Manufacturer of thermal management equipment in the medical, industrial and telecommunications markets, Laird Thermal Systems, has announced that its PowerCycling PCX Series thermoelectric coolers can provide high reliability for demanding thermal cycling applications including point-of-care PCR testing.
Point-of-care testing allows medical staff to accurately achieve real-time diagnostic results within an hour, rather than days. PCR-based point-of-care testing is considered the gold standard for diagnosing COVID-19 because it provides the fastest and most accurate test results. Portable point-of-care testing (POCT) equipment requires a sophisticated thermal management solution that can withstand mechanical stresses induced by rapid temperature changes. This is typically accomplished using portable handheld devices or small benchtop analyzers that utilise thermoelectric coolers for precise temperature control. Modern thermocyclers used for real-time PCR testing require up to 40 thermal cycles to create millions of strands of DNA sequencing for analysis. Thermal cycling creates a harsh environment for standard thermoelectric coolers due to the mechanical stresses that occur during the heating and cooling cycles. Standard thermoelectric coolers are not designed to withstand the rapid thermal cycling, shortening the operating life of the component. The miniaturization of point of care testing devices makes thermal management even more challenging.
Laird Thermal Systems believes it has a solution to this. The company says its thermoelectric coolers have a flexible thermally conductive ‘soft layer’ to reduce mechanical stresses in thermal cycling applications and is designed to handle hundreds of thousands of thermal cycles, providing improved performance and long-life operation in PCR testing applications. “The PCX thermoelectric cooler is assembled with next-generation materials to boost performance over standard product offerings,” Andrew Dereka, Product Director at the manufacturer said. “By achieving faster temperature ramp rates, PCX thermoelectric coolers provide greater throughput and faster test results.”
The series offers high heat pumping capacities from 13 to 215 Watts in various footprints as small as 15 x 15 mm to accommodate compact point of care testing equipment. To achieve precise thermal control, an array of PCX thermoelectric coolers is installed under the sample cartridge. The thermoelectric cooler is built with enhanced process controls to operate in temperatures up to 120°C, exceeding requirements for applications like real-time PCR testing, the company added.