Soft, Flexible Freestanding Neural Stimulation and Recording Electrodes Fabricated from Reduced Graphene Oxide

There is an urgent need for conductive neural interfacing materials that exhibit mechanically compliant properties, while also retaining high strength and durability under physiological conditions. Currently, implantable electrode systems designed to stimulate and record neural activity are composed...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced functional materials 2015-06, Vol.25 (23), p.3551-3559
Hauptverfasser: Apollo, Nicholas V., Maturana, Matias I., Tong, Wei, Nayagam, David A. X., Shivdasani, Mohit N., Foroughi, Javad, Wallace, Gordon G., Prawer, Steven, Ibbotson, Michael R., Garrett, David J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:There is an urgent need for conductive neural interfacing materials that exhibit mechanically compliant properties, while also retaining high strength and durability under physiological conditions. Currently, implantable electrode systems designed to stimulate and record neural activity are composed of rigid materials such as crystalline silicon and noble metals. While these materials are strong and chemically stable, their intrinsic stiffness and density induce glial scarring and eventual loss of electrode function in vivo. Conductive composites, such as polymers and hydrogels, have excellent electrochemical and mechanical properties, but are electrodeposited onto rigid and dense metallic substrates. In the work described here, strong and conductive microfibers (40–50 μm diameter) wet‐spun from liquid crystalline dispersions of graphene oxide are fabricated into freestanding neural stimulation electrodes. The fibers are insulated with parylene‐C and laser‐treated, forming “brush” electrodes with diameters over 3.5 times that of the fiber shank. The fabrication method is fast, repeatable, and scalable for high‐density 3D array structures and does not require additional welding or attachment of larger electrodes to wires. The electrodes are characterized electrochemically and used to stimulate live retina in vitro. Additionally, the electrodes are coated in a water‐soluble sugar microneedle for implantation into, and subsequent recording from, visual cortex. Strong, flexible fibers are wet‐spun from a liquid crystalline dispersion of graphene oxide (LCGO), then coated with parylene‐C, and laser‐excised to create free‐standing stimulate electrodes with high charge injection capacity (14 mC cm−2). LCGO electrodes stimulated retina in vitro; water‐soluble microneedles are utilized to implant the flexible electrodes into cortical tissue enabling acquisition of neural activity.
ISSN:1616-301X
1616-3028
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201500110