专利摘要:
According to one aspect, the present disclosure relates to a device for characterizing particles dispersed in a liquid medium (30) comprising a fibrated light emission source (200), a fibered optical detector (300) and a measurement probe (100) intended to be hermetically dipped in the liquid medium (30). The measuring probe (100) comprises: a confinement tube for sealingly passing through at least one wall of the probe and adapted to receive a sample of the liquid medium, as well as an optical measuring head comprising a focusing optics for focusing in the confinement tube a light beam of illumination, and a collection optics for collecting towards the optical detector (300) a beam of light backscattered by the dispersed particles. The characterization device also comprises a processing unit (400) adapted for characterizing the particles from the backscattered light beam.
公开号:FR3048240A1
申请号:FR1651675
申请日:2016-02-29
公开日:2017-09-01
发明作者:Boris Pedrono;David Jacob
申请人:Cordouan Tech;
IPC主号:
专利说明:

Device for characterizing particles dispersed in a liquid medium
STATE OF THE ART
Technical field of the invention
The present disclosure relates to characterization devices of particles dispersed in a liquid medium, as well as methods of characterization using such devices. The characterization methods apply in particular to the monitoring of the synthesis of nanoparticles in liquid way.
State of the art
Nanoparticles are used in many industries such as the pharmaceutical industry, the cosmetics industry, the materials industry, the electronics industry, etc.
It is known in particular to synthesize the nanoparticles in liquid way, in a reactor, with stirring. Synthetic methods may include, for example, formulation and emulsification, nucleation, growth and assembly of nano-objects, nanoemulsion polymerization or encapsulation. The reactor is generally a hermetically sealed container, which may be opaque, for example stainless steel, or transparent, with an internal volume generally greater than 100 ml. The reactor is generally equipped with a stirrer and measuring probes, for example for the measurement of temperature, viscosity, pH or conductivity. Mechanical and continuous stirring of the reaction medium may be provided for example by the stirrer, at a controlled temperature. Conversely, the reactor can also be used for the degradation of materials under the influence of an environmental parameter (temperature, pressure, illumination, presence of an enzyme, etc.) or the separation of species. During the reaction, parameters such as viscosity, turbidity, defined as the optical transparency of the reaction medium, or the concentration of the particles are caused to evolve.
To optimize the monitoring of the reaction, it is sought to control certain parameters of the nanoparticles during the reaction, such as for example their size.
Among the techniques for characterizing nanoparticles, or more generally particles of micrometric or inferior size, there is known for example dynamic light scattering (or DLS according to the abbreviation of the English expression "Dynamic Light Scattering") for size characterization, or inelastic scattering, for example of the Raman type, or fluorescence, Raman scattering and fluorescence being suitable for the analysis of the molecular composition and the external structure. These techniques based on light scattering require taking, during the reaction or at the end of the reaction, a sample of the reaction medium. The sample is often a representative volume of the liquid medium, taken for example by means of a pipette, a peristaltic pump, a valve / valve assembly or any other device independent of the reactor. The sample thus taken is brought to an analytical instrument, outside the reactor, to be characterized.
However, taking the sample and routing it to the analytical instrument causes a loss of volume because the sample taken is a lost volume. In addition, sampling and sample transport make the operation difficult and empirical characterization because, not only, the reaction conditions can be disturbed by the sampling but, in addition, there is always a shift between the samples. characteristics of the particles being analyzed and those of the particles in the reactor since the particles in the reactor continue to evolve throughout the sampling and analysis period of the sample. Moreover, repeated sampling leads to significant losses of the reaction medium.
To overcome these difficulties, methods that directly enable the characterization of particles in a liquid medium in the reactor have been proposed. The applicant has thus developed a dynamic light scattering analysis probe, also called DLS probe (VASCO FLEX ©), comprising a fiber light source and a fiber optic detector, and for characterizing the particle size dispersed in a liquid medium, through a transparent wall of the reactor. The light source, for example a laser source deported by optical fiber, sends a light beam to the solution to be analyzed. The optical detector allows detection at a given angle of light backscattered by the particles in solution. Backscattered light processing allows measurement of particle size.
However, with such a DLS probe, the measurement can be disturbed by the movements of the solvent in the reactor due to the stirring of the solution implemented during the reaction, resulting in an additional Doppler contribution to the movement of the particles to be qualified by the reaction. dynamic analysis of the backscattered light.
One possibility to overcome these measurement artefacts in moving media could be to compensate for the additional Doppler contribution, for example by using several DLS probes. These methods would however be complex to implement and expensive when several DLS probes are implemented.
In the article by M. de Kanter et al. (Enabling the measurement of particle sizes in colloidal suspensions by embedding dynamic light scattering in an automated probe head, Measurement 80 (2016), 92-98), it is proposed a device for characterizing the particle size in suspension at by means of a probe intended to be immersed in the liquid medium and which makes it possible to overcome the movement of the solvent. The device includes a measurement probe comprising a compartment for isolating a liquid sample and a DLS optical head for characterizing the particle size of the isolated sample in the compartment. More specifically, the compartment is formed by a three-pointed star driven by a stepper motor, which allows, between each measurement, to introduce or to evacuate a liquid sample inside or outside the compartment.
Compared to the aforementioned methods which would implement several DLS probes, the device of M. de Kanter et al. has the advantage of greater simplicity with a single DLS optical head. However, the described device requires the presence of a motor in the probe to be immersed in the liquid medium, which causes a relatively large size of the probe and sealing constraints to protect the motor. Furthermore, the DSL optical head is in direct contact with the liquid sample, which requires cleaning the DSL optical head between two applications and may result in pollution of the DSL optical head during the reaction.
An object of the present description is to propose particle characterization devices dispersed in a liquid medium allowing a reliable characterization of the particles directly in the reaction medium, and in particular their size, by overcoming the drawbacks identified in the art. prior.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to a first aspect, the present description relates to a light scattering characterization device of dispersed particles in a liquid medium, comprising a fiber-type light emission source, a fiberoptic optical detector and a measurement probe intended to be dipped in such a manner. hermetic in the liquid medium. The measuring probe comprises a containment tube intended to be arranged inside said measuring probe and to pass through at least one wall of the probe in a sealed manner to receive, at one end, a sample of the liquid medium; and an optical measuring head to be arranged within said measuring probe, including focusing optics for focusing in the confining tube of a light beam of illumination from the light emission source and collection optics for the collection towards the optical detector of a light beam backscattered by the particles dispersed in the confinement tube. The characterization device according to the first aspect further comprises a processing unit adapted for characterizing the particles from the backscattered light beam measured by the optical detector.
In the present description, the term particles comprises objects of micrometric or sub-micrometric size. Among the particles, the nanoparticles are defined as nano-objects, half of which, taken from a group of 100 nano-objects, have at least one dimension less than 100 nm. The particles and nanoparticles may comprise metal oxides, polymers, nano-objects functionalized with active molecules, crystals, molecular assemblies, biological viruses, biological macromolecules (eg proteins), quantum dots, nanodroplets (by example oil in water or water in oil), etc. Particles and nanoparticles dispersed in a liquid medium can form colloidal suspensions when the dispersion is stable. All of the devices and methods of characterization described in the present application apply as well to the characterization of particles as nanoparticles.
Moreover, different physical mechanisms can be implemented to generate a backscattered light beam; it may be for example quasi-elastic light scattering, inelastic light scattering, fluorescence, etc., each of these mechanisms for characterizing different parameters of the particles.
More precisely, the quasi-elastic scattering of the light results from the scattering of the illumination beam by the particles in motion in the medium of the liquid, with a negligible modification of the wavelength. It allows in particular the characterization of the particle size. It is measured by a so-called DDL (Dynamic Light Scattering) technique, otherwise known as Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS) or QELS (abbreviation of Anglo-Saxon expression "Quasi Elastic Light Scattering") or intensity variation spectroscopy. The DLS includes determining the time-intensity variations of the backscattered light beam at the wavelength of the illumination beam, in a given direction, for example a non-collinear direction with the direction of the illumination beam.
The inelastic scattering of light results from the scattering of the illumination beam by the particles, with change of wavelength. It results for example from the Raman effect. It allows in particular the characterization of particles by their molecular composition and their external structure (conformation). It is measured by determining the intensity of the backscattered light beam at at least one wavelength of the useful optical spectrum different from the excitation wavelength.
Compared with the characterization devices known from the prior art, the device according to the present description not only allows a characterization of the particles in a moving medium, thanks to the confinement of the sample to be analyzed from the rest of the liquid medium, but also allows to maintain a perfect seal between the liquid medium to be analyzed and the optical head.
The confinement tube is transparent, at least at the wavelength of the illumination beam and at the wavelength of the backscattered light that is to be detected. According to one or more embodiments, it is a tube of transparent material in the visible, for example a glass tube, quartz, or plastic low scattering.
The containment tube is for example a cylindrical tube, having a section of any shape (round, polygonal, etc.). The containment tube may also have a variable section. It can be straight or have any shape (curve, with straight sections and one or more angles, etc.).
The containment tube comprises at least one open end through which the liquid sample is intended to enter when the containment tube is mounted through a wall of the probe.
According to one or more embodiments, the containment tube is interchangeable, allowing a direct replacement of the tube between two implementations of the characterization device with different liquid media.
According to one or more embodiments, the containment tube has a standard shape and size to facilitate its interchangeability; for example the containment tube is cylindrical, of round section.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the volume of the confinement tube is less than 500 μL, advantageously less than 300 μL, advantageously less than 100 μL. The sample volume necessary for the analysis is in fact reduced, typically less than 300 μL, or even less than 100 μL. A low volume sampling tube limits the size of the measuring probe.
For example, a cylindrical sampling tube with an internal diameter of less than 2 mm, an outside diameter of less than 3 mm and a height of less than 30 mm makes it possible to form a total volume of less than 375 μL for a useful sample volume of less than 250 μL. .
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the measuring probe has a substantially cylindrical outer casing with a diameter less than or equal to 1 "(2.54 cm) and a length of 10 cm to 20 cm for example, the length depending on the reactor size.
According to one or more embodiments, the measurement probe has a substantially cylindrical outer casing with a diameter less than half the internal diameter of the measuring probe, typically a diameter of less than 12 mm.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the characterization device further comprises a controlled suction device adapted to draw the sample of liquid medium in the confinement tube and discharge the sample of liquid medium out of the confinement tube. The controlled suction device allows the introduction and the evacuation of the liquid sample, in particular when the confinement tube is intended to pass through a wall of the measurement probe by only one of its ends.
According to one or more embodiments, the suction device is a vacuum suction device, which can be installed outside the measuring probe, away from the containment tube, to limit the size of the probe measurement. For example, the controlled suction device comprises a syringe, a vacuum pump, a peristaltic pump, a suction bulb.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the confinement tube is intended to pass through a bottom wall of the measurement probe in a substantially vertical manner, facilitating its sealing insertion through the wall of the measurement probe. Although the shape of the tube may be arbitrary, according to one or more embodiments, the containment tube is straight, which facilitates its interchangeability.
According to one or more embodiments, and particularly when the confinement tube comprises at least one substantially vertical section, the optical measuring head comprises a deflection element of the illumination beam towards the confinement tube and the light beam backscattered to collection optics.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the deflection element comprises a separating plate, a mirror or a total reflection prism.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the deflection element comprises a wavelength selective separator (for example a dichroic plate) for the separation of light beams and backscattered in the case of analysis of diffusion with change wavelength.
According to one or more embodiments, the deflection element is movable, allowing adjustment of the focusing distance of the illumination beam in the confinement tube.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the confinement tube is intended to pass through a side wall of the measurement probe sealingly at its two ends. This exemplary embodiment notably makes it possible to dispense with a suction device by using the flux present in the liquid medium to fill the confinement tube.
In this example, although the containment tube may have any shape and orientation within the measurement probe, it may be straight to facilitate its interchangeability. Moreover, its inclination can be adapted to facilitate its filling. According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the confinement tube is intended to be mounted substantially horizontally inside the measurement probe.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the focusing optics and the collection optics comprise a variable-focus lens enabling the focusing distance of the illumination beam to be adjusted in the confinement tube.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the focusing optics and the collection optics are formed of the same optics adapted to receive the light and backscattered light beams.
According to one or more embodiments, when the light beams and backscattered light are intended, in operation, to propagate in non-collinear directions, said beams can pass through the common focusing optics and collection in two different locations optics, one of the beams can for example cross the optics in its axis.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the focusing and collection optics comprise a variable-focus lens allowing adjustment of the focusing distance of the illumination beam in the confinement tube.
According to a second aspect, the present description relates to a method for characterizing particles dispersed in a liquid medium by means of a characterization device according to the first aspect.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the characterization method comprises the following steps: (a1) immersion of the measurement probe in the liquid medium; (a2) introducing a sample of the liquid medium into the containment tube; (a3) focusing a lighting beam emitted by the light emission source into the sample; (a4) detecting the backscattered light beam by means of the optical detector and characterizing the particles; and (a5) releasing the sample into the liquid medium.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the sample volume introduced is less than 300 .mu.L, advantageously less than 100 .mu.L.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the backscattered light beam detection and particle characterization step (a4) comprises backscattered light dynamic analysis (DLS) for characterization of the particle size.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the step (a4) for detecting the backscattered light beam and for characterizing the particles comprises the static analysis of the backscattered light at a wavelength different from the wavelength of the beam lighting; this type of analysis makes it possible, for example, to characterize the molecular composition and / or the external structure of the particles by analyzing Raman scattering or fluorescence.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the operation (a2) for introducing the sample of the liquid medium comprises the controlled aspiration of the liquid medium into the confinement tube, by means of a suction device.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, when the confinement tube tightly crosses a side wall of the measurement probe by its two ends, the operation (a2) for introducing the sample of the liquid medium comprises: rotating the measuring probe in a first position so that the confinement tube is in a direction substantially parallel to a flow in the liquid medium, allowing the filling of the containment tube; and - once the containment tube is filled, rotating the measuring probe in a second position so that the confinement tube is in a direction substantially perpendicular to the flow in the liquid medium.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the method of characterization further comprises adapting the focusing distance of the illumination beam in the sample as a function of the concentration and / or the absorption of the particles of the liquid medium.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the characterization method according to the present description is applied to monitoring the synthesis of nanoparticles. It can include the repetition of the operations (a2) to (a5) during the synthesis of the nanoparticles.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS Other advantages and characteristics of the invention will appear on reading the description, illustrated by the following figures: FIG. 1 represents a general schematic view of an example of a device for characterizing particles dispersed in a liquid medium, according to the present description; FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C are diagrammatic views of an exemplary measurement probe of a characterization device according to the present description, during different phases of a method for characterizing particles dispersed in a liquid medium, according to FIG. present description; FIGS. 3A, 3B and 3C show schematic views of exemplary embodiments of a measurement probe of a characterization device according to the present description; FIGS. 4A, 4B, 4C and 4D show diagrammatic side and top views of another example of a measurement probe of a characterization device according to the present description, during different phases of a characterization process according to FIG. present description; FIGS. 5A, 5B and 5C show schematic views of other exemplary embodiments of a measurement probe of a characterization device according to the present description.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
In the figures, the identical elements are identified by the same references. For questions of readability of the figures, the size scales between elements represented are not respected.
FIG. 1 schematically represents a reactor 20 containing a liquid medium 30 in which the characterization device 10 according to the present description is partially immersed. The liquid medium contained in the reactor 20 contains particles dispersed in the liquid medium, for example particles in suspension, and may, for certain applications, be kept stirring by an agitator 40. The stirrer 40 may be of mechanical type or magnetic; it may be driven by a mechanical axis, or by a magnetic device arranged outside said reactor, and provide continuous or intermittent agitation of the liquid medium.
The characterization device 10 comprises a measurement probe 100 adapted to be immersed at least partly in the liquid medium 30, as well as a light emission source 200 and an optical detector 300.
The light emission source 200, hereinafter referred to as the light source, can be for example a laser source at a given wavelength. The light source 200 is able to emit a light beam, for example a laser beam, which is transmitted by optical fiber in the measurement probe 100 to illuminate a sample of the liquid medium. The light source 200 is called "fiber".
The optical detector 300, hereinafter simply called detector, is able to detect a light beam retrodiffected by a sample of the liquid medium; the backscattered light beam, or "backscattered beam" is collected by the measurement probe 100 and transmitted by optical fiber from the measurement probe 100 to the detector 300 which is said "fiber". The detector 300 may for example be an optical photon counting detector, of the photomultiplier tube or avalanche photodiode type.
The optical fibers optically connecting, on the one hand, the light source 200 and the measurement probe 100 and, on the other hand, the detector 300 and said measurement probe 100 may comprise, for example, monomode or multimode fibers, or packets of monomode or multimode fibers, for example polarization-maintaining fibers.
The detector 300 is electrically connected to a processing unit 400 which performs the characterization of the particles present in a sample of the liquid medium from the backscattered light beam detected by the detector 300.
In the case, for example, of dynamic scattered light analysis (DLS), the processing unit analyzes the variations in the intensity of the backscattered light beam over time in order to deduce size distributions therefrom. The processing unit may comprise, for example, a correlation subunit and a computational subunit for calculating the particle size. In some examples, the correlation subunit can be performed by a specific correlator.
In the case of static analysis of the scattered light, for example by inelastic light scattering, the processing unit can determine from the optical spectrum of the backscattered light beam, or from the intensity of the scattered light beam. at least one wavelength of the spectrum, the molecular composition and the external structure of the particles.
The characteristics of the particles obtained by characterization, for example their size, can then be displayed on a display 500 connected to the processing unit 400.
An example of a measurement probe 100 is shown schematically in FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C. In this example, the measurement probe 100 comprises a sealed enclosure 110, advantageously chemically inert, inside which are mounted a containment tube 150 and an optical measuring head 140. The enclosure 110 of the measurement probe 100 is in this example closed. Optical measuring head 140 is connected to light source 200 and detector 300, respectively, by optical fibers 120 and 130.
The containment tube 150 is adapted to receive a sample E of the liquid medium 30. The containment tube 150 is for example cylindrical, with any cross section, for example round or polygonal. The section of the confinement tube has a transverse dimension preferably between 0.1 and 5 mm. The confinement tube has an optically transparent wall, advantageously chemically inert, for example glass.
The containment tube 150 comprises at least one open end, said open end, for sealingly pass through a wall of the measuring probe, and through which the liquid of the medium 30 can be introduced into the tube. In the case of a confinement tube with only one emergent end, the liquid is also caused to evacuate by said end. In some embodiments, both ends of the containment tube may be open, as will be described later; in this case, the liquid of the medium 30 can be introduced into the tube at one end and evacuate through the other end. Thus, the opening end (s) of the confinement tube opens (s) in the liquid medium 30 while the central portion of the confinement tube is sealed in the measurement probe.
The containment tube 150 thus forms a closed measuring chamber in which a sample of the liquid medium can be isolated from said liquid medium to be characterized without undergoing any stirring of the liquid medium. This sample being drawn directly into the liquid medium and kept in confinement in the confinement tube, it can be analyzed, or characterized, in real time, without opening the reactor or stopping the stirring and without interrupting the reaction of the liquid medium. .
Moreover, since the chamber 110 of the measurement probe is sealed, the optical measuring head remains perfectly isolated from any liquid projection coming from the liquid medium 30 or the sample to be analyzed. It is thus not necessary to clean it between two characterizations of different liquid media.
In certain exemplary embodiments, the confinement tube 150 may be interchangeable, that is to say that the tube in the measurement probe is changed at each new characterization of a new liquid medium. The interchangeability of the containment tube allows easy maintenance and maintenance of the device.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the characterization device comprises an optical trap 170 schematically represented by a black rectangle in FIG. 2B; the optical trap absorbs the light transmitted by the sample to avoid parasitic reflections that may interfere with the analysis of the backscattered light.
According to an exemplary embodiment illustrated in FIGS. 2A to 2C and 3A to 3C, the confinement tube has a single emergent end 152 which passes through a wall of the enclosure 110 of the measurement probe. In contrast, the upper end 154 of the containment tube 150 can be closed. The upper end 154 is connected to a suction device 160 allowing suction and evacuation of the liquid sample, respectively, in and out of the containment tube 150. In one or more embodiments, the device Suction is a vacuum suction device, which has the advantage of being simple and reliable and can be installed outside the measuring probe, away from the containment tube. The suction device 160 may be, for example, a vacuum pump, a syringe or any other device able on the one hand, to suck a predetermined quantity of liquid into the containment tube and, on the other hand, to purge the sample by evacuating the liquid out of the tube.
FIGS. 2A to 2C illustrate, according to an example, the steps of a method for characterizing particles dispersed in the liquid medium 30. Characterization of the particles is obtained by analysis of the light backscattered by the sample of liquid confined in the confinement tube 150. The liquid sample to be analyzed can be obtained according to the process shown diagrammatically in FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C: FIG. 2A: The measurement probe 100 is immersed in the reactor 20 and a sample of liquid E is introduced into the containment tube 150 from the lower end 152 of said tube, by a suction generated by the suction device 160; the suction is controlled so that the height of the sample in the containment tube is sufficient for the measurement zone to be in the sample; - Figure 2B: the sample E is confined in the confinement tube 150. The analysis of the backscattered light beam can then be performed to characterize the particles present in the sample; FIG. 2C: once the characterization of the particles contained in the liquid sample E has been completed, the liquid sample is discharged out of the confinement tube 150, thanks to the suction device 160.
A new sample of liquid can then be introduced into the containment tube 150 for a new characterization. Several characterizations can thus succeed one another, making it possible to provide an evolution, in real time, of the characteristics of the particles of the liquid medium. Successive characterizations can be performed until the measured characteristics of the particles correspond to predetermined characteristics. In the case of a synthesis of nanoparticles, for example, the characterizations can follow one another until the measured size of the nanoparticles corresponds to the desired size. In the case of a particle separation, the characterizations may follow one another until the separation of the particles is obtained.
FIGS. 3A-3C illustrate in greater detail examples of measurement probes 100 in which the confinement tube 150 has at least a substantially vertical portion. By "substantially vertical" portion, is meant a portion that extends in a direction more or less parallel to the length of the chamber 110 of the measuring probe, that is to say in a general direction Z, in the reference (Χ, Υ, Ζ) of Figure 2A, with a deflection angle relative to the vertical less than +/- 0.5 °.
The containment tube may for example have bent portions and have a through end which passes through a side wall of the measuring probe. According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the confinement tube is a straight tube, arranged substantially vertically in the measurement probe, in this example substantially parallel to the optical fiber of the focusing optics, and has an open end 152 which through a bottom wall 112 of the enclosure 110 of the measuring probe, as shown in Figures 2A to 2C. This particular arrangement makes it possible in particular to reduce the quantity of volume taken and allows an optimization of the space inside the measurement probe, which makes it possible to reduce its external volume.
The measurement probe 100 illustrated in FIGS. 3A to 3C comprises an optical measurement head 140 and a confinement tube 150 of which only a central, vertical portion is represented here.
In the example of FIG. 3A, the optical measuring head 140 comprises a light emission head 220 for the emission of a lighting beam Fe, the light emission head 220 receiving the light beam emitted by the light source 200 through the optical fiber 120. The light emitting head 220 may be formed simply of the end of the optical fiber 120 or include a shaping optics (not shown). The optical measuring head 140 also comprises a reception head 330 for receiving the backscattered light beam Fr and the transmission to the detector 300 by virtue of the optical fiber 130. The reception head can, once again, comprise an optical arrangement for form for sending the backscattered light beam Fr to the input face of the optical fiber 130.
The optical measuring head 140 also includes focusing optics 143 for focusing the illumination beam Fe in the sample E, a collection optic 144 for collecting the beam of light Fr backscattered by the particles dispersed in the sample E and a deflection element 148 which in this example makes it possible to deflect the light and backscattered light beams in order respectively to illuminate the sample and to collect the backscattered light in the case where the confinement tube is arranged substantially parallel to the optical axes of the focusing optics and / or collection. The focus optics 143 and the collection optics 144 may comprise a lens or a group of lenses. The deflection element 148 may comprise a mirror, a glass slide or a return prism, for example a total reflection prism, as illustrated in the example of FIG. 3 A.
As represented by the arrows in FIG. 3A, the deflection element 148 reflects the illumination beam Fe towards a measurement zone M of the confinement tube 150. At the focusing point of the illumination beam Fe in the sample of liquid E, the light received by the sample is scattered by the particles dispersed in the liquid sample, whether a so-called quasi-elastic diffusion of light (without change in wavelength) or an inelastic light scattering for example by Raman effect (at a longer wavelength). The backscattered light beam Fr is defined by the beam of light reflected by the deflection element 148 and collected by the collection optics 144. It is thus possible by arranging the relative positions of the lighting optics 143 and the collection optics 144. as well as their optical axes to adjust the angle between the illumination beam and the backscattered light beam. Thus, in the example of FIGS. 3A and 3B, the optical axes of the illumination optics 143 and the collection optics 144 have a non-zero angle making it possible to analyze the backscattered light in a non-collinear direction with the direction of the illumination beam. For example, the backscattered light beam has an angle of between 90 ° and 175 ° in the case where the quasi-elastic light scattering (DLS) is measured, this angle making it possible to avoid paraxial parasitic reflections. and maintain a self-beat interference mode (and not a 2-wave beat).
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the optical head may comprise a wavelength-selective separator for the separation of light beams and backscattered in the case of wavelength change diffusion analysis. For example, it may be a dichroic blade arranged on the deflection element 148. It is also possible to provide a fluorescence rejection filter, of the pass-band filter type, to cut the fluorescence light when seeking to characterize another type of diffusion, for example Raman scattering.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the deflection element 148 is movable in translation along a direction parallel to the optical axis of the focusing and / or collection optics. This mobility of the deflection element 148 can be obtained, for example, by means of a sliding mechanical device 146, such as a pair of slides mounted on the wall 141 of the optical measuring head 140 and between which is fixed the deflection element 148. The mobility of the deflection element 148 allows an adjustment of the working distance d between the measurement zone M (where the illumination beam Fe is focused in the liquid sample E) and the inner face 149 of the wall of the containment tube. It is thus possible to adapt the location of the measurement zone M to the concentration and absorption of the sample, related to the particle concentration of the liquid sample. The angle formed by the two beams Fe and Fr can then be recalculated by the processing unit 400.
Thus, in an exemplary embodiment, the working distance can be adjusted in a range from 0 to 5 mm by translation of the deflection element 148. In the case of a particle synthesis operation for example, the distance d work may be chosen larger for example at the beginning of the synthesis operation, when the liquid is little concentrated in particles (Figure 3A) and may be chosen shorter for example at the end of the synthesis operation, when the liquid medium is very concentrated (Figure 3B). In other words, when the solution to be analyzed is turbid, the working distance is chosen short, that is to say that the measurement zone M is chosen close to the wall 149 of the containment tube 150 so that the beam Fr of backscattered light are not impaired by the multicast due to the turbidity of the liquid present between the measurement zone M and the wall of the containment tube and the sufficient detected signal. These exemplary embodiments therefore allow adaptability to all liquid media, whether they are diluted or partially turbid or opalescent. The adjustment of the working distance d can also be obtained by means of lighting optics 143 and 144 zoom lens collection.
FIG. 3C illustrates a variant of FIGS. 3A and 3B in which the focusing optics and the collection optics are formed by a common optic 142, the other elements being unchanged. Thus, the common optic 142 provides both the focusing of the illumination beam Fe and the collection of the backscattered light beam Fr.
According to an exemplary embodiment illustrated in FIG. 3C, the emission optical 220 and reception 330 heads are arranged in such a way that the illumination beam Fe and the backscattered light beam Fr are incidentally offset on the common optic 142 , one of the two beams being incident for example on the optical axis of the common optic 142 and the other eccentric. This configuration makes it possible to detect, with a common optic 142, a beam Fr of backscattered light non-collinear with the illumination beam. This configuration also makes it possible to detect collinear Fe light beams and Collinear backscattered light beams using for example a polarimetric type optical isolator system, which makes it possible to separate the polarizations.
FIGS. 4A to 4D illustrate another exemplary embodiment of a measurement probe of a characterization device according to the present description in which the confinement tube 150 has two open ends in the side wall 114 of the enclosure 110 of the measuring probe 100.
In the example illustrated in FIGS. 4A-4D, the confinement tube 150 is straight and arranged in the measurement probe in a substantially horizontal manner, that is to say having an angle of inclination with the horizontal of ± 0.5 °. However, it could have other shapes and / or have a non-zero inclination with the horizontal direction.
In the example illustrated in FIGS. 4A to 4D, the filling of the confinement tube 150 can be obtained by positioning the measurement probe so that the confinement tube 150 is in the direction of the flow of liquid generated by the agitator 40 and schematized by double arrows in FIGS. 4A-4D. This positioning of the measuring probe corresponds to a first position shown in a sectional side view in FIG. 4A and shown in a sectional top view in FIG. 4B. Once the liquid sample E has been introduced into the confinement tube 150, the measuring probe is angularly displaced in a second position so that the confinement tube is not in the direction of the flow of liquid generated by the stirrer. As shown in Figures 4C and 4D, the second position of the measurement probe may be approximately perpendicular to the first position. In this second position, the sample of liquid inside the containment tube is isolated from the agitation of the liquid medium 30 because, the open end 156 of the tube being perpendicular to the direction of the flow of the liquid, the liquid to the inside of the tube no longer undergoes the movement of the liquid medium. When the characterization of the sample E is complete, the confined sample can be evacuated from the containment tube by moving the measuring probe back into the first position, the liquid flow of the medium 30 pushing the liquid confined out of the tube of containment. A new liquid sample can then be analyzed. This embodiment has the advantage of not requiring any material to suck and evacuate the liquid in / out of the containment tube.
As explained above, several characterizations can follow one another, providing an evolution, in real time, of the characteristics of the particles of the liquid medium. An operator can, for example, monitor in real time the result of the reaction in the liquid medium since the reactants are brought into contact until the end of the reaction.
Of course, in some embodiments (not shown in the figures), only one end 156 of the containment tube 150 can be opened and pass through a side wall 114 of the chamber 110 of the measuring probe to open into the liquid medium 30. In these exemplary embodiments, the non-emergent end 158 is connected to a suction device allowing suction and evacuation of the liquid sample E, respectively in and out of the containment tube 150, as explained previously with reference to FIGS. 2A-2C.
According to one or more exemplary embodiments, the characterization device comprises, as in the preceding examples, an optical trap 170 schematically represented by a black rectangle in FIG. 4A or 4C; the optical trap absorbs the light transmitted by the sample to avoid parasitic reflections that may interfere with the analysis of the backscattered light.
FIGS. 5A, 5B and 5C represent examples of a measurement probe 100 of a device according to the present description, in which the confinement tube comprises at least one horizontal portion or slightly inclined portion (inclination less than ± 20 °) to inside the measuring probe. It may be a horizontal straight tube, as shown in FIGS. 4A to 4D, or a confinement tube opening on a bottom wall of the measurement probe enclosure but having a horizontal section or weakly inclined.
In this configuration, it is no longer necessary to provide a deflection element for the optical measuring head 140. In other words, the confinement tube 150, of which only the central portion is shown here, is located below the head optical measurement 140, that is to say facing focusing optics 143 and collection 144.
Thus, in the example of FIGS. 5A and 5B, the elements of the optical measuring head are similar to those of FIGS. 3A and 3B, with the difference that there is no deflection element 148.
More precisely, as represented by the arrows in FIG. 5A, the focusing system 143 focuses the illumination beam Fe towards a measurement zone M of the confinement tube 150. At the focusing point of the illumination beam Fe in the sample of liquid E, the light received by the sample is diffused by the particles dispersed in the liquid sample, either a so-called quasi-elastic scattering of light or inelastic scattering for example by Raman effect. The backscattered light beam Fr is defined by the backscattered light beam collected by the collection optics 144. It is thus possible by arranging the relative positions of the lighting optics 143 and the collection optics 144 and their optical axes to adjust the light. angle between the illumination beam and the backscattered light beam. Thus, in the example of FIGS. 5A and 5B, as in the example of FIGS. 3A and 3B, the optical axes of the lighting optics 143 and the collection optics 144 have a non-zero angle making it possible to analyze the backscattered light in a non-directional direction. collinear with the direction of the illumination beam.
As in the previous example, the optical head may comprise a wavelength selective separator for the illumination beam splitting and backscattered in the case of wavelength shift analysis (not shown on FIG. the figures).
In one or more exemplary embodiments, it is possible to seek to adjust the working distance between the measurement zone M (where the lighting beam Fe is focused in the liquid sample E), in particular to take account of the turbidity of the solution, as explained above. For this purpose, the focusing optics 143 and the collection optics 144 may comprise lenses with variable focal length, for example electrically controlled variable-focus liquid lenses, marketed by the companies Varioptic © or Optotune ©. In other exemplary embodiments, the adjustment of the working distance d between the measurement zone M and the inner wall 149 of the confinement tube 150 may be obtained by means of microelectromechanical systems, or MEMS (abbreviation of the expression Anglo-Saxon "Microelectromechanical Systems") by modifying the individual deflection angles.
FIGS. 5A and 5B thus illustrate two examples of different locations of the measurement zone M. In the example of FIG. 5A, the measurement zone M is positioned relatively centrally within the confinement tube 150, at a distance of distance d of the inner wall 149 of the confinement tube 150. In this case, the focal length of the focusing optics 143 is chosen so that the focusing point in the measurement zone M is relatively to the center of the containment. On the contrary, in the example of FIG. 5B, the measuring zone M is close to the inner wall 149 of the confinement tube 150. The focal length of the collection optic 144 is adapted to the working distance d chosen. The angle formed by the two beams Fe and Fr can then be recalculated by the processing unit 400.
FIG. 5C illustrates a variant of FIGS. 5A and 5B in which the focusing optics and the collection optics are formed by a common optic 142, the other elements being unchanged. Thus, as in the example of FIG. 3C, the common optic 142 provides both the focusing of the illumination beam Fe and the collection of the backscattered light beam Fr. In the example of FIG. 5C, the elements the optical measuring head are therefore similar to those of FIG. 3C, with the difference that there is no defiance element 148.
In particular, the emission and reception optical heads 220 and 330 are arranged in such a way that the beams Fe of illumination and Fr of light backscattered are incidentally offset on the common optics 142, one of the two beams being incidental. for example on the optical axis of the common optics 142 and the other eccentric. This configuration makes it possible to detect, with a common optic 142, a beam Fr of backscattered light non-collinear with the illumination beam.
The characterization device which has just been described can be implemented as follows: - immersion of the measurement probe 100 in the reactor 20 containing the liquid medium 30 in which several reactants react together; introduction and confinement of a sample E of the liquid medium 30 in the confinement tube 150, either by rotation of the measuring probe or by suction; emission of a lighting beam Fe and focusing of this lighting beam towards a measurement zone M of the confinement tube 150; detecting a backscattered light beam Fr by the particles of the liquid sample E and transmission to the processing unit 400; treatment, by the processing unit 400, of the backscattered light beam Fr and characterization of the particles, for example by their size and / or their composition; - Release of the liquid sample E in the medium.
After the step of releasing the sample E, a new sample E 'can be introduced into the confinement tube and then placed in confinement and characterized according to the steps set out above. A plurality of new samples can thus be characterized one after the other until the desired characteristics are achieved.
Whatever the exemplary embodiments, the characterization device according to the present description has the advantage of being compact and of having a small footprint (typically a volume have a lateral dimension of less than 30 mm and a height dimension of less than 80 mm). mm). It also has the advantage of allowing the characterization of a sample inside the reactor, without any removal from the reactor is necessary and while preventing contact of the optical measuring head with the liquid medium.
Furthermore, the characterization of particles by light scattering as just described can be coupled with other characterizations, such as temperature, viscosity, imaging, etc. by means of specific devices.
Although described through a number of detailed exemplary embodiments, the devices and methods for characterizing the particles dispersed in a liquid medium according to the present description comprise various variants, modifications and improvements which will become obvious to the person skilled in the art. the art, it being understood that these various variants, modifications and improvements are within the scope of the invention, as defined by the following claims.
权利要求:
Claims (15)
[1" id="c-fr-0001]
A device for characterizing dispersed particles in a liquid medium (30) comprising: - a fiber light source (200); a fiber optic detector (300); a measuring probe (100) intended to be hermetically dipped in the liquid medium (30) and comprising: a confinement tube (150) intended to be arranged inside said measuring probe and to pass through sealingly at least one wall of the probe (100) for receiving, at one end, a sample (E) of the liquid medium; an optical measuring head (140) intended to be arranged inside said measuring probe, comprising focusing optics (143) for focusing in the confinement tube (150) of a lighting light beam (Fe) from the light emission source (200) and a collection optic (144) for the collection towards the optical detector (300) of a backscattered light beam (Fr) by the particles dispersed in the tube containment (150); a processing unit (400) adapted for characterizing the particles from the backscattered light beam measured by the optical detector (300).
[2" id="c-fr-0002]
2. Characterization device according to claim 1, wherein the confinement tube (150) passes through a bottom wall (112) of the measuring probe (100) substantially vertically.
[3" id="c-fr-0003]
The characterization device according to claim 2, wherein the optical measuring head (140) comprises a deflection element (148) of the illumination beam (Fe) towards the confinement tube (150) and the backscattered light beam. (Fr) to collection optics (144).
[4" id="c-fr-0004]
4. A characterization device according to claim 3, wherein the deflection element (148) is movable, allowing adjustment of the focusing distance of the illumination beam (Fe) in the confinement tube (150).
[5" id="c-fr-0005]
The characterization device as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, further comprising a controlled suction device (160) adapted to draw the liquid medium sample (E) into the containment tube (150) and evacuate the liquid medium sample from the containment tube.
[6" id="c-fr-0006]
The characterization device according to claim 1, wherein the containment tube (150) passes through a side wall (114) of the measuring probe (140) sealingly at both ends thereof (156, 158).
[7" id="c-fr-0007]
7. Characterization device according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the focusing optics and the collection optics are formed of the same optics (142) adapted to receive the light beams and backscattered light .
[8" id="c-fr-0008]
8. Characterization device according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein, in operation, the backscattered light beam and the illumination beam are non-collinear.
[9" id="c-fr-0009]
A characterization device according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein the focusing optics and / or the collection optics comprise a variable focus lens allowing adjustment of the focusing distance of the illumination beam in the containment tube.
[10" id="c-fr-0010]
10. A method of characterizing particles dispersed in a liquid medium (30) by means of a characterization device (10) according to any one of the preceding claims, comprising the following steps: (a1) immersion of the measurement probe ( 140) in the liquid medium (30); (a2) introducing a sample (E) of the liquid medium into the containment tube (150); (a3) focusing a lighting beam (Fe) emitted by the light emission source (200) into the sample; (a4) detecting the backscattered light beam (Fr) by means of the optical detector (300) and characterizing the particles; and (a5) releasing the sample (E) into the liquid medium (30).
[11" id="c-fr-0011]
11. A method of characterization according to claim 10, wherein the step (a4) of the backscattered light beam (Fr) detection and particle characterization comprises the dynamic backscattered light analysis (DLS).
[12" id="c-fr-0012]
A method of characterization according to any one of claims 10 or 11, wherein the step (a4) of detecting the backscattered light beam (Fr) and characterizing the particles comprises the static analysis of the backscattered light at a wavelength different from the wavelength of the illumination beam.
[13" id="c-fr-0013]
13. A method of characterization according to any one of claims 10 to 12, wherein the operation (a2) for introducing the sample (E) of the liquid medium comprises the controlled suction of the liquid medium (30) in the containment tube (150), by means of a suction device (160).
[14" id="c-fr-0014]
14. A method of characterization according to any one of claims 10 to 12, wherein, when the confinement tube tightly crosses a side wall of the measuring probe by its two ends, the operation (a2) of introduction of the sample of the liquid medium comprises: - the rotation of the measuring probe (100) in a first position so that the confinement tube (150) is in a direction substantially parallel to a flow in the liquid medium (30) allowing filling of the containment tube; and - once the containment tube is filled, rotating the measuring probe (100) in a second position so that the containment tube (150) is in a direction substantially perpendicular to the flow in the liquid medium.
[15" id="c-fr-0015]
The method of characterization according to any one of claims 10 to 14, further comprising adapting the focusing distance of the illumination beam (Fe) in the sample as a function of the particle concentration of the liquid medium and / or their absorption.
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公开号 | 公开日
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法律状态:
2017-02-20| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 2 |
2017-09-01| PLSC| Publication of the preliminary search report|Effective date: 20170901 |
2018-02-19| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 3 |
2019-02-12| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 4 |
2020-11-13| ST| Notification of lapse|Effective date: 20201006 |
优先权:
申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题
FR1651675A|FR3048240B1|2016-02-29|2016-02-29|DEVICE FOR CHARACTERIZING PARTICLES DISPERSE IN A LIQUID MEDIUM|FR1651675A| FR3048240B1|2016-02-29|2016-02-29|DEVICE FOR CHARACTERIZING PARTICLES DISPERSE IN A LIQUID MEDIUM|
EP17157625.9A| EP3210938B1|2016-02-29|2017-02-23|Device for characterising particles which are dispersed in a liquid medium|
US15/444,768| US20170248510A1|2016-02-29|2017-02-28|Devices and methods for characterizing particles dispersed in a liquid medium|
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