By Shalaka Samant PhD and Damon Anderson PhD
Automation has greatly enabled modern life science laboratories by addressing critical factors of speed, accuracy, precision, and efficiency. Fast and repeatable liquid handling is often key to successful life science or drug discovery experiments. As such, automated liquid handling instruments that facilitate precise and rapid dispensing of micro-volumes of reagents have proven extremely valuable in the lab. This applies to high-throughput and high-content research processes as well, which are often challenged by large sample sets and the need for rapid and efficient processing.
Modern liquid handling technologies not only boost lab performance but serve the added benefit of freeing up scientists to focus on value-added activities. These may include experiment design, research optimization, and data analysis – duties that serve a higher purpose, rather than routine, time intensive tasks. By decreasing human intervention through the use of automated liquid handling, the chances of error, variability, and systematic bias are reduced. Furthermore, the requirements for controlling sterility, exposure to light, exposure to hazardous chemicals, and experimental waste reduction, all serve as important driving factors helping the design of liquid handling solutions.
Significant improvements in automated liquid handling technologies have been driven in part by user communication and feedback between instrument manufacturers and laboratory scientists. Companies continually innovate to bring new products in-line with consumer requirements based on the needs and challenges of specific research applications. Important criteria driving continued improvement include considerations of: fluid type, volume range, nature of the liquid being handled, scale of use, accuracy, and rate of dispensing. Other areas of focus include addressing hurdles such as problematic disposable tips, non-independent channel spreading, and restricted platforms.
With these driving factors in mind, here are four important areas of current liquid handling innovation.
While performance criteria once focused squarely on speed, capacity, and throughput -- more recent advances in automation, software, and robotics have led to the development of new generation platforms offering exceptional accuracy and precision even when dispensing the smallest volumes.
New automated liquid handling systems offer flexibility and adaptability to varying experimental needs, inlcuding unique sample types and microplate formats.
Device miniaturization without compromise of volumetric precision is yet another modern development theme. Given the high cost of many reagents used in today’s life science experimentation, considerable savings can be made by simply using less.
Other advances have come in the form of multipurpose liquid handling automated workstations. These integrated workstations are tools designed to not only pipette and sample liquids but also mix and combine liquid samples automatically.
New liquid handling and pipetting platforms have overcome the early technological hurdles in the field, effectively resolving issues with evaporation control, difficulties of liquids with diverse rheological properties, evaluation and calibration, clogging detection, and air bubbles dissolution.
Technological innovations in the automated liquid handling field are continuing to tackle the latest challenges -- enabling applications in microfluidics, high-resolution analytical separations, multipurpose implementation, and other evolving areas.
LHS Liquid Handling Station from Brandtech - Routine lab tasks with high speed and precision
Biomek i-Series Automated Liquid Handling Workstations - Multi-functional operations for mid- and high-throughput labs
PE JANUS® G3 Liquid Handling Workstations - Automated sample preparation
SCICLONE G3 Liquid Handling Workstations - Automated high-thoughput plate to plate processing
ZEPHYR G3 Liquid Handling Workstations - Benchtop sized liquid handler
LYNX Liquid Handling Platform from Dynamic Devices - Combined novel microfluidics and traditional capabilties
VERSA Series of Automated Liquid Handling Workstations from Aurora - Flexible design to automate various lab operations
ECHO MS Acoustic Ejection Mass Spectrometry System from SCIEX
Clinical Automation, Sample Prep for NGS, and Sample Prep for MS from Tecan
Acoustic Liquid Handling for High Accuracy and Precision Workflows from Labcyte
Automated Liquid Handling Solutions for a Range of Lab Operations and Scales from Thermo Fisher
View Automated Liquid Handling listings at LabX.com
View Pipette and Pipette Tips listings at LabX.com
View Robotics listings at LabX.com