Flexible Nanoarchitectonics for Biosensing and Physiological Monitoring Applications

Flexible and implantable electronics hold tremendous promises for advanced healthcare applications, especially for physiological neural recording and modulations. Key requirements in neural interfaces include miniature dimensions for spatial physiological mapping and low impedance for recognizing sm...

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Veröffentlicht in:Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) Germany), 2023-03, Vol.19 (9), p.e2204946-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Ashok, Aditya, Nguyen, Tuan‐Khoa, Barton, Matthew, Leitch, Michael, Masud, Mostafa Kamal, Park, Hyeongyu, Truong, Thanh‐An, Kaneti, Yusuf Valentino, Ta, Hang Thu, Li, Xiaopeng, Liang, Kang, Do, Thanh Nho, Wang, Chun‐Hui, Nguyen, Nam‐Trung, Yamauchi, Yusuke, Phan, Hoang‐Phuong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Flexible and implantable electronics hold tremendous promises for advanced healthcare applications, especially for physiological neural recording and modulations. Key requirements in neural interfaces include miniature dimensions for spatial physiological mapping and low impedance for recognizing small biopotential signals. Herein, a bottom‐up mesoporous formation technique and a top‐down microlithography process are integrated to create flexible and low‐impedance mesoporous gold (Au) electrodes for biosensing and bioimplant applications. The mesoporous architectures developed on a thin and soft polymeric substrate provide excellent mechanical flexibility and stable electrical characteristics capable of sustaining multiple bending cycles. The large surface areas formed within the mesoporous network allow for high current density transfer in standard electrolytes, highly suitable for biological sensing applications as demonstrated in glucose sensors with an excellent detection limit of 1.95 µm and high sensitivity of 6.1 mA cm−2 µM−1, which is approximately six times higher than that of benchmarking flat/non‐porous films. The low impedance of less than 1 kΩ at 1 kHz in the as‐synthesized mesoporous electrodes, along with their mechanical flexibility and durability, offer peripheral nerve recording functionalities that are successfully demonstrated in vivo. These features highlight the new possibilities of our novel flexible nanoarchitectonics for neuronal recording and modulation applications. This work introduces a new concept of flexible mesoporous electronics for highly sensitive biological sensing and implantable neural recording applications.
ISSN:1613-6810
1613-6829
DOI:10.1002/smll.202204946