Are you an EPFL student looking for a semester project?
Work with us on data science and visualisation projects, and deploy your project as an app on top of Graph Search.
The pipetting of small volumes, typically ranging between a few and one thousand microliters (mu l), is widely used in many laboratories and essentially relies on air displacement to aspirate and dispense the liquid contained in a small plastic tip. While these pipetting devices are largely dependable, they require rigorous calibration at periodic intervals which can be conducted by gravimetry (weight measurement of water) or by spectrophotometry with the dilution of a dye from a known concentration. The aim of this work is to describe an entirely new and reliable method based on the measurement of the pressure increase in a reference volume caused by the pipette piston opening. Relying on the physical properties of the perfect gas, this method offers several advantages and can be conducted at any time without other high-precision and expensive devices. Thanks to advances in digital pressure sensors recently introduced into smartphones and digital watches, their sensitivity and precision allows the use of differential pressure measurements for reliable reading over a large volume range. This new method is adequate even for measurements of volumes below 1 mu l, a condition that is difficult to achieve using standard gravimetry and requires a consumable such as dye in the case of spectrophotometry. Moreover, a clear advantage of the method is to allow rapid verification of the pipetting condition with the very same tip that can be subsequently used for handling the liquid; a condition that cannot be satisfied by any method currently available. Easily adaptable to automated liquid handlers, or multiple channel pipetting devices, this method also offers the possibility of assessing the precision of the pipetting, with the very same conditions and pipette tip, immediately prior to any critical operation.
Jian Wang, Lesya Shchutska, Olivier Schneider, Yiming Li, Yi Zhang, Aurelio Bay, Guido Haefeli, Christoph Frei, Frédéric Blanc, Tatsuya Nakada, Michel De Cian, Luca Pescatore, François Fleuret, Elena Graverini, Renato Quagliani, Maria Vieites Diaz, Federico Betti, Andrea Merli, Aravindhan Venkateswaran, Luis Miguel Garcia Martin, Vitalii Lisovskyi, Sebastian Schulte, Veronica Sølund Kirsebom, Elisabeth Maria Niel, Alexandre Brea Rodriguez, Mingkui Wang, Zhirui Xu, Lei Zhang, Ho Ling Li, Mark Tobin, Minh Tâm Tran, Niko Neufeld, Matthew Needham, Marc-Olivier Bettler, Maurizio Martinelli, Vladislav Balagura, Donal Patrick Hill, Liang Sun, Pietro Marino, Mirco Dorigo, Xiaoxue Han, Liupan An, Federico Leo Redi, Plamen Hristov Hopchev, Thibaud Humair, Maxime Schubiger, Hang Yin, Guido Andreassi, Violaine Bellée, Olivier Göran Girard, Preema Rennee Pais, Pavol Stefko, Tara Nanut, Maria Elena Stramaglia, Yao Zhou, Tommaso Colombo, Vladimir Macko, Guillaume Max Pietrzyk, Albert Puig Navarro, Evgenii Shmanin, Simone Meloni, Xiaoqing Zhou, Lino Ferreira Lopes, Surapat Ek-In, Carina Trippl, Sara Celani, Dipanwita Dutta, Zheng Wang, Yi Wang, Hans Dijkstra, Gerhard Raven, Peter Clarke, Frédéric Teubert, Giovanni Carboni, Victor Coco, Adam Davis, Paolo Durante, Wenyu Zhang, Yu Zheng, Anton Petrov, Maxim Borisyak, Feng Jiang, Chen Chen, Zhipeng Tang, Luis Alberto Granado Cardoso, Daniel Hugo Cámpora Pérez, Xuan Li, Alexey Boldyrev, Almagul Kondybayeva, Hossein Afsharnia