biomedical devices that can be made cheaper and safer using pneumatic logic.
许多生物医学设备由电气元件供电和控制。这些电子元件增加了设备成本(可能使设备在资源有限或即时护理环境中使用过于昂贵),还可能使设备不适用于某些环境(例如,高湿度区域如孵化器,冷凝可能导致电气短路;烤箱,电子元件可能过热;或爆炸或易燃环境,电火花可能导致严重事故)。在这项工作中,我们表明气动逻辑可用于为生物医学设备供电和控制,而无需电力或电气元件。这些电路最初是为控制微流控“芯片实验室”设备而开发的,它们在气动逻辑“电路”中使用类似晶体管的微流控阀。我们表明,对基本阀设计进行修改——在阀中并行添加额外的空气通道——可创建一个“高流量”阀,该阀适用于控制广泛的生物仪器,而不仅仅是微流控设备。作为概念验证,我们开发了一种高流量气动振荡器,它使用五个高流量布尔非门以环形排列。由单个恒定真空源供电,该振荡器提供五个异相气动输出,每1.3秒在真空和大气压力之间切换。此外,用户可以通过挤压连接到其中一个气动输出的波纹管来调节振荡器的频率。然后,我们使用该气动振荡器为一种低成本的3D打印实验室摇床供电,该摇床常用于使血液制品、细胞培养物和其他异质样品保持悬浮状态。我们的气动摇床制造成本约为12美元,性能与成本超过1000美元的传统电子摇床相当。这是众多可使用气动逻辑使其更便宜、更安全的生物医学设备中的第一个。