| Literature DB >> 31308234 |
Enming Song1,2, Chia-Han Chiang3, Rui Li4,5, Xin Jin6, Jianing Zhao7, Mackenna Hill3, Yu Xia2, Lizhu Li8, Yuming Huang2, Sang Min Won2, Ki Jun Yu9, Xing Sheng8, Hui Fang10, Muhammad Ashraful Alam6, Yonggang Huang11,12,13, Jonathan Viventi3, Jan-Kai Chang14,2, John A Rogers14,2,11,13,15,16,17,18,19,20.
Abstract
Flexible biocompatible electronic systems that leverage key materials and manufacturing techniques associated with the consumer electronics industry have potential for broad applications in biomedicine and biological research. This study reports scalable approaches to technologies of this type, where thin microscale device components integrate onto flexible polymer substrates in interconnected arrays to provide multimodal, high performance operational capabilities as intimately coupled biointerfaces. Specificially, the material options and engineering schemes summarized here serve as foundations for diverse, heterogeneously integrated systems. Scaled examples incorporate >32,000 silicon microdie and inorganic microscale light-emitting diodes derived from wafer sources distributed at variable pitch spacings and fill factors across large areas on polymer films, at full organ-scale dimensions such as human brain, over ∼150 cm2 In vitro studies and accelerated testing in simulated biofluids, together with theoretical simulations of underlying processes, yield quantitative insights into the key materials aspects. The results suggest an ability of these systems to operate in a biologically safe, stable fashion with projected lifetimes of several decades without leakage currents or reductions in performance. The versatility of these combined concepts suggests applicability to many classes of biointegrated semiconductor devices.Entities:
Keywords: bioelectronics; biomedical implants; electrocorticography; flexible electronics; heterogeneous integration
Year: 2019 PMID: 31308234 PMCID: PMC6681732 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1907697116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205