MINIMAL COMPONENTS,
MAJOR IMPACT

Graphic by Enrique Garza

Graphic by Enrique Garza

UH Researcher Joined International Group of Physicists and Engineers to Design FDA-Approved, Open-Source Ventilator

HOUSTON, May 7, 2020 – As the spread of COVID-19 sparked a global search for ventilators to help critically ill patients, an international collaboration of particle physicists and engineers pivoted to design a mechanical ventilator made from readily available components.

The ventilator, approved late last week by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for emergency use with COVID-19 patients, came together in about six weeks, driven by members of the Global Argon Dark Matter Collaboration. The international coalition studies dark matter, a mysterious substance that makes up about 85% of the matter in the universe but which cannot be directly observed.

Andrew Renshaw, assistant professor of physics at the University of Houston and a member of the collaboration, now is working to ensure quality assurance of the controlling software and to connect the effort with U.S. manufacturers.

"This is something that can be used immediately.”
Andrew Renshaw

The ventilator, known as Mechanical Ventilator Milano, or MVM, is made from a small number of off-the-shelf components in order to facilitate rapid production. Renshaw said its open-source blueprint and software is a reflection of the way scientists work.

“Whenever we do our science, we try to make it open to everybody,” he said. “In our typical day-to-day work, we’re really looking at fundamental science, trying to understand the origin of the universe. This is something that can be used immediately.”

Other members of Renshaw’s lab are involved as well, including post-doctoral researcher Paolo Agnes and graduate student Frank Malatino, who are working on the software that controls the flow of oxygen.

five ventilators on table

In a little over a month, a team of physicists and engineers from around the world took a simplified ventilator design from concept all the way through approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

In a little over a month, a team of physicists and engineers from around the world took a simplified ventilator design from concept all the way through approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

headshot of Andrew Renshaw

Andrew Renshaw, assistant professor of physics at the University of Houston

Andrew Renshaw, assistant professor of physics at the University of Houston

photo of MVM ventilator

Physicists and engineers from nine countries helped build the Mechanical Ventilator Milano, which has been approved for use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Image: MVM collaboration

Physicists and engineers from nine countries helped build the Mechanical Ventilator Milano, which has been approved for use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Image: MVM collaboration

INTERNATIONAL EFFORT

The project began when Cristiano Galbiati, the spokesman for the Global Argon Dark Matter Collaborative, or GADMC, became part of the lockdown in Milan, Italy, the first European nation to be hit hard by the pandemic. Galbiati leads experiments with the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare’s Gran Sasso Laboratory, an underground laboratory in Italy. He also is a professor of physics at Princeton University.

As concern grew over critical shortages of ventilators, which pump oxygen into the lungs and remove carbon dioxide, members of the collaboration took on the challenge to design, develop, build and certify a safe, simple and powerful ventilator.

“It’s made to be as simple as possible to keep costs down, to keep manufacturing simple and fast.”
Andrew Renshaw

“The idea is it will be completely open-source. The hardware design, the parts list will all be available," Renshaw said. "The software itself will be open-source, too, available for any company that wants to manufacture it.”

Manufacturers will be allowed to make slight modifications but will have to share the changes so others can use them, he said.

“Italy was the first European country hit by this really hard. They went under lockdown right away,” Renshaw said. “I think (Galbiati) saw a niche, we have this expertise to design gas control systems, and so he just started assembling people and saying, let’s do this.”

Researchers from Italy, Canada and the United States are involved, among other nations, and prototypes are in place around the world to certify the ventilator’s effectiveness. The FDA approved the machine for use in the United States; it still must be approved in Europe, Canada and elsewhere.

Three researchers wearing masks in front of five ventilators

Photo courtesy MVM collaboration

Three researchers wearing masks in front of five ventilators

Photo courtesy MVM collaboration

"Moving at the speed of light..."

The work isn’t as much of a leap from dark matter as it might seem.

The GADMC uses detectors powered by liquid argon, which serves as a target for dark particles but which can become contaminated by the detector materials. Researchers purify the argon by converting it to a gas and filtering out the contaminants before returning it to a liquid state.

“This inherently requires a lot of gas control, rapidly controlling valves and constantly monitoring for levels of contaminants,” Renshaw said – expertise aligned with that required to design and operate a mechanical ventilator, which involves controlling the flow of oxygen and carbon dioxide to and from a patient.

The collaboration worked with engineers and other scientists on the project, he said. Anesthesiologists and other medical clinicians from Italy, Canada and the United States also provided guidance.

Galbiati, in a statement released after FDA approval, said the work highlights the benefits fundamental research can have for society. “It also highlights the importance of international and multidisciplinary collaboration to tackle the big challenges of this new era: at a time when borders between countries were closed and supply chains were disrupted, our collaboration across borders spread much faster than the virus, moving at the speed of light through the internet fibers,” he said.

More details about the design are available here. Information about a fundraising campaign are here.


A communication by the University of Houston Division of University Marketing and Communications.

Story Credits

  • Written by Jeannie Kever
  • Graphic Design by Enrique Garza
  • Photographs and ventilator graphic courtesy Mechanical Ventilator Milano and Andrew Renshaw

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