Team:Grenoble-EMSE-LSU/Project/Instrumentation/Fluo

From 2013.igem.org

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<p>The box has been made to be mountable in an incubator. On its support, there are holes that fit the holes of the incubator so that you can simply screw them together. There are also two doors, one with a latch that enables us to easily put the Erlenmeyer and a second dedicated to the electronic circuitry and optical components. As a safety and experimental issue, the two parts are completely separated to avoid spreading the culture on the electronic part or illuminating the culture with an unwanted wavelength. There is only one hole that allows us to illuminate the sample.</p>
<p>The box has been made to be mountable in an incubator. On its support, there are holes that fit the holes of the incubator so that you can simply screw them together. There are also two doors, one with a latch that enables us to easily put the Erlenmeyer and a second dedicated to the electronic circuitry and optical components. As a safety and experimental issue, the two parts are completely separated to avoid spreading the culture on the electronic part or illuminating the culture with an unwanted wavelength. There is only one hole that allows us to illuminate the sample.</p>
<h3>The filter rack and the rail</h3>
<h3>The filter rack and the rail</h3>
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<p><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/f/fb/Talk%27E_filter.png" alt="filter_rack_inside_box" style="float:left;margin: 25px;" width="300px"/>To create the filter rack we were inspired by a cube filter which is composed by two excitation filters – green and blue two emission filters – red and yellow and two dichroic mirrors.  We re-design it on SketchUp by adding two more slots. The first slot is used to measure the red fluorescence of KillerRed. There is a green excitation filter on the top, a red emission filter on one side and a dichroic mirror between the two pieces.  A red colored filter is on the top of the second slot to induce the KillerRed protein production. There is no filter in the third slot because it is used to activate ROS emission with white light. Since the light comes from above there is a plate mirror between the two pieces under the slot two and three. The last slot was planned for further use, for instance to measure back-scattering of the cell suspension. For such measure, a colored filter and a half-reflecting mirror would be used. Back-scattering would provide information about the total number of bacteria, similar to OD600nm recording.</br>
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<p><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/f/fb/Talk%27E_filter.png" alt="filter_rack_inside_box" style="float:left;margin: 25px;" width="300px"/>To create the filter rack, we were inspired by a cube filter which is composed of two excitation filters – green and blue, two emission filters – red and yellow, and two dichroic mirrors.  We re-designed it on SketchUp by adding two additional slots. The first slot is used to measure the red fluorescence of KillerRed. There is a green excitation filter on the top, a red emission filter on one side and a dichroic mirror between the two pieces.  A red colored filter is on the top of the second slot to induce the KillerRed protein production. There is no filter in the third slot because it is used to activate ROS emission with white light. Since the light comes from above, there is a plate mirror between the two pieces under the slots two and three. The last slot was planned for further use, for instance to measure back-scattering of the cell suspension. For such measure, a colored filter and a half-reflecting mirror would be used. Back-scattering would provide information about the total number of bacteria, similar to OD600nm recording.</br>
The filters were taken from the cube filter we receive but the plate mirror was created in a clean room by aluminum sputtering  at 70W and 1.2Pa – the thickness of the aluminum is about 20nm.
The filters were taken from the cube filter we receive but the plate mirror was created in a clean room by aluminum sputtering  at 70W and 1.2Pa – the thickness of the aluminum is about 20nm.
</p>
</p>
<h3>The lens holder</h3>
<h3>The lens holder</h3>
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<p>To focus the beam of the fluorescence, we use a microscope objective. We need therefore a part that can hold it. We create a mold where you just plug the objective in it.</p>
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<p>To focus the beam of the fluorescence, we use a microscope objective. Therefore, we needed a part that could hold it. We created a mold where you just plug the objective into it.</p>
<h3>The LED lamp box</h3>
<h3>The LED lamp box</h3>
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<p>To avoid illuminating the entire box we put the LED in a smaller one where one side is closed with only a hole that matches the size of the lamp cap. Since the illumination angle of the lamp is small, the light goes almost in one direction and only light up  the filters or mirror.</p>
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<p>To avoid illuminating the entire box, we put the LED in a smaller one where one side is closed with only a hole that matches the size of the lamp cap. Since the illumination angle of the lamp is small, the light goes almost in one direction and only light up  the filters or mirror.</p>
<h3>The servomotor holder</h3>
<h3>The servomotor holder</h3>
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<p>Since the servomotor will move the filter rack, it needs to be securely attached on the box. We design a part with two arms where you can screw the servomotor and a flat support to bold it on the box. We drill many holes so that we can easily adjust the height of the servomotor.</br></br>
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<p>Since the servomotor will move the filter rack, it needed to be securely attached onto the box. We designed a part with two arms that allowed you to screw the servomotor and a flat support to bold it on the box. We drilled many holes so that we can easily adjust the height of the servomotor.</br></br>
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As said previously we used a 3D-printer to built these parts but because of the complexity of the filter rack and its rail they had to be done with a another 3D-printing method. These two parts were done by Selective Laser Sintering and all the other were made by Fused Deposition Modeling</p>
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As said previously we used a 3D-printer to built these parts, but because of the complexity of the filter rack and its rail they had to be done with a another 3D-printing method. These two parts were completed through Selective Laser Sintering and all the other were made by Fused Deposition Modeling</p>
                                 </li>
                                 </li>

Revision as of 23:11, 4 October 2013

Grenoble-EMSE-LSU, iGEM


Grenoble-EMSE-LSU, iGEM

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