The recent advent of biodegradable materials has offered huge opportunity to transform healthcare technologies by enabling sensors that degrade naturally after use. The implantable electronic systems made from such materials eliminate the need for extraction or reoperation, minimize chronic inflammatory responses, and hence offer attractive propositions for future biomedical technology. The eco-friendly sensor systems developed from degradable materials could also help mitigate some of the major environmental issues by reducing the volume of electronic or medical waste produced and, in turn, the carbon footprint. With this background, herein we present a comprehensive overview of the structural and functional biodegradable materials that have been used for various biodegradable or bioresorbable electronic devices. The discussion focuses on the dissolution rates and degradation mechanisms of materials such as natural and synthetic polymers, organic or inorganic semiconductors, and hydrolyzable metals. The recent trend and examples of biodegradable or bioresorbable materials-based sensors for body monitoring, diagnostic, and medical therapeutic applications are also presented. Lastly, key technological challenges are discussed for clinical application of biodegradable sensors, particularly for implantable devices with wireless data and power transfer. Promising perspectives for the advancement of future generation of biodegradable sensor systems are also presented.
The recent advent of biodegradable materials has offered huge opportunity to transform healthcare technologies by enabling sensors that degrade naturally after use. The implantable electronic systems made from such materials eliminate the need for extraction or reoperation, minimize chronic inflammatory responses, and hence offer attractive propositions for future biomedical technology. The eco-friendly sensor systems developed from degradable materials could also help mitigate some of the major environmental issues by reducing the volume of electronic or medical waste produced and, in turn, the carbon footprint. With this background, herein we present a comprehensive overview of the structural and functional biodegradable materials that have been used for various biodegradable or bioresorbable electronic devices. The discussion focuses on the dissolution rates and degradation mechanisms of materials such as natural and synthetic polymers, organic or inorganic semiconductors, and hydrolyzable metals. The recent trend and examples of biodegradable or bioresorbable materials-based sensors for body monitoring, diagnostic, and medical therapeutic applications are also presented. Lastly, key technological challenges are discussed for clinical application of biodegradable sensors, particularly for implantable devices with wireless data and power transfer. Promising perspectives for the advancement of future generation of biodegradable sensor systems are also presented.
Over the past decade,
biodegradable sensors and electronic devices
that naturally degrade or fully dissolve in their physiological environments
have emerged as attractive alternatives for both invasive and noninvasive
health monitoring.[1,2] They provide a unique opportunity
for temporary medical implants for continuous body condition monitoring
and in vivo sensing. With flexible form-factors,
such sensor systems integrated on wearables or clothing could offer
a hygienic route for monitoring of various physiological parameters.[3−5] The ability for real-time monitoring of parameters such as strain,
pressure, temperature, pH, oxygen, and other specific biomarkers would
expressively improve the information about tissue healing, early stage
detection of postsurgical infection, and personalized treatments.[6−11] Besides, they are ideal for single-shot measurements in point of
care diagnostics as they are environmentally friendly and reduce the
medical waste associated with disposable sensors and are usually low-cost.[12−16]Most of the sensors that are used today in medical healthcare
are
often outside the body or noninvasive, and those implanted into the
body have the disadvantage of removal surgery that exposes patients
to the distress of retrieval and additional complications.[17,18] Resorbable devices offering short-term performance are excellent
temporary implants for diagnostic and therapeutic applications that
need to operate only for a assigned duration and later elude without
the need for surgical removal,[1] thus promoting
extensively to the patient’s comfort and eliminating the cost
and risks of removal surgery. Additionally, using biocompatible and
biodegradable materials for sensor fabrication minimizes the foreign
body reactions to implants.The main achievements in the development
of biodegradable sensors
are quite new and have started from about a decade ago with partially
degradable sensors materials and recently with further advances in
functional materials and fabrication methods, fully biodegradable
systems that include power source, circuitry, and wireless technologies
in flexible form-factors.[19] Obtaining suitable
materials for degradable sensors is challenging, considering that
the materials they need to use should be nontoxic, biocompatible,
biodegradable, and yet exhibit high-performance electrical/optical/mechanical
properties. Flexibility and appropriate mechanical properties for
conformal interfacing and minimal stresses on the tissue are other
important aspects. The perfect route for such electronic devices requires
production using green materials, those with renewable and abundant
sources with intrinsic biocompatibility and biodegradability (such
as protein derived or polysaccharide-based polymers), or synthetic
materials with desirable properties found in common commodity products.This review emphases on the major advancements in the area of biodegradable
and implantable sensors used for monitoring of biomarkers and body
signals for diagnostics and therapeutics. A comprehensive overview
of the structural and functional biodegradable materials that have
been used for the development of biodegradable systems, their properties,
degradation mechanisms, and dissolution rates is presented in section . This includes
active sensing materials, substrates, electrodes, interconnections,
encapsulations, and adhesives layers. Section presents some examples of recently developed
physical and chemical biodegradable/bioresorbable sensors for in vitro body monitoring and those integrated into the body
for diagnostic and medical therapeutic applications. In some medical
applications, the biodegradable sensors are needed with wireless communication
capability to decrease the chances of infection caused by wires breaching
the skin. To achieve this, antennas/coils for data transmission and
power supply have been explored. A few such examples have also been
discussed in this section along with the potential opportunities they
open for implanted sensors to enhance the understanding of biological
systems. In section , the key current challenges associated with biodegradable sensors
are discussed. This includes power requirements, size limitation,
data transmission from the body, degradation kinetics of the device
components, and performance stability. Lastly, the concluding section
presents a summary of key conclusions, and the promising future perspectives
for the advancement of a new generation of biodegradable devices,
with emphasis on clinical application.
Structural and Functional Materials for Biodegradable
Sensors
Motivated by the growing demand for degradable electronics,
several
research endeavors have targeted the expansion of biodegradable substitutes
for conventional electronic components using safe, low-cost, large
volume, and disposable materials to fabricate state-of-the-art biodegradable,
bioresorbable, or transient devices. Subsequently, innovative approaches
from materials science and engineering have facilitated the development
of degradable fundamental device components including substrate materials,
dielectric layers, active layers, conductive contacts and interconnects,
and even circuitry using natural, synthetic, and conjugated biodegradable
polymers, organic or inorganic semiconductors, and hydrolyzable metals.[20−25]Polymeric materials offer high tunability in terms of their
chemical
structure, morphology, and dissolution time scale, the rate of which
can be tailored by varying intrinsic polymer properties including
molecular weight, crystal structure, chemical composition, hydrophilic
or hydrophobic nature, and erosion mechanisms.[26−28] In addition
to flexibility and biocompatibility, this ability to tune the intrinsic
properties of polymeric materials makes them promising candidates
for compliant, customizable, and biodegradable device components.
Among the wide range of naturally derived polymers, protein-based
polymers, such as collagen, chitosan, fibrin, silk, and gelatin, as
well as plant-based polysaccharides, including alginate, cellulose,
dextran, and starch, have been increasingly employed for the fabrication
of biodegradable devices. Many of these naturally derived biodegradable
polymers also possess inherent bioactivity, due to similarities with
biological macromolecules and can therefore elicit immunogenic response,
if for example used as transient components for implantable healthcare
technologies. Besides, weak mechanical properties, structural complexity,
and high batch-to-batch variation often limit their use.[29−31]Synthetic biodegradable polymers, on the other hand, offer
greater
control over the physiochemical properties of transient components
and their resulting devices since they are produced under controlled
and reproducible conditions.[30] Since the
simplest linear, aliphatic, and thermoplastic polyester, polyglycolide
(PGA), was marketed as the first biodegradable suture in the 1960s,
a range of synthetic biodegradable polymers numerous advancements
have been made in the development of synthetic biodegradable polymers.
Various biodegradable poly(α-esters) cross-linked elastomers,
like poly(1,8-octanediol-co-citrictrate) and poly(glycerol
sebacate) (PGS), polycarbonates, polyphosphazenes, polyurethanes (PU),
polydioxanones, and polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA) have since appeared.[29,32−36] Among them, poly(lactic acid) or poly(lactide) (PLA/PLLA), poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) or poly(lactide-co-glycolide)
(PLGA), POC, PGS, poly(∈-caprolactone) or simply polycaprolactone
(PCL), and more recently, polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) and polyhydroxyvalerate
(PHV) have attracted the greatest attention.[37−45] The biocompatibility of these synthetic polymers has also been widely
assessed.[46−51] For instance, the biocompatibility of PLA and PLGA microspheres
implanted in rats was verified using in vivo histological
and immunologic analysis.[46] The biocompatibility
of PCL films has been demonstrated by examining the influence of their
exposure on L929 mouse fibroblast viability.[47] The biocompatibility of POC scaffolds was confirmed by their lack
of influence on the morphology and phenotype of porcine chondrocytes.[48] PGS membranes were also found to be biocompatible
with both human cardiac mesenchymal stem cells and rat cardiac progenitor
cells, supporting their adhesion and growth;[49] PHB biocompatibility was evaluated through the inflammatory response
of tissue after 4 and 12 weeks of subcutaneous implantation in rats.[50] Finally, the in vitro and in vivo biocompatibility of silk has been extensively demonstrated
through its widespread use as a passive substrate for biodevices,
as well as its use in a number of biomedical applications, including
drug delivery, wound healing, tissue engineering, and regenerative
medicine.[51]The biodegradation of
both naturally derived and synthetic polymers
generally occurs through cleavage of unstable sites found along the
polymer chain backbone, leading to a loss of polymeric materials.[52] Many polymers derived from natural sources tend
to undergo enzymatic breakdown by living organisms.[53] However, in biological environments, biodegradation can
also occur by hydrolysis, oxidation, or photooxidation.[53] Synthetic polymers, on the other hand, are usually
nonenzymatically degraded.[52] The most widely
used biodegradable synthetic polymers typically contain ester bonds
that facilitate hydrolytic degradation in acidic or alkaline conditions.[54] Amide, sulfonamide, anhydride, carbonate, ether,
imide, imine, phosphonate, thioester, urea, and urethane bonds also
serve as unstable sites susceptible to hydrolytic degradation (Figure ).[23] The rate of hydrolysis is largely based on the physiochemical
characteristics of the polymeric material. For instance, as hydrophilicity
or the frequency of hydrolyzable groups and the available surface
area increase, so too does the rate of degradation.[55] In contrast, increasing the cross-linking density and crystallinity,
both of which limit the rate of water uptake, reduces the rate of
hydrolysis.[55] Environmental factors, for
example, the temperature, pH, and the physiological composition of
the surrounding environment also have a profound effect on the rate
of hydrolysis. The degradation pattern of several known synthetic
biodegradable polymers can therefore often be tuned to facilitate
a desired transience time scale.[29,56] Biologically
relevant oxidative mechanisms, such as the release of reactive oxygen
or nitrogen species by activated phagocytes during wound healing,
can also facilitate the chemical or enzymatic cleavage of polymers
(Figure ).[57,58,55] Take poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA)
for example. This synthetic highly polar, water-soluble polymer consists
mainly of carbon atoms and repeating 1,3-diols units that can ultimately
be broken down into acetic acid via microbial oxidation or enzymatic
hydrolysis (Figure ).[57,59]
Figure 1
Chemical structures of natural and synthetic
biodegradable polymeric
materials. Chemical structures of moieties susceptible to hydrolysis
and oxidation. Mechanism of acid-catalyzed ester hydrolysis. Mechanism
of PVA enzymatic degradation. Reproduced with permission from refs (57 and 58). Copyright 2008 Woodhead Publishing
and ref (59). Copyright
2014 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Chemical structures of natural and synthetic
biodegradable polymeric
materials. Chemical structures of moieties susceptible to hydrolysis
and oxidation. Mechanism of acid-catalyzed ester hydrolysis. Mechanism
of PVA enzymatic degradation. Reproduced with permission from refs (57 and 58). Copyright 2008 Woodhead Publishing
and ref (59). Copyright
2014 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.In addition to biodegradable electronic polymer components,
monocrystalline
inorganic semiconductors, such as silicon (Si) nanomembranes (Si-NMs),
are also considered vital materials for high-performance biodegradable
devices due to their excellent operational characteristics and the
well-established nature of Si semiconductor technologies.[60] These chemically inert and biocompatible platforms
also offer nanoscale thicknesses and, most importantly, undergo hydrolysis
in biofluids.[12,21,22] Recent research investigating the dissolution behavior of nanoscale
elements of monocrystalline Si has greatly promoted their use in biodegradable
electronics and highlighted the important roles of Si dopant type
and concentration,[61−63] temperature,[63] pH,[62] and the presence or concentration of proteins
in the surrounding environment (Table ).[64] For example, increasing
the temperature of the surrounding environment, as well as the concentration
of chloride (Cl–) and phosphate (HPO42–) anions, considerably increases the dissolution
rate of Si-NMs through nucleophilic attack of Si surface bonds.[63] Similarly, the presence of calcium (Ca) and
magnesium (Mg) ions in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) solutions can
also increase the dissolution rates of Si.[64] On the other hand, the absorption of proteins, like albumin, onto
the Si surface reduces the rate of dissolution.[64] Furthermore, when a certain degree of dopant concentration
is exceeded (i.e., 1020 cm–3), the rate of Si-NM
dissolution sharply decreases.[24] The deposition
condition of semiconductor thin films also significantly influences
their physiochemical properties, which ultimately determines the dissolution
rates of these materials.[65,66] For instance, the dissolution
of silicon oxides is 100-fold slower when using electron-beam (e-beam)
deposition as opposed to plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition
(PECVD). Likewise, nitrides deposited by low-pressure chemical vapor
deposition (LPCVD) have slower dissolution rates than those deposited
by PECVD. Related forms of Si, including polycrystalline Si (poly-Si),
amorphous Si (a-Si), and germanium (Ge) and Si germanium (Ge) alloys
(SiGe), have also demonstrated comparable dissolution rates to monocrystalline
Si (Table ).[67] For example, poly-Si, a-Si, Ge, and SiGe in
PBS solutions of pH 7.4 at 37 °C dissolve at rates of 2.8, 4.1,
3.1, and 0.1 nm day–1, respectively, in PBS solutions
of pH 7.4 at 37 °C.[68] a-Si dissolves
faster than poly-Si due to an increased rate of water penetration,
which stems from the lower activation energy and density of a-Si.[65,69,70] Similarly, Ge has a lower bandgap
and greater minority-carrier mobility than Si.[68] Like monocrystalline Si, the dissolution of each of these
materials is regulated by the temperature and pH of the surrounding
environment as well as the presence of proteins and ions.[68] For example, in comparison to room temperature,
dissolution rates are accelerated at physiological temperatures (37
°C). In solutions of high pH (pH 10), patterned arrays of Si
and Ge take only a few hours to dissolve at a pH of 10. Under similar
conditions, however, SiGe dissolves at a much slower rate (∼2
nm day–1). This is because band-bending and a lowered
potential barrier leads to large activation energy and the creation
of a passivating oxide at the SiGe surface.[78] Furthermore, the dissolution rates of poly-Si, a-Si, and nano-Si
are 30–40-times higher in bovine serum than in PBS, while SiGe
dissolved ∼185-times faster.
Table 1
Dissolution Behavior
of Inorganic
Dielectric Materials, Inorganic Semiconductor Materials, and Hydrolyzable
Metals in DI Water or Buffer Solution at Room Temperature[717374757677]
Owing to their attractive electrical and
mechanical performances,
and their degradability in physiological environments essential metals
and trace elements, including Mg, Molybdenum (Mo), Iron (Fe), Zinc
(Zn), and their alloys, represent an exciting class of biomaterials
for temporary medical device applications (Table ).[70,79,80] Because of their simplicity and fast dissolution rates (r = 7.2 nm day–1 and 115 nm day–1 in aqueous media and Hanks’s balanced saline solution, respectively),
initial reports detailing biodegradable, bioresorbable, or transient
devices components focused primarily on the use of Mg or Mg alloys
as electrodes, interconnects, or structural device components.[12,23] Mo, Zn, Fe, and Tungsten (W), however, share similar characteristics
and transient mechanisms with Mg in both aqueous media and biofluids
(Table ).[70] In addition, the biocompatibility of these biodegradable
metals has also been widely assessed in vivo by examining
inflammatory responses in both animal models and humans using histological
and immunofluorescence analysis.[81−83] However, in comparison
to Zn, which has demonstrated dissolution rates of 1.7 nm day–1 in aqueous media and 7.2 nm day–1 in a biofluid, Mo and W are favored metals for temporary medical
applications that may require direct contact between biological tissues
and metals components, such as physiological electrical signal sensing,
due to their slower, more tunable degradation (∼10–2 nm day–1). On the other hand, although both Mo
and W have been deemed essential materials for the design of biodegradable
healthcare devices, less comprehensive data relating to the biocompatibility
of these metals and their degradation byproducts are available.[28,70] Unique challenges are also faced when using biodegradable metals
for ingestible or implantable electronics. For one, the physical properties
of metal-based materials tend to change as they oxidize and dissolve.[84] Besides, pockets of gas can form near implant
sites due to excessive hydrogen evolution at the surface of metal
contacts or interconnects. Since, however, ingestible electronics,
like biodegradable antennae, will be used in the form of thin-film
devices, excessive hydrogen evolution is not such a concerning risk.
In addition, recent efforts to address potential challenges such as
these have focused on the development of new composite alloys made
up of Mg–Zn–Ca.[85]Considering
the large volume of suitable biodegradable materials
that are available for the production of high-performance transient
electronics, this section of the review will discuss recent developments
in the selection of materials for the fundamental components of temporary
biodegradable sensors for health monitoring.
Substrates
Electronic device substrates
provide an electrically inert foundation for the deposition of multiple
functional materials including dielectric layers, semiconductor materials,
and conductive electrodes and interconnects. As a result, substrate
area and thickness are larger than that of any other device layer.
The substrate also constitutes most of the weight in an electronic
device and therefore generates more “electronic waste”
than the functional layers.[86] In this respect,
substrate materials ultimately determine device stability and degradation
and are thus a critically important consideration.[23,24] In consequence, the mechanical robustness, swelling rate, and dissolution
rate are critical parameters for guiding the selection of suitable
substrates for the design of high-performance biodegradable devices
with controlled operational timeframes.[23,24] To match device
fabrication procedures, substrate materials must be compatible with
high temperatures and harsh solvents..
Naturally
Derived Polymer Substrates
Recently, several protein-based
biopolymers, including silk, cellulose,
and chitosan, etc., have attracted extensive attention as substrate
materials for biodegradable devices because of their readily abundant
availability, outstanding biocompatibility, flexibility, and environmental
sustainability.[24,87−90]Over the past two decades,
the mechanical robustness, bioactivity, excellent biocompatibility,
and immuno-compatibility of silk and regenerated silk fibroin materials
have led to increased recognition of these biomaterials as a distinct
class of biodegradable and biocompatible polymers for transient health
monitoring technologies.[30] Besides, the
well-characterized degradation rate of these US Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) approved biomaterials can be regulated via controlled β-Sheet
crystallization. On the other hand, as crystallinity increases, silk
becomes less flexible, more brittle, and difficult to handle. In addition,
the rapid degradation rate of silk renders this fibrous protein incompatible
with aqueous processing steps, which typically limits the potential
for direct device fabrication.[91] However,
if the complete electronic system of a transient device is first fabricated
on temporary substrate and then transferred to the substrate chosen
for device operation, almost any biodegradable material can be used
as a structural support for soft transient electronic devices.[86] Using such approaches, silk has been demonstrated
as a suitable support for a new generation of mechanically flexible
and degradable Si-based implantable electronics with bespoke in vivo lifetimes (Figure a,b).[19] The dissolution
process, which can be tailored from periods of months to even years,
relies on complex mechanisms that are ordinarily arbitrated by a foreign
body response.[92] Typically, silk is first
broken down by proteolytic enzymes, for example, chymotrypsin, actinase,
and carboxylase, via adsorption at surface-binding domains, followed
by hydrolysis of the ester bond.[93] The
last degradation products include noninflammatory amino acids, which
are simply absorbed in vivo and often usable in cell
metabolic functions. Similar advances have also led to ultrathin biointerfaced
electronic systems that provde intimate contact and minimal invasiveness
for integration with the soft curved profiles of biological tissues.[94] Silk has also been used to support the biotransfer
of peptide modified, transfer printed graphene nanosensors onto biomaterials,
with tooth enamel for the bioselective detection of bacteria. Biotransfer
of the graphene nanosensors was achieved via dissolution of the water-soluble
silk substrate.[95] Other approaches have
described the fabrication of biodegradable, flexible, and optically
transparent, all organic micropatterned bioelectronic devices via
aqueous photolithographic processing of conducting polymers (CPs)
on silk substrates.[96] Skin-conformable
stretchable electrodes have also been developed for wearable and implantable
applications using silk plasticization and thin-film metallization
(Figure c).[97] These highly stretchable (>100%) plasticized
silk electrodes demonstrated excellent electrical on-skin electrophysiological
signals recording performance, comparable to commercial gel electrodes.
More recently silk was combined with graphene to serve not only as
a substrate but also as an electrically conductive path for the realization
of self-healing, skin mountable electronic tattoos that are sensitive
to changes, in strain, temperature, and humidity (Figure d).[98]
Figure 2
(a)
Ultrathin devices on a flexible silk substrate, in flat (left)
and bent (center and right) configurations, and (b) images of the
water dissolution of silicon electronics on silk, at various time
stages. Reproduced with permission from ref (19). Copyright 2009 American
Institute of Physics (AIP). (c) Photographs of plasticized silk electrodes
conformably attached to a finger and laminated on a human forearm.
Reproduced with permission from ref (97). Copyright 2018 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co.
KGaA, Weinheim. (d) Photographs showing a silk-graphene E-tattoo attached
to the forearm and the tattoo on skin in a stretched (upper), compressed
(middle), and twisted (lower) state. Reproduced with permission from
ref (98). Copyright
2019 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
(a)
Ultrathin devices on a flexible silk substrate, in flat (left)
and bent (center and right) configurations, and (b) images of the
water dissolution of silicon electronics on silk, at various time
stages. Reproduced with permission from ref (19). Copyright 2009 American
Institute of Physics (AIP). (c) Photographs of plasticized silk electrodes
conformably attached to a finger and laminated on a human forearm.
Reproduced with permission from ref (97). Copyright 2018 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co.
KGaA, Weinheim. (d) Photographs showing a silk-graphene E-tattoo attached
to the forearm and the tattoo on skin in a stretched (upper), compressed
(middle), and twisted (lower) state. Reproduced with permission from
ref (98). Copyright
2019 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.Aside from silk, cellulose, the utmost available natural
polysaccharide
on Earth, is also a promising substrate for biodegradable sensors
for healthcare monitoring due to the complex carbohydrate’s
attractive degradation behavior in physiological environments as well
as its flexibility, transparency, high-temperature stability, and
excellent biocompatibility.[99−101] Conversely, the potential fabrication
of ultrathin cellulose-based devices, a desirable characteristic for
enhanced flexibility and faster degradation, is limited by the substrates
tendency to exceed multiple micrometers in thickness. To overcome
such issues, trimethylsilyl-functionalized cellulose was spin-coated
on a thin dextran sacrificial layer to produce a cellulose substrate
with good chemical and thermal stability and thickness as low as 800
nm.[91] In a similar regard, papers made
of cellulose nanofibers (CNF) have also been recognized as affordable,
green biobased platforms for the fabrication of low-cost devices and
biosensors for healthcare diagnostics. Paper is also a recyclable
and eco-friendly household material that has been in use in our daily
lives for centuries, and thus, its manufacturability, simplicity,
and authenticity are beyond doubt. In addition, this simple substrate
is versatile, flexible, and porous and can thus facilitate the accurate
and rapid detection of targeted physiological analytes. By this means,
paper-based devices can provide inexpensive and transportable diagnostic
technologies that can be immensely useful in resource-constrained
settings, where special instrumentation and medical professionals
are not always readily accessible.[102] For
instance, due to its high processing temperature (275 °C), paper
was chosen as a suitable substrate to support the large area growth
of NiSe2 for the fabrication of a pH sensor for noninvasive
monitor oral health monitoring, a breath sensor to monitor breath-related
diseases, and a physical strain sensor for gesture recognition, to
assist deaf, dumb, and aurally challenged (Figure a).[103] Disposable,
lightweight, and low-cost paper-based, “calibration-free”
electrochemical wearable sensors have also been established for real-time,
continuous, and on-site testing of exhaled hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in artificial breath (Figure b).[104] These versatile
electrochemical paper-based sensors can also be easily incorporated
within a commercial respiratory mask. The flexible and hygroscopic
porous paper acted as both a support for screen-printed electrodes
and as a “solid electrolyte”, eradicating the requirement
for additional membranes. In addition, both the sensing surface and
collection volume of the device could be significantly improved by
shaping or patterning the paper-based substrate. A “paper watch”
has also been developed for simultaneous and real-time detection of
body vital conditions including blood pressure, heart rate, body temperature,
and skin hydration, using recyclable and nonfunctionalized using Post-It
paper as a structural support (Figure c).[105] By using Post-It
paper as a substrate, the ultralow-cost wearable health monitoring
system presents a simple approach for integration, a small environmental
footprint, and improved contact intimacy with the skin. In addition,
a wearable paper-based chemiresistor for assessing both sweat rate
and sweat loss in the human body has been fabricated by integrating
a nanocomposite of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) and sodium
dodecylbenzenesulfonate surfactant within the cellulose fibers
of commercial filter paper (Figure d).[106] The resulting wearable
device provides simple and cost-effective, real-time perspiration
measurements that could be used for several on-body biofluid analysis
applications.
Figure 3
(a) Schematic diagram demonstrating the fabrication of
a noninvasive
periodontal diagnostic sensor, a breath analyzer, and a gesture sensor
using NiSe2 modified cellulose paper. Reproduced with permission
from ref (103). Copyright
2019 American Chemical Society. (b) Schematic diagram demonstrating
the fabrication of a real-time paper-based H2O2 sensing chip and image of a respiratory mask that includes customized
sidewalls and an extension of a commercial filter with the paper-based
sensor. Reproduced with permission from ref (104). Copyright 2019 American
Chemical Society. (c) Integration of a 3D stacked paper-based autonomous
healthcare monitoring system. Reproduced with permission from ref (105). Copyright 2017 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (d) Paper-based sweat sensor for
human perspiration monitoring. Reproduced with permission from ref (106). Copyright 2019 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
(a) Schematic diagram demonstrating the fabrication of
a noninvasive
periodontal diagnostic sensor, a breath analyzer, and a gesture sensor
using NiSe2 modified cellulose paper. Reproduced with permission
from ref (103). Copyright
2019 American Chemical Society. (b) Schematic diagram demonstrating
the fabrication of a real-time paper-based H2O2 sensing chip and image of a respiratory mask that includes customized
sidewalls and an extension of a commercial filter with the paper-based
sensor. Reproduced with permission from ref (104). Copyright 2019 American
Chemical Society. (c) Integration of a 3D stacked paper-based autonomous
healthcare monitoring system. Reproduced with permission from ref (105). Copyright 2017 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (d) Paper-based sweat sensor for
human perspiration monitoring. Reproduced with permission from ref (106). Copyright 2019 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.After cellulose, chitin, the structural polymer commonly found
in the shells of crabs, shrimp, lobster and squid, as well as some
mushrooms, green algae, molds, and yeast, is the second most abundant
biopolymer.[107,108] Because of its highly ordered
crystalline structure and corresponding lack of solubility, however,
the use of chitin, in many cases is limited.[109] On the other hand, the N-deacetylated derivative of chitin, chitosan,
a linear cationic polysaccharide that consists of glucosamine and N-acetyl-glucosamine, is soluble in aqueous solutions of
both organic and inorganic acids. Chitosan is also biodegradable and
biocompatible and has functions of antibacterial, anti-inflammatory,
and hemostatic activity.[110,111] These unique features
thus make chitosan an ideal candidate for a multitude of diverse biomedical
applications, for example, as FDA approved wound dressings to promote
healing or for the local management of bleeding wounds, bioscaffolds
for epithelial and soft tissue engineering, and for drug delivery
systems.[9,112] Despite this, chitosan’s inadequate
mechanical properties often limit this natural substrate’s
use in a wide variety of applications. In consequence, chitosan is
often mixed with other polymers to enhance its properties and further
diversify its applications. For example, by blending chitosan, extracted
from crab shell with another widely abundant and naturally sourced
polymer, potato starch, wearable green electronics based on cheap,
edible, biodegradable, transparent and water-soluble substrates have
been developed (Figure a).[113] The edible starch–chitosan
substrate-based transparent electrodes can be biodegraded in lysozyme
solution quickly at room temperature, deprived of creating any toxic
remains. Our group has also recently developed a free-standing, biodegradable,
piezoelectric film for the development of fully degradable pressure
sensing devices by blending chitosan with bioorganic glycine.[7,114] Chitosan has also been blended with synthetic polymers, like poly(vinylpyrrolidone)
(PVP), to fabricate biodegradable, low-cost, and flexible substrates
(Figure b).[115] The chitosan–PVP flexible substrate
demonstrated high optical transmittance, high-temperature stability,
smooth surface, and good mechanical stability. The natural–synthetic
polymer blend also revealed a high degree of biodegradability, degrading
by almost ∼90% of its original state after just 6 days in farmland
soil at room temperature.
Figure 4
(a) Photographs of a flexible and transparent
starch–chitosan
substrate (SC) and dissolution of an SC based transparent electrode.
Reproduced with permission from ref (113). Copyright 2018 American Chemical Society.
(b) Photographs of a chitosan–PVP substrate and its biodegradability
in soil. Reproduced with permission from ref (115). Copyright 2019 American
Chemical Society.
(a) Photographs of a flexible and transparent
starch–chitosan
substrate (SC) and dissolution of an SC based transparent electrode.
Reproduced with permission from ref (113). Copyright 2018 American Chemical Society.
(b) Photographs of a chitosan–PVP substrate and its biodegradability
in soil. Reproduced with permission from ref (115). Copyright 2019 American
Chemical Society.A variety of additional
natural compounds, including bio-organics,
such as sodium alginate and even foodstuffs, like charcoal, rice paper,
potato starch, gelatin seaweed, and cheese, have also been used as
natural substrates for biodegradable devices.[22,116]
Synthetic Polymer Substrate
Although
natural substrate materials present an exciting platform for transient
technologies, their intrinsic properties often fail to meet the high
demand drawn by biodegradable electronic devices.[23] For instance, the mechanical properties and rate of degredation
of naturally derived substrates are often hard to tune. Natural polymers
also have the capacity to elicit immune responses.[117−119] In addition, the increasing demand for improved integration of biodegradable
devices with dynamic surfaces, such as wearable or implantable transient
electronics designed to adhere to the skin, heart, or brain, further
stresses substrate requirements to consider stretchable and elastic
features.[120,121] In contrast, many naturally
derived biopolymers tend to demonstrate a brittle nature, particularly
as crystallinity and thickness increase.[23] Instead, synthetic polymers with foreseeable and reproducible mechanical
and disintegration performances can be produced using controlled conditions.[119,122−124] Because of these advantages and the increasing
interest in green electronics, several synthetic polymers with unique
features, including PLA, PLGA, PU, PVA, PCL, poly(caprolactone)–poly(glycerol
sebacate) (PGS–PCL), poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG), polydimethylsiloxane
(PDMS), polybutylene succinate (PBS), and sodium carboxymethylcellulose
(Na–CMC) are gaining prominence as substrates for soft, elastic
transient electronics.[125−127]Of the many synthetic
polymer substrates available for the fabrication of biodegradable
healthcare monitoring devices, PLA is a commercially attractive due
to its similaritites with traditional hydrocarbon polymers such as
polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polystyrene (PS), and polycarbonate
(PC). In addition, PLA can be produced from lactic acid by direct
polycondensation reaction, or ring-opening polymerization of the lactide
monomer. This means that, while PLA is a synthetic polymer, this biodegradable
thermoplastic polyester can be derivative of several renewable resources
including corn starch, tapioca roots, or sugar cane.[128] Furthermore, the FDA has also permitted the use of PLA
in specified clinical applications.[129,130] In consequence,
PLA, in addition to PLLA and PLGA, has been used for the manufacture
of biodegradable disposable products, as bioresorbable biomaterial
substrates, scaffolds, and medical implants, and for drug-delivery
systems.[131] For example, a three-arm stereocomplex
PLA (tascPLA) has been employed as both a dielectric and substrate
material for the fabrication of a skin-like temperature sensor array
created on a highly flexible and thermally stable (up to 200 °C)
organic transistors (Figure a).[132] The biomaterial-based organic
field-effect transistors (OFETs) present many advantages, including
transparency, degradability, reliable skin-like thermal sensitivity,
and good biocompatibility, hence displaying wide ranging applicability
for implantable medical devices and artificial skin as well as environmentally
friendly electronics. Flexible wearable transient pressure sensors
to act as an electronic skin (e-Skin) for mapping tactile stimuli
and to forecast the potential health condition of patients have also
been developed by inserting porous MXene-impregnated tissue paper
between two PLA thin sheets, one coated with an interdigitated electrode.[133] Because of the advantageous degradability of
both PLA and tissue paper, the sensor degraded after just 14 days
in 0.5 M NaOH (Figure b).
Figure 5
(a) Schematic diagram demonstrating the fabrication of an OFET
device using a three-arm stereocomplex PLA substrate and images of
the fully constructed transparent and flexible OFETs. Reproduced with
permission from ref (132). Copyright 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (b)
Photographs of a flexible wearable transient MXene/tissue paper sensor
sandwiched between a PLA thin sheet and an interdigitated electrode-coated
PLA thin sheet, and its dissolution over 2 weeks in a 0.5 M NaOH solution.
Reproduced with permission from ref (133). Copyright 2019 American Chemical Society.
(c) Sequential dissolution images of a fully transient PVA-based electrochemical
strip in DI water. Reproduced with permission from ref (135). Copyright 2020 The Royal
Society of Chemistry. (d) Photographs of a PVA–liquid metal
hydrogel for wearable transient epidermal sensors placed in a HCl
solution. Reproduced with permission from ref (136). Copyright 2019 American
Chemical Society. (e) Images showing the degradation of a patterned
electrospun nanofibrous PGS–PCL substrate inside a solution
of 0.5 M NaOH. Reproduced with permission from ref (127). Copyright 2014 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
(a) Schematic diagram demonstrating the fabrication of an OFET
device using a three-arm stereocomplex PLA substrate and images of
the fully constructed transparent and flexible OFETs. Reproduced with
permission from ref (132). Copyright 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (b)
Photographs of a flexible wearable transient MXene/tissue paper sensor
sandwiched between a PLA thin sheet and an interdigitated electrode-coated
PLA thin sheet, and its dissolution over 2 weeks in a 0.5 M NaOH solution.
Reproduced with permission from ref (133). Copyright 2019 American Chemical Society.
(c) Sequential dissolution images of a fully transient PVA-based electrochemical
strip in DI water. Reproduced with permission from ref (135). Copyright 2020 The Royal
Society of Chemistry. (d) Photographs of a PVA–liquid metal
hydrogel for wearable transient epidermal sensors placed in a HCl
solution. Reproduced with permission from ref (136). Copyright 2019 American
Chemical Society. (e) Images showing the degradation of a patterned
electrospun nanofibrous PGS–PCL substrate inside a solution
of 0.5 M NaOH. Reproduced with permission from ref (127). Copyright 2014 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.PVA is another popular substrate choice for biodegradable and biocompatible
electronic devices. For example, PVA has been used as a temporary
substrate to support sensors, transistors, light-emitting diodes,
photodetectors, radiofrequency inductors, capacitors, oscillators,
rectifying diodes, wireless coils, and solar cells on thin PDMS foil
for the measurement of electrical activity produced by the heart,
brain, and skeletal muscles.[134] Like other
polymer materials, both natural and synthetic, PVA is often mixed
with blend polymers to achieve improved material properties and targeted
or tunable device characteristics. For instance, research has previously
shown that the addition of gelatin to a PVA–polymer matrix
achieved the necessary film strength and transience required for long-term
point of care glucose levels using electrochemical test strips.[135] Although bare PVA films also maintained their
shape during electrochemical analysis, their dissolution was timely.
In comparison, PVA–gelatin substrates fully degraded after
7 days in deionized water at room temperature (Figure c). PVA-based hydrogels have also been used
as a platform for the development of transient wearable sensors for
healthcare diagnosis and to monitor human activity. For instance,
borate-modified PVA hydrogels stabilized with liquid metal particles
(LMPs) of eutectic gallium and indium were fabricated as epidermal
sensors.[136] The PVA–LMP-based sensors
demonstrated attractive dissolvable features for on-demand transient
electronics, largely dissolving after just 3 days in pH 5 HCl solution
at room temperature (Figure d). The excellent degradation properties were ascribed to
the separation of the dynamic diol–borate complex and destruction
of the 3D hydrogel network in acidic environments or disrupted liquid
inner cores due to acid attacking the oxidized shells of LMPs.PGS, a biodegradable elastomer, is yet another excellent candidate
for temporary health monitoring devices that can withstand up to ∼30%
strain with linear elastic mechanical responses.[137] Electrospun elastic PGS–PCL substrates have been
used to engineer stretchable and biodegradable electronics to serve
as elastic and biocompatible heaters, temperature sensors, and strain
gauges for bioresorbable electronics and smart wound dressings. Electrospun
PGS–PCL substrates are generally constructed of a thin fibrous
mesh and present wicking properties similar to paper. This enables
their compatibility with fabrication processes normally applied in
paper electronics.[127] These processes range
from using screen printing or inkjet printing of metallic inks to
patterning or machining using a laser to deposit electrically conductive
traces.[138] These substrates also offer
elasticity, suturability, and gradual degradability. After 10 days
in 0.01 M NaOH and PBS solutions at 37 °C, the variation in the
electrical resistance of serpentine silver lines patterned on the
nanofibrous substrates varied by less than 10%.[127] After 30 days, however, the silver patterned PGS–PCL
substrate had completely degraded, highlighting the material’s
potential as a substrate for bioresorbable electronics and smart wound
dressings (Figure e).Although biodegradable synthetic polymer substrates offer
superior
mechanical properties over their natural counterparts, they too are
often incompatible with direct device fabrication techniques.[139] In this regard, transfer printing techniques
can be used to avoid the constraints associated with the inherent
features of synthetic biodegradable polymers. For instance, transient
complementary metal-oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) arrays, with
excellent operational characteristics, were fabricated on several
synthetic biodegradable substrates including PLGA, PCL, and rice paper.
Ultrathin Si microdevices were first deposited, patterned, and etched,
and then transferred to the desired biodegradable substrate using
transfer printing.[86] To demonstrate the
potential of this manufacturing strategy, a fully formed transient
hydration sensor that might be used to monitor the healing processes
of cutaneous wounds was transfer printed from a temporary substrate
where it was formed onto a PLGA substrate. Critically, the performance
of the transfer printed device was comparable to that of devices before
transfer. Under physiological conditions, in PBS at 37 °C, the
dissolvable inorganic components the PLGA-based device required only
a matter of days or weeks to degrade, while the PLGA substrate took
some months. This difference in degradation times could, therefore,
be used to develop robust yet transient sensing systems that rely
on the degradation of inorganic elements as the sensing mechanism.
Similar transfer printing techniques have also been reported for the
development of biodegradable Si-based devices on PVA substrates.[139−141]
Metal Substrates
As alternatives
to biodegradable polymeric substrates, metal foils, including Mo,
Fe, W, and Zn, have also served as substrates for biodegradable devices.
For instance, n-channel metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect
transistors (MOSFETs) have been fabricated on a Mo foil (≈
5 μm) to serve as transient active and passive electronic components
including diodes, transistors, capacitors, and inductors. The transient
n-MOSFETs completely dissolved after 25 days in PBS (pH 7.4) at 90
°C. Because of excellent electrical and thermal properties, relative
solvent resistant, and favorable water and oxygen isolation performances,
metal foils such as these provide improved compatibility with device
manufacture techniques.[66] They also avoid
the issue of polymer swelling in aqueous solutions. On the other hand,
their rigid properties often limit use in a varied range of applications.
Dielectric Materials
Dielectric materials
are electrical insulators that generate a large polarization in the
presence of an electric field. Because of the alignment of dipole
moments in an external electric field, positive charges present in
the dielectric material move in the direction of the applied field
and negative charges move opposite to this, resulting in an internal
electric field that decreases the overall field that is contained
by the dielectric. Dielectric materials are, therefore, integral components
of both active and passive devices such as field-effect transistors
(FETs) and capacitive sensing devices, both of which contribute significantly
to the realization of medical diagnostics and structural health monitoring
devices.[23,125]
Inorganic Dielectrics
Inorganic
dielectric materials, such as magnesium oxide (MgO), silicon dioxide
(SiO2), silicon nitride (Si3N4),
and spin-on-glass (SOG) represent attractive choices for gate and
interlayer dielectrics, passivation coatings, and the encapsulation
layers of biodegradable devices to avert short circuit and shield
other functional materials.[22,66] SiO2 and
Si3N4 are two of the most used dielectric materials.
For example, n-channel monocrystalline silicon MOSFETs have been developed
for biodegradable electronic implants using silk substrates (≈
25 μm), Si semiconductors (≈ 100 nm), Mg source, drain,
and gate electrodes (≈ 200 nm), and SiO2 gate (≈
100 nm) and interlayer (≈ 100 nm) dielectrics (Figure a).[142] The constructed devices demonstrated on/off ratios of >105 and mobilities of 650 cm2/V s. Furthermore, the
free-standing
MOSFETs completely degrade within 5 min or so in deionized (DI) water
at room temperature (Figure b). The silk substrates dissolve rapidly (∼2 min),
followed by a beak down of the array into its individual components.
Depending on the dissolution rates of the various constituent materials,
each of the individual components then gradually disappears.[12] SiO2 and Si3N4 have also been employed as multifunctional materials that serve
as gate dielectrics, interlayer dielectrics, and encapsulation layers
in multiplexed neural sensing arrays.[143] MgO is also considered a useful inorganic dielectric material that
has demonstrated optical transparency, good thermal stability, and
high resistivity in numerous applications.[144]
Figure 6
(a)
Schematic diagram representing the wafer-scale fabrication
of fully formed transient n-channel MOSFETs based on SiO2 gate and interlayer dielectrics, and subsequent transfer of the
device to silk films. (b) Optical images of the dissolution and disintegration
of an array of MOSFETs on silk. Reproduced with permission from ref (142). Copyright 2013 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (c) Images of the degradation
of a highly sensitive biodegradable pressure sensor based on nanofibrous
PLGA–PCL dielectric in PBS. Reproduced with permission from
ref (147). Copyright
2019 Elsevier. (d) Rollable pentacene OTFT with silk fibroin as the
gate dielectric. Reproduced with permission from ref (165). Copyright 2011 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (e) Schematic diagram representing
the structure of an OFET fabricated using egg white as a dielectric
and a schematic diagram demonstrating the denaturation and cross-linking
of albumen protein under thermal treatment. Reproduced with permission
from ref (178). Copyright
2011 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
(a)
Schematic diagram representing the wafer-scale fabrication
of fully formed transient n-channel MOSFETs based on SiO2 gate and interlayer dielectrics, and subsequent transfer of the
device to silk films. (b) Optical images of the dissolution and disintegration
of an array of MOSFETs on silk. Reproduced with permission from ref (142). Copyright 2013 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (c) Images of the degradation
of a highly sensitive biodegradable pressure sensor based on nanofibrous
PLGA–PCL dielectric in PBS. Reproduced with permission from
ref (147). Copyright
2019 Elsevier. (d) Rollable pentacene OTFT with silk fibroin as the
gate dielectric. Reproduced with permission from ref (165). Copyright 2011 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (e) Schematic diagram representing
the structure of an OFET fabricated using egg white as a dielectric
and a schematic diagram demonstrating the denaturation and cross-linking
of albumen protein under thermal treatment. Reproduced with permission
from ref (178). Copyright
2011 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Synthetic Polymer Dielectrics
Considering
their commercial availability and ease of processability, a variety
of synthetic and elastomeric polymers, including PLA, PVA, PDMS, and
PU, have also been widely used as dielectric materials for biodegradable
devices.[132,145,146] The applicability of these polymers as dielectric layers is by virtue
of the presence of charged/polar terminal groups, for example, alcohol
or acid groups that can be polarized under an electric field.[125] Since elastomeric polyesters such as PGS more
reversibly endure compression than more viscoelastic substitutes,
these biodegradable elastomers are also especially useful for transient
capacitive sensing applications. A PLGA–PCL composite membrane
has also been prepared as an elastomeric dielectric layer for the
fabrication of a completely biodegradable pressure sensor using a
state of the art electrospinning technique.[147] PLGA was selected as the main component of the composite to relaize
desired dielectric properties (3.3–4.4, depending on molecular
weight), while PCL was chosen as a secondary component to realize
desired mechanical properties. The nanofibrous dielectric demonstrated
sufficient mechanical properties, revealing a modulus of elasticity
of less than 10 MPa and attractive degradation characteristics,
losing 60% of its initial weight during first 2 weeks of degradation
in PBS and completely dissolving within 18 days (Figure c). At the same time, after
the first week of degradation, the sensor retained 70.5% of its low-pressure
measurement range. Because of its highly compressible and porous nature,
the PLGA–PCL nanofibrous dielectric presented tunable mechanical
and dielectric properties.On the other hand, synthetic and
elastomeric polymers tend to display reduced dielectric constants
(κ < 3), which need high voltage for device operation.[148−150] To realize lower operation voltages, several approaches have been
developed for the formation of high-k dielectrics. A general strategy
involves the incorporation of inorganic high-κ fillers including
SiO2 (κ = 3.9), aluminum oxide (Al2O3) (κ = 9), hafnium oxide (HfO2) (κ
= 25), titanium dioxide TiO2 (κ = 80), and Barium
titanate (BaTiO3) (κ ≤ 7000) into the polymer
matrix. For instance, Al2O3 additives have been
used to form degradable high-k cellulose acetate dielectrics (κ
value = 27.57 (50 Hz)).[87,151−153] In addition, the integration of polymeric materials with conductive
fillers, including conductive polymers, carbon nanotubes (CNTs), metal
particles, or liquid metals, enhances the effective electrode area
and enables polarization, thus resulting in high-k dielectrics.[154−158] For instance, both metal oxides and CNTs have been shown to improve
the dielectric constant of paper, resultant in a high κ value
of 3198 (1 kHz).[88] However, high concentrations
of conductive fillers may significantly increase leakage current and
adversely affect device performance. Elastomeric polymers integrated
with polarizable moieties, such as nitrogen (N), oxygen (O), and fluorine
(F), atoms can also be used. For example, the incorporation of highly
polarizable PEG units within conventional PU leads to increased dielectric
constant.[159]
Naturally
Derived Dielectrics
As
an alternative, natural polymers also essentially demonstrate innate
practical dielectric properties. For instance, due to an abundance
of free hydroxyl groups that impart polarity, most plant-based fibers,
including cotton, jute, banana, and bamboo, demonstrate high κ
values.[160,161] In addition, cellulose-based gate dielectrics
have been widely used in organic TFTs (OTFT) with high on–off
ratios.[162,163] For instance, a high κ dielectric
cellulose-based gate dielectric for OTFTs and complementary inverter
circuit have previously been shown to out-perform any other organic
inverter circuit by demonstrating a record DC gain of above 500 V/V,
a low operation voltage of only 4 V, and large noise margin up to
92.5%.[164] Many protein derived polymers,
such as silk, shellac, and gelatin, have also been highlighted as
gate dielectric materials for TFT devices. For example, pentacene-based
OTFT with solution-processed silk fibroin gate dielectric demonstrated
high mobility of 23.2 cm2/(V s) and a low operating voltage
of −3 V (Figure d).[165] Similarly, shellac and gelatin
also display high gate dielectric properties in OTFT.[166,167]Because of low dielectric losses, high breakdown strength,
and low loss tangent, various sugars, such as glucose, lactose, and
sucrose, naturally occurring nucleobases, such as adenine, guanine,
thymine, and cytosine, and both essential and nonessential nutrients,
including caffeine, are also promising dielectrics for biodegradable,
biocompatible, and even edible devices.[23,125] For example,
organic FETs (OFETs) fabricated with sugar dielectrics and fullerene-based
semiconductors demonstrated capacitances per area of 6.8 nF/cm2 and 2.15 nF/cm2 for lactose and glucose, respectively,
with minimal hysteresis.[168] Deoxyribonucleic
acid (DNA) is another useful biodegradable dielectric that can be
the derivative of natural and renewable sources such as waste materials
from fishing industries and has recently attracted significant attention
for organic electronic and photonic devices.[169−172] To enhance solution processability for thin-film processing, a complex
can be formed between DNA and cationic surfactants such as hexadecyltrimethylammonium
chloride (CTMA).[173−176] Then again, because of the presence of mobile ion impurities, OFETs
with DNA-CTMA dielectrics have substantial hysteresis.[174,177] On the other hand, hysteresis can be reduced by limiting the ionic
mobility of DNA-CTMA via poly(phenylisocyanate)-co-formaldehyde cross-linking.[174] Alternatively,
2.5 nm films can be produced from DNA nucleobases using vacuum processing
and directly used as biodegradable dielectric materials. For instance,
vacuum processed thin films of guanine and cytosine displayed dielectric
constants and breakdown voltages similar to both glucose and lactose,
while also presenting low losses in the range of 10–3 at 100 mHz. Notably, high capacitances per area were also attained,
9.25 nF/cm2 for guanine and 13.8 nF/cm2 for
cytosine.[177] Egg white or albumen is another
interesting nutrient-based dielectric. By simply spin coating and
thermally processing albumen obtained directly from eggs, without
further extraction, a high-quality dielectric layer in pentacene-
and C60-based OTFTs was achieved (Figure e).[178] The dielectric
and surface properties of the egg-derived dielectric layer were tailored
by regulating the thermal baking conditions and sequences. The thermal
processing of the albumen film led to irreversible denaturation of
albumen proteins and the creation of the disulfide bonds between two
cross-linked protein molecules, which takes a critical part in the
decline of gate leakage current.
Semiconductor
Materials
Inorganic Semiconductors
Traditional
semiconductor electronics have been largely dominated by inorganic-based
materials such as Si and metal oxides. Since Si is the mainstay material
for the semiconductor industry and many technologies, a vast number
of fabrication techniques and processing methods have been developed
for its deposition and growth.[179] Furthermore,
recent revelations that Si experiences total hydrolysis (relevant
only to Si layers in nanoscale dimensions) have also unlocked new
opportunities for the use of Si in electriconic systems that require
biodegradability.[61] As a result, a wide
range of degradable Si-NM-based devices have been developed. In one
example, p- and n-channel metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors
(MOSFETs) have been developed using a biodegradable elastomer POC
as a stretchable polymer substrate and Si nanomembranes/nanoribbons
to serve as skin conformable, transient, and capacitive electrophysiology
(EP) sensor.[180] This EP sensor demonstrated
a linear, elastic-mechanical response, and reversible stretching at
strains of up to ∼30%. The transient electronic materials dissolved
within hours in a uniform fashion and without delamination, while
the POC substrate remains visible for several weeks (Figure a). Other alloys of Si, such
as SiGe and Si3N4, have also been explored.[68] At the same time, growing research surrounding
metal oxide semiconductors has resulted in the development of more
cost-effective materials, compared to elemental semiconductors, exhibiting
comparable device performance and improved ambient stability. Gallium
oxide (Ga2O3), tin oxide (SnO2),
indium oxide (In2O3), and ternary oxides such
as tin-doped indium oxides (ITO) and fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO)
have all demonstrated comparable performances to Si-based materials.[181−185] In addition, the end products of the degredation pathway of these
oxides are considered unharmful in physiological environments. At
the same time, cumbersome processing techniques and a lack of availability
make these metal oxides expensive. Instead, ZnO is regarded as a standard
metal oxide for various health monitoring devices. The relative ease
of synthesis, varied solution processability, stability, and efficient
charge transfer properties makes it an ideal material.[186−188] Besides, the major end product of the degradation pathway is a metabolite
processable by the body, zinc hydroxide (Zn(OH)2). The
biocompatibility and antibacterial properties of TiO2 are
also particularly attractive.[189] Nevertheless,
to grant a suitable rate of charge transfer, TiO2 requires
relatively high processing temperatures (∼200 °C) to convert
from an amorphous to crystalline phase. Considering biodegradable
substrate materials like PLA or PVA may not be compatible with elevated
temperatures such as these, transfer strategies may therefore need
to be explored.
Figure 7
(a) Image of the fabrication and degradation of capacitive
electrophysiology
(EP) sensor based on biodegradable elastomers and Si nanomembranes/nanoribbons.
Reproduced with permission from ref (180). Copyright 2015 American Chemical Society.
(b) Illustration and chemical structure of nanoconfined acid-labile
semiconductor fibers embedded within a biodegradable elastomer as
well as the UV–vis absorption spectra of a solution of p(DPP-PPD)
chlorobenzene with the addition of 1% 1 M TFA, and the normalized
peak maxima extracted from UV–vis absorption spectra of a thin
film of neat and nanoconfined p(DPP-PPD) in 1 M TFA water. Reproduced
with permission from ref[207]. Copyright 2019 American Chemical Society.
(a) Image of the fabrication and degradation of capacitive
electrophysiology
(EP) sensor based on biodegradable elastomers and Si nanomembranes/nanoribbons.
Reproduced with permission from ref (180). Copyright 2015 American Chemical Society.
(b) Illustration and chemical structure of nanoconfined acid-labile
semiconductor fibers embedded within a biodegradable elastomer as
well as the UV–vis absorption spectra of a solution of p(DPP-PPD)
chlorobenzene with the addition of 1% 1 M TFA, and the normalized
peak maxima extracted from UV–vis absorption spectra of a thin
film of neat and nanoconfined p(DPP-PPD) in 1 M TFA water. Reproduced
with permission from ref[207]. Copyright 2019 American Chemical Society.
Synthetic Semiconducting Polymers
The emergence of semiconducting polymers, such as polythiophenes
(P3HTs) (e.g., poly(3-hexylthiophene), P3HT)(65), and donor–acceptor
copolymers (e.g., diketopyrrolopyrroles, DPP), has revealed
a distinct class of materials that offer a more cost-effective solution
and greater mechanical flexibility than their inorganic counterparts.[190−193]Semiconductors are typically characterized by their carrier
mobility. In organic systems, charge transfer happens along and between
conjugated backbones. The prime feature defining the conductivity
of organic semiconductors, or intrinsically conductive polymers, is,
therefore, the extent of π-conjugation in the polymer backbone.
A longer sequence of alternating C=C double bonds or a higher
degree of π-conjugation leads to greater intra- and intermolecular
overlap of the π-orbitals through π–π stacking,
thus resulting in higher conductivity due to increased delocalization
of π-orbital electrons.[194] While
the electrical conductivity and charge transport properties of inorganic
materials are still superior, the solution processability and tuneability
of π-bonded molecules or conjugated polymers (CPs), including
polypyrrole (PPy), polyaniline (PANI), poly thiophene, and poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene)
(PEDOT), which has conductivities up to 4.6 × 103 S/cm
when doped with poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS), offer potential
advantages over inorganic and small-molecule organic semiconductors.[195−202]Partially degradable semiconducting and conducting polymers
are
often achieved by blending nondegradable semiconducting materials
or conjugated polymers with biodegradable, insulating polymers. For
example, a P3HT derivative with carboxylate substituents known as
poly(3-thiophene methyl acetate) (P3TMA) was blended with poly(tetramethylene
succinate), PLA, poly(ester urea), and thermoplastic polyurethane
(TPU) to enhance miscibility. In this way, although the polymers could
not be completely disintergrated into their monomeric constituents,
the conductive composites can degenerate. Considering that the electronic
component of the polymer blend is often nondegradable, a blend demonstrating
maximum electrical conductivity with a minimum concentration of nondegradable
conjugated component is most desirable.[23] As with dielectric materials, conducting polymers can also be achieved
by distributing conjugated polymer nanoparticles throughout a biodegradable
polymer matrix.[203−206] To sufficiently form conducting networks within the composite, however,
conductive fillers must, unlike biodegradable dielectric materials,
be above the critical filler content, also referred to as the percolation
threshold. Furthermore, since a high degree of degradability requires
a minimum concentration of nanoparticles, this approach is best suited
to applications where a lower conductivity is sufficient.[206]Complete degradation is achieved by introducing
hydrolyzable linkages
into semiconducting polymer backbones. For instance, a fully degradable,
two-component polymeric system has been assembled from semiconducting
fibril aggregates nanoconfined in an elastomeric matrix to enable
controlled transience and strain-independent transistor mobilities.[207] Both the urethane-based elastomeric matrix
(E-PCL) and the p(DPP-PPD) semiconductor, a diketopyrrolopyrrole
(DPP)-based polymer that features imine bonds that were created to
completely break down into their monomeric constituents in acidic
aqueous solutions. This is achieved by hydrolysis of imine bonds along
the polymer backbone. UV–vis absorption spectra, which have
been used to monitor the degradation process of neat p(DPP-PPD), in
a 1% 1 M trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) (pH ≈ 0.5), chlorobenzene
solution show a steady decrease in light absorbance. The light absorbance
eventually becomes negligible after 40 days of incubation. The color
of the corresponding solution also changes from blue–green
to purple and then to clear (Figure b). Thin films of both neat and nanoconfined p(DPP-PPD)
demonstrate similar but slower dissolution trends in 0.1 M TFA in
water, highlighting the potential of these imine-linked semiconductors
for transient electronics that will move through and breakdown within
the digestive system.[91] Alternative strategies
for complete degradation involve conjugation breaking, whereby flexible
but nonconjugated linkers are presented into semiconducting and conducting
polymers, also resulting in enhanced processability and mechanical
properties, with nominal concession to device activity.[208−211]
Naturally Derived Semiconductors
Naturally available conjugated molecules also offer exciting platforms
for biocompatible and biodegradable sensors for futuristic applications.
Many conjugated molecules found in dyes and food offer naturally defined
degradation pathways and intrinsic biocompatibility. Indigo, a natural
plant-derived dye, was one of the earliest reported naturally derived
conjugated molecules. Indigo is a semiconductor with a bandgap of
1.7 eV and stable exciton transfer on the order of 10–2 cm2/V s. Indigo molecules also lack intramolecular π-conjugation
but nonetheless display impressive anisotropic charge transfer features.
This is due to the strong intermolecular hydrogen-bonding, which underpins
π-stacking along the crystallographic b-axis.[212] Naturally inspired synthetic dyes, for example,
indigoids, such as tyrian purple, acridones, anthraquinones, terpenoids,
phenazines, and perylene/naphthalene imides, have also displayed exciton
transfer in the range of 10–2–10–1 cm2 /(V s).[213,214] The natural pigment
melanin is again an interesting biopolymer, which, though essentially
nonconducting because of an extremely disordered structure, displays
conductivity through doping via water absorption.[215] Owing to the significance of hydration on melanin conductivity,
it is an attractive material for in vivo healthcare
monitoring applications. For instance, an in vivo investigation of fully hydrated melanin thin films with conductivities
of 7 × 10–5 S/cm revealed that the melanin
implants are almost fully eroded and resorbed after 8 weeks.[216] Other eco-friendly and biodegradable natural
conjugated materials include the molecule accountable for the orange
color of carrots, β-carotene and byproducts of a natural laxative,
anthraquinone.[116,217] Although these natural or nature-inspired
conjugated molecules possess exciting potential, strict processing
constraints are required to attain the most advantageous morphology
and orientation for sufficient device performance.[218] Thus, to better understand and predict the future of these
materials, a greater assessment of charge transfer and electrochemical
features is required.[219] Similarly, to
understand their environmental impact, further in-depth investigation
into their mechanisms of dissolution is also necessary.
Electrode Materials
Electrode materials
are responsible for transporting electrical charge carriers around
electronic or sensing devices and to the external circuit. To achieve
high-performance biodegradable devices, conductors with high conductivities
(>10–1 S/cm) are necessary requirements.[125]
Metal-Based Electrodes
Because
of their inert nature, corrosion-resistant and high conductivity (σ
= 3–60 × 106 S/m) noble metals, such as gold
(Au) and silver (Ag), have long been used as electrode materials for
electronic medical devices. However, because of their scarcity, these
precious metals are usually costly and might result considerable build-up
and ultimate obstruction in the body due to their break down resistance.
Considering this, the use of corrodible metals linked to trace elements
that are intrinsic to the human body, including Mg, Zn, W, Fe, Mo,
and their oxides has been indispensible to the early development of
biodegradable devices.[62,70,220] Owing to their ease of processing, lower cost, and safer resorbable
properties, Mg and Zn are used most often. For example, Mg has been
chosen as an electrode for chitosan-based resistive switching memory
devices due to its biodegradability and electrical conductivity (Figure ).[221] Nevertheless, both Mg and Zn degrade relatively quickly;
metals with slower rates, such as W and Mo, are, thus, more advantageous
for devices requiring a long operational lifetime.[70] In neutral solutions, Fe thin films also demonstrate a
slow degradation rate. However, currently available Fe-based materials
rust quickly in physiological environments and are subsequently transformed
into iron oxides and hydroxides, which feature considerably reduced
solubility. The extremely slow degradation of these byproducts can
therefore limit the use of Fe-based materials in certain biodegradable
health monitoring technologies, particularly edible or implantable
technologies that should disappear entirely after fulfilling their
requirements.
Figure 8
Time-lapse images of the dissolution of Mg electrodes
of chitosan-based
resistive switching memory devices on a plastic substrate in water
at room temperature. Reproduced with permission from ref (221). Copyright 2015 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Time-lapse images of the dissolution of Mg electrodes
of chitosan-based
resistive switching memory devices on a plastic substrate in water
at room temperature. Reproduced with permission from ref (221). Copyright 2015 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Carbon-Based Electrodes
It is also
worth mentioning that graphite, carbon black nanoparticles, and CNTs
have also been employed as organic carbon-based electrodes for several
biosensing applications.[222] Nevertheless,
the toxicity of these nanosized materials limits their use in biodegradable
devices. Furthermore, because of their enhanced intrinsic charge transfer
as well as the ease of processing, metals are largely the prime material
of choice for electrodes.
Polymer-Based Electrodes
Organic
polymer-based electrode materials are achieving prominence due to
their reasonable electronic conductivity after doping as well as their
electronic and ionic conduction.[223,224] In addition,
polymers display high mechanical flexibility, in comparison to metal
contacts, and are, therefore, more appropriate for the development
of flexible and conformal electronic health monitoring devices. Strategies
suitable for the preparation of biodegradable semiconducting polymers
also apply to conductors. Relevant examples of polymeric conductors
are chemically or electrochemically doped conjugated polymers, including
melanin, polyacetylene, PEDOT, PANI, PPy, P3HT, and their copolymers.
However, due to their lower conductivities, newly emerging fully degradable
conducting polymers have mostly been developed to monitor small bioelectronic
signals. For the practical realization of fully degradable conducting
polymers, better control over the chemistry, morphology, and doping
of these materials and much higher conductivities are required.[23] Another disadvantage of conducting polymer-based
electrode is the requirement for orthogonal solvents to circumvent
the dissolution of the primary polymer electrode when processing subsequent
layers. This may lead to a new or additional challenges that could
complicate the device fabrication process further.[125] Despite these limitations, the development of highly conductive
biodegradable polymers will significantly pave to the advancement
of bioelectronics interfacing human skin or internal organs. Forthcoming
advances in organic conducting materials would, therefore, be among
the utmost exciting nevertheless the most essential milestones to
attain fully biodegradable high-performance transient devices.
Encapsulants and Adhesives
Like substrates,
encapsulation layers also play key roles in defining the lifetimes
of biodegradable electronic and sensing devices.[24] Encapsulation layers provide protection to ensure device
performance and safety for its intended lifetime, before the degradation
of functional materials, such as organic semiconductors that are generally
more susceptible to environmental degradation.[125] Encapsulants or adhesives also serve as an insulating barrier
between different device components that may be built in a multilayered
sandwich structure.[125] Starch and carbohydrate-based
sugars, like sucrose, are some of the interesting materials that are
mechanically extremely soft to be used as a substrates; however, they
could also be used as adhesive materials. Easily dissolved synthetic
polymer materials, including PLGA, PVA, POC, PCL, etc., can also serve
as a temporary encapsulant for the protection and easy handling of
the devices.[225−227] For instance, epidermal electronic systems
(EES) have been developed using water-soluble sheets of PVA that were
bonded to and encapsulated on the skin using a spray-on-bandage.[225] Placement of the EES on the skin was followed
by the dissolution of the PVA in water, leaving the EES mounted on
the skin (Figure a).
A polyvinyl acetate (PVAc) encapsulation layer extended the lifetime
of pentacene based OTFT devices.[146] Controlled
modulation of the device lifetime has also been achieved by encapsulating
devices in multiple air pockets formed using multiple layers of silk.[228] In wet environments, as the protective silk
layer begins to swell the device, the air pockets start to collapse,
and the device degradation begins. However, due to solvent incompatibility
or discrepancies in surface energy, there will be instances where
interfacial adhesive materials are required to promote wettability
and interaction. In addition, when a long device lifetime is required
the relatively weak resistance of biodegradable polymeric materials
to water permeation limit their use. For instance, Mg electrodes encapsulated
using silk fibroin lose their conductivity within just a few hours.[12] Despite this, the biodegradation of encapsulation
materials with ultralow water permeation rates still requires investigation.
On the other hand, by using Si membranes (∼1.5 m) as encapsulants,
the degradation times of dissolvable metals can significantly extend
(Figure b).[64] For example, Mg thin films encapsulated by an
Si membrane can perform for up to 60 days in PBS solution at 37 °C.
SiO2 and Si3N4 have also demonstrated
good resistance to water permeation.[143]
Figure 9
(a)
Epidermal electronic systems mounted on a forearm and encapsulated
with a layer of spray-on-bandage (left), under compression and extension
of the skin (center), and after wearing for 1 week (right). Reproduced
with permission from ref (225). Copyright 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
(b) Monocrystalline silicon nanomembranes as encapsulation layers
for water-soluble electronics. Reproduced with permission from ref (64). Copyright 2017 American
Chemical Society.
(a)
Epidermal electronic systems mounted on a forearm and encapsulated
with a layer of spray-on-bandage (left), under compression and extension
of the skin (center), and after wearing for 1 week (right). Reproduced
with permission from ref (225). Copyright 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
(b) Monocrystalline silicon nanomembranes as encapsulation layers
for water-soluble electronics. Reproduced with permission from ref (64). Copyright 2017 American
Chemical Society.
Biodegradable
Sensors: Fabrication and Implementation
Physical
Sensors
Pressure/strain
sensors are one of the most important classes of physical sensors
required for monitoring body conditions. Numerous types of biodegradable
pressure sensors made up of capacitive structures, that is, those
filled with air or biodegradable dielectric materials and piezoelectric,
piezocapacitive, or piezoresistive material, have been developed for
health monitoring purposes, in addition to electronic skins and soft
robotics. They are implanted in different parts of the body to prevent
the creation of dangerous intracranial pressure in organs postsurgery
in areas such as brain, eyes, or muscles.[1,229,230]The examples include a biodegradable
wireless capacitive pressure sensor based on the resonant frequency
mechanism developed with electrodeposited conductor Zn/Fe bilayers
parallel plate, separated by a PLLA layer, and sealed with polycaprolactone
(PCL).[231] The capacitor is filled with
air and connected to a microfabricated inductor coil (Figure a,b). Applying pressure to
the sensor results in the reduction of the gap in capacitive structure
and a shift of the resonance frequency of the circuit. The change
in the resonance frequency was wirelessly measured with an external
coil outside the body. The fabricated sensor demonstrated a linear
frequency response with applied pressure, and the sensor sensitivity
in the 0–20 kPa pressure range was about 290 kHz kPa–1. In vitro degradation of the device was tested
in saline solution (NaCl 0.9%). Functional lifetime of the sensor
in saline solution was about 107 h, followed by complete degradation
of the device in 170 h. In another instance, a biodegradable implantable
pressure sensor that has a potential to monitor physiological pressure
in the brain, lungs, eyes, and heart was fabricated using piezoelectric
PLLA.[232] The PLLA film was heated under
stretch to orient polymer chain and induce piezoelectric properties.
Later, the film was cut in a specific orientation to maximize piezoelectric
response. The sensor consisted of two layers of piezoelectric PLLA
polymer between two tiny biodegradable Mo/Mg electrodes and then encapsulating
this assembly inside layers of PLA (Figure c,d). The device is sensitive enough to
detect even very small changes in pressure in the range of 0–18
kPa with two sensitivity values (75 mV kPa–1 in
the range of 0–2 kPa and 14 mV kPa–1 in the
range of 3–18 kPa). Its sensitivity can be changed by varying
the number of PLLA layers. The sensor has a reliable performance around
4 days in vitro (PBS solution at pH 7.4, 37 °C)
and in vivo implanted in the back of mice. The sensor
started degradation after that to self-vanish, and after 8 days there
was no detectable signal. However, it took a few weeks to depredate
completely (Figure e). Hence, tuning the thicknesses of the PLA encapsulated sensor
is a highly effective parameter in controlling the degradation time
of a sensor. The same group recently developed a biodegradable pressure
sensor by using PLLA nanofibers for monitoring of physiological pressures
and as a biodegradable ultrasonic transducer for the delivery of drugs
across the blood–brain barrier.[233]
Figure 10
(a) Schematic cross-section of a passive LC resonant sensor and
(b) capacitor design. Reproduced with permission from ref (231). Copyright 2014 IEEE.
(c, d) Schematic and optical image of the biodegradable piezoelectric
PLLA sensor. (e) Sensor degradation at different days in the buffered
solution at a temperature of 74 °C. Reproduced with permission
from ref (232). Copyright
2018 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United
States of America.
(a) Schematic cross-section of a passive LC resonant sensor and
(b) capacitor design. Reproduced with permission from ref (231). Copyright 2014 IEEE.
(c, d) Schematic and optical image of the biodegradable piezoelectric
PLLA sensor. (e) Sensor degradation at different days in the buffered
solution at a temperature of 74 °C. Reproduced with permission
from ref (232). Copyright
2018 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United
States of America.The other example of
biodegradable pressure sensor is a single-use
biodegradable capacitive pressure sensor patch for cardiovascular
monitoring using a microstructured dielectric layer of poly(glycerol
sebacate) (PGS) between two Mg electrodes as capacitive structure.[234] Polyhydroxybutyrate/polyhydroxyvalerate
(PHB/PHV) were used as top and bottom substrates, Mg electrodes were
deposited on them, and finally the PGS layer between them was laminated
(Figure a). Figure b shows SEM image
of the PGS film that contains microstructured 2D arrays of square–pyramid
shapes. The sensors had a very high sensitivity of 0.76 kPa–1 until 2 kPa, and 0.11 kPa–1 from 2 to 10 kPa.
Blood pulse wave in human arteries was measured successfully by application
of the device on the skin, and the skin enhanced the SNR and response
time. By submerging the device in PBS at pH 7.4 and 37 °C, Mg
electrodes degraded rapidly, and polymers last for a few months as
the device retained about 58% of its initial weight after 7 weeks
(Figure c). The
same group recently developed an implantable and self-powered biodegradable
sensor based on fringe-field double capacitor structures for measuring
arterial blood flow in a healing vessel.[230] The capacitive sensor had a similar structure to ref (216) (using microstructured
PGS dielectric layer and Mg electrodes), and now in this study, a
wireless circuit was coupled to an inductor coil to wirelessly track
the blood flow. Biodegradable POMaC and PHB/PHV with a thickness of
10 μm were used as substrates and packaging layer and PLLA was
used as coil spacer (Figure d). The sensor wrapped around the femoral artery of a rat
with the softer POMaC layer facing the blood vessel to provide a soft
mechanical interface around the vessel wall. The change in capacitance
(in pF range) in response to blood-vessels expansion and relaxation
generates a shift in the resonant frequency of an LCR circuit that
finally read out through coupling with an external reader coil wirelessly
(Figure e,f). One
week after implantation, the sensor signal was decreased. Again, Boutry et al.[137] developed another biodegradable
and implantable capacitive sensor for real-time monitoring of the
mechanical forces on tendons and tissue strains after surgical repair.
The sensor is stretchable and able to measure both strain and pressure
of tendon healing at the same time using two independent vertically
stacked sensors, as shown in Figure g. The sensor consists of microstructured dielectric
PGS layer with Mg electrodes as pressure sensor and two interdigitated
Mg electrodes that are evaporated on top of PLLA substrate as strain
sensor. The entire device is encapsulated in POMaC and PGS (Figure h). In
vitro degradability study carried out by immersing the device
in PBS at pH 7.4 and 37 °C showed stable performance for 2–3
weeks. The implanted sensor placed on the back of a rat showed stable
signal even after 3.5 weeks. The device has a quite a fast response
time (millisecond) and high sensitivity that could discriminate strain
as small as 0.4% and the pressure applied by a grain of salt (12 Pa)
with no interface between pressure and strain measurements. The fabricated
sensor could be used for personalization of rehabilitation protocol.
Figure 11
(a)
Schematic illustration of the structure of the biodegradable
and elastomer PGS-based sensor. (b) SEM image of the PGS film contains
microstructured 2D arrays of square-pyramid shapes. (c) Photographs
of a device before in vitro degradation and after 7 weeks of incubation.
Reproduced with permission from ref (234). Copyright 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co.
KGaA, Weinheim. (d–f) Sketch of the structure and functional
principle of the wirelessly readable capacitive pressure sensor. Reproduced
with permission from ref (230). Copyright 2019 The Author(s), under exclusive license
to Springer Nature Limited. (g) Implantable strain and pressure sensor
that can be attached to a tendon for real-time healing assessment.
(h) Materials and overall assembly of the fully biodegradable sensor.
Reproduced with permission from ref (137). Copyright 2018 Macmillan Publishers Limited,
part of Springer Nature.
(a)
Schematic illustration of the structure of the biodegradable
and elastomer PGS-based sensor. (b) SEM image of the PGS film contains
microstructured 2D arrays of square-pyramid shapes. (c) Photographs
of a device before in vitro degradation and after 7 weeks of incubation.
Reproduced with permission from ref (234). Copyright 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co.
KGaA, Weinheim. (d–f) Sketch of the structure and functional
principle of the wirelessly readable capacitive pressure sensor. Reproduced
with permission from ref (230). Copyright 2019 The Author(s), under exclusive license
to Springer Nature Limited. (g) Implantable strain and pressure sensor
that can be attached to a tendon for real-time healing assessment.
(h) Materials and overall assembly of the fully biodegradable sensor.
Reproduced with permission from ref (137). Copyright 2018 Macmillan Publishers Limited,
part of Springer Nature.In another report, a
bioresorbable pressure monitoring platform
with tunable degradation properties for continuous monitoring of intracranial
space pressure was investigated.[235] A Si-NMs-based
strain gauge bonded on a layer of PLGA and etched into the surface
of Mg with an air-filled cavity in between. The Si-NM offers a piezoresistive
response in bending strains due to differences between the pressure
of air trapped inside the cavity and the surroundings. The main design
feature of the device is that they used a sheet of monocrystalline
flexible silicon as a flexible encapsulation layer that is impermeable
to biofluids penetration and resorbs in a controllable rate. The device
structure was optimized by the theoretical modeling to sensor response,
which remains reliable during the partial dissolution of the encapsulation
layer (Figure a–c).
Figure 12
(a)
Schematic and optical image of the biodegradable piezoresistive
PLLA sensor consists of Si-NM strain gauge as a sensing element. (b)
Schematic illustration of the working principle and (c) pressure response
performance of the biodegradable sensors (blue line) and its comparison
with commercial sensor (orange line). Reproduced with permission from
ref (235). Copyright
2020 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (d) Schematic illustration
of the piezoresistive silicon-nanomembrane (Si-NM) pressure sensor.
The inset shows the magnified illustration of the Si-NM strain gauge.
(e) Photographs of the device dissolution upon insertion into an aqueous
buffer solution (pH 12) at room temperature. Reproduced with permission
from ref (1). Copyright
2016 Nature Publishing Group.
(a)
Schematic and optical image of the biodegradable piezoresistive
PLLA sensor consists of Si-NM strain gauge as a sensing element. (b)
Schematic illustration of the working principle and (c) pressure response
performance of the biodegradable sensors (blue line) and its comparison
with commercial sensor (orange line). Reproduced with permission from
ref (235). Copyright
2020 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim. (d) Schematic illustration
of the piezoresistive silicon-nanomembrane (Si-NM) pressure sensor.
The inset shows the magnified illustration of the Si-NM strain gauge.
(e) Photographs of the device dissolution upon insertion into an aqueous
buffer solution (pH 12) at room temperature. Reproduced with permission
from ref (1). Copyright
2016 Nature Publishing Group.In a more refined approach, a bioresorbable silicon sensor was
developed that can be implanted in the brain and monitor multiple
parameters (temperature and pressure) wirelessly.[1] The device consists of patterned Si-NMs on a 30 μm
PLGA membrane with an air cavity and sealed against a supporting substrate
of nanoporous silicon or Mg foil (Figure d). In response to the pressure of the surrounding
fluids, the air cavity allows the membrane to reflect the changes.
The sensory response was monitored in vitro using
artificial cerebrospinal fluid, which displayed the change in resistance
of silicon nanomembrane with sensitivity around 0.6 kΩ Pa–1 under applying pressure and thermal sensitivity around
0.1 kΩ C1– with increasing temperature. Figure e shows the in vitro degradation of the resistive pressure sensor in
the aqueous buffer solution at pH 12 and room temperature, leading
to complete degradation in about 30 h. The device’s functional
time could be increased by encapsulating with polyanhydride; however,
it decreased the pressure sensor sensitivity to 0.38 kΩ Pa–1. The bioresorbable sensor was implanted in the rat
brain and wired to an external power supply and communication unit.
The sensor could effectively measure intracranial pressure and temperature
for 3 and 6 days, respectively. In another recent report, the authors
demonstrated the fixation of sensors directly onto orthopedic implants.
Mg electrodes were deposited onto the poly(desamino tyrosyl-tyrosine
ethyl ester carbonate) (PDTEC) substrates with a holed spacer of polycaprolactone
PCL films.The variable capacitance developed between the electrode
changes
with the change in the pressure applied, which is detected by the
change in the resonance peak. The sensor remained active up to 10
days in Sörensen buffer solution, providing an initial resonance
frequency of 101.89 MHz (106.57 MHz in air). The initial resonance
frequency observed under immersion in minimum essential medium (MEM)
is 92.76 MHz (98.67 MHz in air).[236]In one of our study, a biodegradable piezoelectric pressure sensor
based on natural composite of amino acid glycine and chitosan polymer
for wearable application was developed for monitoring pressure under
the wound bandage (Figure ).[7] Deposition of gold electrodes
(Ti/Au) of 10/90 nm thickness was done by electron-beam evaporation
technique on both the sides of the glycine/chitosan film. The sensor
displayed a sensitivity of 2.82 ± 0.2 mV kPa–1 under the pressure range of 5 to 60 kPa. The biodegradability of
the pressure sensor was studied by depositing Mg as a biodegradable
electrode. The electrodes showed complete degradation within a few
minutes of immersion in PBS solution of pH 7.4, while the rest of
the film dissolved in the next few days. The use of chitosan aided
to the flexibility of the film and controlled the crystallization
of glycine into β-phase, which is the piezoelectric polymorph
of glycine with high piezoelectric coefficient.
Figure 13
Optical images of the
(a) glycine/chitosan (Gly/CS) film and (b,
c) deposited Au electrodes on film and fabricated flexible sensor.
(d) Dissolution of biodegradable piezoelectric Gly/CS-based pressure
sensor with Mg electrodes in PBS solution over time. Reproduced with
permission from ref (7). Copyright 2020 American Chemical Society.
Optical images of the
(a) glycine/chitosan (Gly/CS) film and (b,
c) deposited Au electrodes on film and fabricated flexible sensor.
(d) Dissolution of biodegradable piezoelectric Gly/CS-based pressure
sensor with Mg electrodes in PBS solution over time. Reproduced with
permission from ref (7). Copyright 2020 American Chemical Society.A summary of many other bioresorbable sensors, their reported structure,
their degradation time, and the in vitro or in vivo analysis of the samples are discussed in Table .
Table 2
Summarized Glance of Different Types
of Biodegradable Pressure Sensors[237238239240]
Temperature sensors are also essential physical
sensors that provide
body temperature measurements for real-time or remote healthcare monitoring
and have even been shown to be useful for monitoring intracranial
or brain temperature, as well as wound temperature, which can often
reflect the incidence of infection.[241] Temperature
sensors are also mainly based on piezoresistive materials. The dependence
of resistance on temperature is an interesting feature exploited to
build up temperature sensors. Materials developed for sensors display
two kinds of nature: their resistance increases as temperature increases
(positive temperature coefficient, PTC) or decreases as temperature
increases (negative temperature coefficient, NTC). Hence, sensors
with PTC behavior could be utilized for overcurrent protection materials,
self-regulating heaters, and microswitch sensors. However, NTC behavior
material could be utilized for highly stretchable thermistors for
wearable temperature sensing, mapping, and compensation applications.[242] In another report, the authors presented a
fully biodegradable and highly formable resistive temperature sensor
for medical postsurgery monitoring.[243] Mg
serpentine structures that sandwiched between two dielectric layers
of Si3N4 (100 nm) and SiO2 (100 nm)
are fabricated on a substrate by common lithography techniques and
transfer printed on the compostable flexible Ecoflex polymer (Figure ). The device is
encapsulated by ultrathin films of biodegradable Ecoflex films (<20
μm), which exhibits small swelling rate and elasticity similar
to muscles and cartilage. The device exhibited a linear behavior in
the temperature range of 20–50 °C and with absolute sensitivity
of about 70 Ω K–1. The degradability of the
sensor was tested in vitro using saline solution
at 25 °C, which showed a stable temperature measurement for 1
day and that full dissolution of the SiO2/Mg/SiN3 occurred within 67 days. The fabricated sensor is scalable by integration
of an array of sensors to perform a 2D mapping of the temperature
distribution.
Figure 14
(a) Schematic structure and optical image of resistive
temperature
sensor consist of metal and semiconductor serpentine structure as
sensing element, Peano-like interconnects, and Ecoflex encapsulation.
Biodegradability of the sensor in a water–NaCl solution (b)
after 36 d and (c) 67 d dissolution in water. (d) Changes in resistance
of the sensor after 24 h immersing in the solution. Reproduced with
permission from ref (243). Copyright 2017 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
(a) Schematic structure and optical image of resistive
temperature
sensor consist of metal and semiconductor serpentine structure as
sensing element, Peano-like interconnects, and Ecoflex encapsulation.
Biodegradability of the sensor in a water–NaCl solution (b)
after 36 d and (c) 67 d dissolution in water. (d) Changes in resistance
of the sensor after 24 h immersing in the solution. Reproduced with
permission from ref (243). Copyright 2017 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.In another study, the authors reported the functionalization
of
silkworm fiber coiled yarns with a mixture of CNTs and an ionic liquid
([EMIM] Tf2N). Later, the yarns are coated by highly elastic
and biocompatible Ecoflex as the encapsulation layer for the temperature
sensor. It showed a temperature sensitivity of 1.23% °C1–. The authors explained the increased conductivity displayed to the
transport of charges through direct body contacts of the CNT tubes.
Another route is via the end to end contact of the tubes. The use
of ionic liquid functionalization enhanced the temperature sensitivity
and decreased the overall resistivity compared to the only CNT coated
yarns, as the ionic liquid provides a site for charge carrier transmission,
even at sites with no direct contacts of CNT tubes in the composite
(Figure ).[244]
Figure 15
Composite temperature sensors using different
sensing materials.
(a) Image of a fibrous temperature sensor. (b) Three different conducting
mechanisms for composite CNT temperature sensors: (i–iii) Three
different electron/ions transport modes in CNT and [EMIM]Tf2N composite
sensing materials: (i) transport of charges via the body–body
contacts among CNTs; (ii) transport via the end to end contacts of
CNTs; (iii) transport via ionic liquids. (c, d) Scanning electron
microscopic (SEM) images of the cross-section of a fibrous temperature
sensor in different scales: Ecoflex constitutes the outside sealing
layer, silk fibers encapsulated with CNTs and [EMIM]Tf2N turn out to be the middle layer, and polyester fibers were chosen
as the supporting cores. (e) SEM displays the surface morphology of
composite material of CNTs and [EMIM]Tf2N between the middle
silk coiling fibers. Reproduced with permission from ref (244). Copyright 2019 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Composite temperature sensors using different
sensing materials.
(a) Image of a fibrous temperature sensor. (b) Three different conducting
mechanisms for composite CNT temperature sensors: (i–iii) Three
different electron/ions transport modes in CNT and [EMIM]Tf2N composite
sensing materials: (i) transport of charges via the body–body
contacts among CNTs; (ii) transport via the end to end contacts of
CNTs; (iii) transport via ionic liquids. (c, d) Scanning electron
microscopic (SEM) images of the cross-section of a fibrous temperature
sensor in different scales: Ecoflex constitutes the outside sealing
layer, silk fibers encapsulated with CNTs and [EMIM]Tf2N turn out to be the middle layer, and polyester fibers were chosen
as the supporting cores. (e) SEM displays the surface morphology of
composite material of CNTs and [EMIM]Tf2N between the middle
silk coiling fibers. Reproduced with permission from ref (244). Copyright 2019 WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, Weinheim.In another report, intending to produce green electronics, a femtosecond
laser direct writing (FsLDW) of graphene patterns on arbitrary natural
woods and leaves was reported. The authors used UV femtosecond lasers
to transform high power source laser to char wood components by localizing
the heat generated (Figure a,b). Further, the repeated rate of carbonization resulted
in laser-induced graphene pattern creation. The temperature sensor
fabricated on a dried leaf (≈ 100 μm thick) displayed
a negative temperature coefficient (−0.08% °C1–) as shown in Figure c and d. They also fabricated a sensor over wood, which displayed
a similar result to the leaf, but with longer response and recovery
time than the latter.[245]
Figure 16
(a) Photo of an LIG
electronic circuit on a thin leaf for flexible
and wearable devices. The inset shows an enlarged optical image of
the temperature sensor (scale bar: 1 mm). (b) Photo of LIG electronics
on a leaf for green electronics. (c) Photo of the LIG temperature
sensor on the leaf and an experimental setup for measuring performance.
The inset shows the flexibility of the leaf that was still retained
after FsLDW. (d) Resistance variation as a function of temperature,
indicating a negative temperature coefficient behavior. The inset
shows the dependency of ln(R) on 1/T. Reproduced with permission from ref (245). Copyright 2019 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co.
KGaA, Weinheim.
(a) Photo of an LIG
electronic circuit on a thin leaf for flexible
and wearable devices. The inset shows an enlarged optical image of
the temperature sensor (scale bar: 1 mm). (b) Photo of LIG electronics
on a leaf for green electronics. (c) Photo of the LIG temperature
sensor on the leaf and an experimental setup for measuring performance.
The inset shows the flexibility of the leaf that was still retained
after FsLDW. (d) Resistance variation as a function of temperature,
indicating a negative temperature coefficient behavior. The inset
shows the dependency of ln(R) on 1/T. Reproduced with permission from ref (245). Copyright 2019 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co.
KGaA, Weinheim.In another study, a
nanomaterial was designed for a bioresorbable
electronic stent (BES) with drug-infused functionalized nanoparticles.
It is utilized to detect flow sensing, temperature monitoring, data
storage, wireless power/data transmission, inflammation suppression,
localized drug delivery, and hyperthermia therapy. Figure provides a more summarized
view of the biodegradable electronic stent developed. The role of
ceria nanoparticles was evaluated by both in vitro and in vivo cytotoxicological analysis. The human
umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) exposed with reactive oxygen
species showed a decreased viability. In contrast to the cell lines
in the presence of ceria, nanoparticles showed increased proliferation.
The in vivo analysis by placing the BES in canine
common carotid artery displays lower inflammatory responses and macrophage
migration.[246]
Figure 17
(a) Components of a
bioresorbable electronic stent (BES) and bioinert
materials and (b) schematic diagram of the BES that includes Mg alloy
stent integrated with ceria NPs (catalytic ROS scavenging), AuNR@MSN
(photothermal therapy), drugs (e.g., Rapamycin; well-known drug for
the treatment of restenosis), flow/temperature sensors (physiological
signal sensing), and RRAM array (data storage). Reproduced with permission
from ref (246). Copyright
2015 American Chemical Society.
(a) Components of a
bioresorbable electronic stent (BES) and bioinert
materials and (b) schematic diagram of the BES that includes Mg alloy
stent integrated with ceria NPs (catalytic ROS scavenging), AuNR@MSN
(photothermal therapy), drugs (e.g., Rapamycin; well-known drug for
the treatment of restenosis), flow/temperature sensors (physiological
signal sensing), and RRAM array (data storage). Reproduced with permission
from ref (246). Copyright
2015 American Chemical Society.In an another context, the authors report the development of a
bioresorbable photonic device utilized to measure the activity of
tissue oxygenation, temperature, and neural activity. The device is
made up of several bioresorbable optical components along with single-junction
photodetectors, which is based on nanomembranes of device-grade monocrystalline
silicon (Si nanomembranes), foundry-produced tricolor photodetectors
based on trilayer stacks of Si P–N junctions, an optical multilayer
filter of SiOx and SiNy, and optical fibers made up of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA). The concentrations of Si and Zn
were measured for 7 days in the blood, brain, heart, kidney, liver,
lung, muscle, and spleen tissues of mice using inductively coupled
plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES) and inductively coupled
plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The concentration of the elements
increased for the first few days in the kidney, which indicated the
renal clearance of the elements.[247] The
photodetector completely degraded completely within 2 weeks of being
immersed in PBS solution at 37 °C. The temperature-dependent
resistance of the Si nanomembrane photodetector enables researchers
to monitor the change in tissue temperature at a resolution of ∼0.1
°C.[247]An optical sensor for
intracranial pressure and temperature monitoring
was reported recently. The sensor is designed to monitor the changes
in the thickness of an air cavity or in the lattice parameters of
the photonic crystal for pressure-induced deflections of Si-NM diaphragm.
This causes a shift in the position of resonant peak in the reflection
spectra. The same configuration could be adopted to detect temperature
change as by monitoring the refractive index of silicon. The temperature
responsivity was estimated to be 0.090 nm/°C and pressure sensitivity
of 3.8 nm/mmHg. Complete dissolution was observed within ∼195
days in PBS solution at 37 °C.[241] Shin
and co-workers reported the fabrication of an inorganic bioresorbable
pressure sensor based on four silicon nanomembrane sensors. Two of
which served as strain gauges, and two acted as temperature gauges.
The pressure sensor was made up of strain gauges filled with air cavity.
The piezoresistive response of the pressure sensor was cast due to
the change in the pressure between the surrounding and the air present
inside the cavity. The temperature gauges remain unresponsive with
the pressure alteration as they are not located on the diaphragm,
while they display changes in the surrounding temperature via their
temperature-dependent resistance. The pressure sensitivity was estimated
to be −0.13 Ωmm Hg–1 while the membrane
thickness was reduced as well as the thickness of the diaphragm was
increased. Similarly, the temperature sensitivity of the sensor was
observed to be 0.0012 °C1–. The concentration
of Si was measured for 7 days in the liver, spleen, heart, kidney,
brain, and lung tissues of mice using ICP-OES. The results show higher
concentrations of silicon in the spleen, heart, and lungs in comparison
to the brain where the device is located. The cerebrospinal fluid
transports through the brain and then joins the bloodstream by reabsorption.
The phagocytic cells of the spleen and lungs easily uptake these nanomaterials,
resulting in the high deposition of Si in these organs. Complete dissolution
of the device was observed within a few hours in PBS solution at 95
°C.[229]There have been several
reports on bioresorbable temperature and
pressure sensors as part of the medical implants discussed in the
last section. They reduce the risk of infection as they limit the
need for postsurgical removal. The current impasse lies on the fabrication
of biocompatible sensors at a miniaturized scale. The choice of biopolymers
is critical, as often they tend to face the issue of thermal lability.
Similarly, the soft materials tend to display low Young’s moduli,
which cause issues during implantation. Thus, clinical implementation
is still a distant goal that requires extensive investigation in animal
models and then consecutively in humans.
Chemical
Sensors
Chemical sensing
devices that can quickly, conveniently, and noninvasively collect
information accessible from biomarkers found in the human body, such
as glucose, pH, nitric oxide and ions,[15] are also necessary for the real-time and continuous monitoring of
an individual’s dynamic health status.[6,11] Although
various biodegradable physical sensors with comparable performance
to their nondegradable counterparts have been demonstrated, there
are limited reports detailing the development and performance of biodegradable
chemical sensors that continuously monitor biochemical markers for
healthcare applications. Thus far, biodegradable chemical sensors
have mainly been used for the detection of ions or small organic molecules,
possibly due to the challenge of sensing larger and more complex biomolecules in vivo. The main challenges surrounding the development
of biodegradable chemical sensors relate to their operational lifetime
when in direct contact with physiological environments without packaging
and the precise measurement of target chemical without interference
by other chemicals in biological systems.A mesoporous chitosan-based
conformable and resorbable biostrip for dopamine detection was recently
reported.[8] The electrochemical sensor uses
bioresorbable materials such as chitosan, rGo, and graphene, which
makes it useful for in vivo applications. Furthermore,
it improves the detection limit up to 10 pM. In another study, the
authors developed a biocompatible and biodegradable polysaccharide-based
flexible humidity sensor for wearable applications such as monitoring
human breathing states.[248] A 9:1 chitosan
to lignin mixed solution was spin-coated on a flexible PI substrate
to yield a sensing layer film with a thickness of approximately 20
μm, and Mg/Fe electrodes were deposited on top of the film.
The functionalized chitosan film gives a high humidity sensitivity
by the formation of hydrogen bond networks between water and polysaccharides,
which accelerates proton transfer under humid conditions and thus
increases conductivity of the material. The biocompatibility of the
device was confirmed by cytotoxicity tests using human skin fibroblast
cells and human umbilical vein endothelial cells in contact with the
biocomposite film. In a similar attempt, Liu et al. reportedly used
spider egg sac silk (SESS) as a section of single-mode fiber (SMF)
to configure an interference-cavity structure. The change of ambient
humidity results in the change of SESS diameter, which changes the
length of the interference-cavity. The interference spectrum displays
a redshift, with the change of the interference-cavity length, and
consequentially, the SESS-based sensor displays the humidity-sensing
characteristic. The testing results show that the higher is the ambient
humidity, the higher is the sensitivity. The maximum value of the
sensitivity is 0.99 nm/%RH in the humidity range of 90–99%.[249] The use of spider silk as potential humidity
sensor has been previously explored.[250]Nanocomposites of zein with graphene oxide (Z-GO), Laponite,
and
CNT were fabricated using drop casting technique and tested for fabricating
for the detection of gliadin. Gliadin is a protein molecule responsible
for several autoimmune disorders. The pristine zein coated electrode
did not display any electrochemical sensing, while the three composite
structures improved the detection response considerably. The CNT-based
composite showcased the strongest signals compared to other nanomaterials.
The CNT-based composite aided as a natural linker for several functional
groups, which ensured a higher degree of performance. The limit of
detection observed for these sensors was as low as 0.5 ppm.[251]
Challenges and Constraints
Despite great progress in the fabrication of biodegradable and
implantable healthcare monitoring devices, the high-performance devices
that can compete with more established nondegradable healthcare monitoring
technologies remain a significant challenging, and many of the sensors
discussed above are not yet mature enough for commercialization. For
instance, for the clinical implementation of biodegradable healthcare
monitoring, devices require reliable and stable electrical performances,
high mechanical deformation similar to biological systems, and full
biodegradability. In addition, the need for biodegradable power sources
culpable to run for a definite time period also remains largely unfulfilled.[252] There are many other aspects of biodegradable
devices that must also be considered before the realization of clinical
healthcare monitoring, which have been discussed below.
Degradation Kinetics and Biocompatibility
Degradation
kinetics of bioresorbable materials and a functional
lifetime of the devices in more complex biological environments need
to be investigated carefully as the biodegradation rate in physiological
temperature (37 °C and may increase up to 41 °C) and under
mechanical stresses due to movements and deformations of body is higher
than in a normal lab environment. The physio-chemical parameters (e.g.,
pH value, oxygen level, and ion concentrations) are also affected
by tissue area and may change in a different part of the body. Currently
developed wireless biodegradable sensors often have short lifetime
for clinical application, and applying proper packaging is an important
step to achieve controllable degradation rate. A significant challenge
is that biofluid usually penetrates the packaging layers that are
based on biodegradable polymers (such as silk fibroin, collagen, and
PLGA) and does not provide fully controllable degradation.Additionally,
biochemical interactions between the implant and body environment
and cytocompatibility of the degradation products should be specified
by appropriate in vivo device characterization. Distribution
of dissolved biodegradable materials in the body and daily allowance
of the materials of the sensor that can be harmlessly resorbed or
expelled by the body need to be determined carefully by clinical studies
and in consultation with the United States FDA.
Power Supply
Low energy consumption
and appropriate device size are of the main constraints in developing
biodegradable sensors for clinical applications. Previously developed
biodegradable sensors are mostly passive and do not require an internal
power supply; therefore, their functionality is limited.[253] Bioresorbable power supplies, either batteries,
energy harvesters, or flexible degradable circuits for wireless energy
transfer, are essential components to achieve a full active electrical
system in implantable biodegradable devices. Biodegradable batteries
using biodegradable Mg as anode materials, Mo as cathode materials,
and electrodes space filled by PBS solution have been reported.[254] To increase the output voltage of the battery,
the cells can be stacked in series and a layer of polyanhydride used
a separator between cells and packaging. The battery reported using
this approach is fully biodegradable, and stacked cells could provide
a voltage up to 1.6 V. Another example of biodegradable battery uses
Mg and Fe as electrodes and employed similar to biological fluids
solution such as MgCl2, PBS, and NaCl as electrolytes that
could provide an average power of 30 μW for 100 h.[255] PLC polymer encapsulates the device and is
used as a separator between the electrodes. Batteries can provide
stable output voltage and high energy density. However, in both mentioned
cases, immersing the batteries in biofluid solution at 37 °C
showed a limited lifetime of only few hours to a few days and started
degradation afterward. In context with energy storage devices, the
use of sweat or sweat equivalent solutions as electrolyte is a notable
advance.[25]Degradable energy harvester
devices are the other possibility to power the sensors, particularly
for the devices that need low power consumption and a long-term operating.[256] In this regard, piezoelectric and triboelectric
generators are ideal for in vivo energy harvesting
as they produce energy from mechanical motion of the body. A biodegradable
piezoelectric harvester by deposition piezoelectric zinc oxide strips
on a silk substrate and using Mg as electrodes was reported.[72] However, the silk substrate quickly dissolved
in PBS and lost its functionality; therefore, encapsulation is needed
for implantable applications. An example of biodegradable triboelectric
nanogenerator includes using multilayered nanopatterned PLGA and PCL
film and Mg electrodes to generate the open-circuit voltage up to
40 V.[257] Other notable advanced solutions
related to energy generation reported recently are sweat-based biofuel
cells.[258,259] The main drawback in all of the mentioned
energy devices is that they are bulky when compared to the sensor
itself and usually lose their functionality soon when operated in
biofluids, and they are usually not flexible enough. In addition,
for piezoelectric/triboelectric harvesters, their output power under
application of a periodic compression force would be enough for sensors
operation, but their performance depends on motion or pressure of
the body part to which they are implanted.The other current
possibility for implantable sensor power supplies
is wireless power transfer.[260] Both power
and data can be transmitted wirelessly to the implant via different
wireless transfer techniques, namely inductive, microwave, capacitive,
acoustic, and optical. Wireless operation increases the complexity
of the system and increases the overall size of the implant but eliminates
the risks of infection at the skin and wire interface. Currently,
power transfer to the implantable medical devices is typically through
inductive coupling technique.[261,231] The main limiting
factors for wireless implants in inductive coupling are related to
miniaturizing the size of the coils/antennas used for wireless communication.
In most cases, the dimensions of the antenna can not be altered as
they depend on the transmission frequency, which depends on the location
of the implant in the body and the layers of tissue involved in transmission.[262] In many cases, the living cells would be absorbing
a high amount of transferred energy in the body environment. Research
on the other techniques of wireless power transmission such as acoustic[263] and optical[264] provided
the possibility of miniaturized transmission coil for implants. Nevertheless,
having these systems with biodegradable properties has not been explored
much.
Data Communication
Data communication
in biodegradable sensors is simply achieved by thin wires connected
to an external circuitry and power supply, etc.[232,265] In the case of biomedical applications, the wires could also increase
the risk of infection and limit the mobility. In some biodegradable
sensors with implanted wireless data transmission, circuitry for wireless
data communication has included nonbiodegradable components that would
lead to a partially biodegradable system.[1,233] In this scenario, the nondegradable electronic circuits is usually
implanted just under the skin and connected via biodegradable wires
to the sensors that are implanted deeper in the tissues. In such cases,
the nondegradable circuitry could be removed with a minor treatment
after the functional lifetime of the sensors is over and they are
left to safely degrade within the body.Some biodegradable sensors
integrated with fully transient wireless technologies have been used
in the implanted devices to wirelessly communicate with the external
circuitry to enhance the mobility and reduce the risk of infection.[234,266] The majority of them are based on passive wireless data transfer
through resonant inductive coupling between the implanted device and
external circuitry.[230,253] In passive systems, the implanted
coil is connected to a sensor, which is usually a capacitive sensor.
The change in the parameters such as pressure or temperature results
in a change in the capacitance of the sensors and causes a change
in the resonance frequency of implanted coil, and information is then
transferred to an external reader coil by inductive coupling. The
resonance frequency of external coil can be recorded with an impedance
analyzer. Passive inductive systems have simple structure, low weight,
and enable battery free operation. However, these devices work only
for short distance communication (few milimeters), and measured signal
strongly depends on the intermediate tissue and position of the coil.[267] In addition, the sensed signals are mainly
limited to a shift in the position of resonant frequency of the external
coil, and the operation is limited to short frequency range.The continuous monitoring of biomarkers using biodegradable wearable
sensors could generates large data, which may also require complex
circuits for processing. The fabrication a fully biodegradable active
electronic circuit with multiple functionalities is a challenging
task, and a suitable solution is needed to manage the large data.
A few examples in this regard include a biodegradable circuit involving
various components such as transistors, resistors, diodes, inductors,
capacitors with interconnects developed using conductive Mg, Si-NMs
semiconductor, and MgO (or SiO2) dielectric layer on a
silk substrate.[12] The transient circuit
integrated with degradable sensor, power supply, and wireless control
system was implanted in the mice as a fully biodegradable system.
Another example of active bioresorbable electronic circuits has been
reported for wireless power harvesting and radio communication capabilities.[268] The functional biodegradable circuits such
as those mentioned earlier increase the complexity of the system and
the size and power consumption, which is undesirable for implanting.
To minimize the implanted circuit size and reduce power consumption
of the system, processing of complex data can also be performed outside
the body.[269] For partially biodegradable
wireless sensor, another way of power reduction is to focus on antenna
modules and radio frequency (RF) components. The choice of wireless
technology such as wifi, Bluetooth, or radio frequency identification
(RFID) impacts the choice of electronics for the sensor node.[270] In recent years, the development of the RFID
chip has improved the power consumption and its communication range.
For instance, the RFID chip sensitivity and read range have improved
for far-field communications (FFC) from −8 dBm with a reading
range of 5 m in 1997 to −22 dBm with a reading range of 25
m in 2014. RFID chips can operate in a completely passive power mode
where the power needed to operate the RFID chip is drawn from the
reader through inducing an electromagnetic current in the tag’s
antenna. RFID chips have an internal energy harvesting unit that can
produce up to 3 V to power up the RFID chip circuit. Moreover, the
addition of sensing capabilities permits the integration of external
sensors to the RFID chip and uses some of the harvesting energy as
a supply to the sensor.On the circuit level, the low power
can be achieved by the energy
efficient CMOS circuits.[271,272] The total power in
the CMOS technology is due to the dynamically dissipated power during
the charging and discharging of the parasitic capacitances, the power
dissipated during the time when both the NMOS and the PMOS conduct,
and the losses due to a nonzero current of the MOS transistors in
the off-state for digital circuits or to a biasing current for analog
circuits. Investigating the energy efficiency of CMOS circuits will
have the advantage of reducing the power consumption in data processing
and control as well as for the data storage. Emerging technologies
with low leakage power, including, for example, nonvolatile processors,
ferroelectric random access memory (FRAM), and fully-depleted silicon-on-insulator
(FD-SOI), and neural like computing are promising solutions for low
power circuits.[273−275] Besides, choosing the process technology
with a high threshold voltage can further reduce leakage power. Another
approach to reduce power consumption of the circuit is by using sleep
mode in idle periods.[276] In this approach,
the reduction of the power consumption is achieved by software optimization.
In this regard, different techniques such as dispersed electronics
including edge processing, algorithm-architecture codesign, RF subsystems
can be tailored for a wide range of future sensing applications.
Conclusions and Future Perspectives
The degradable
materials and sensing technologies elaborated in
this paper and their future evolution will play key roles in improving
human health and realizing the goal of sustainable healthcare systems.
Using biodegradable implantable and wearable sensors for continues
monitoring of body condition could transform the future of disease
management in healthcare systems toward preventative, predictive,
and personalized management of diseases. In addition, the development
of biodegradable electronic systems and sensors that naturally dissolve
under ambient conditions could mitigate electronic waste problems.The degradation rates of materials and dissolution behavior of
bioresorbable devices in different biological systems can vary significantly.
Engineered transient materials to control degradation at programmed
rates are necessary for practical application. In addition, developing
a high-performance and miniaturized power supply, circuits and chips
on biodegradable substrates, and wireless transmission are required
to develop a fully biodegradable platform. For future implantable
sensors, the power consumption must be minimized, and devices might
be able to take the required power from the movement or heat of the
body or other in situ energy sources such as biofluid.From the discussion in this paper, it is clear that the majority
of reported degradable materials-based wearable devices focus on a
single mode of analysis. However, multisensors with the combination
of chemical and physical modes of sensing in a hybrid device or multifunctional
devices that provide both monitoring and treatment would be needed
in the future to obtain a more complete picture of the state of health
of the user.Finally, to realize these technologies for clinical
uses, further
understanding of biological systems and immune response to design
the device specifically for in vivo environment is
needed. To this end, greater interaction and collaboration between
engineers and biologist are essential.
Authors: B Smith; Z Tang; M W Johnson; S Pourmehdi; M M Gazdik; J R Buckett; P H Peckham Journal: IEEE Trans Biomed Eng Date: 1998-04 Impact factor: 4.538
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Authors: Albertus B Mostert; Benjamin J Powell; Francis L Pratt; Graeme R Hanson; Tadeusz Sarna; Ian R Gentle; Paul Meredith Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Date: 2012-05-21 Impact factor: 11.205
Authors: Eric Daniel Głowacki; Mihai Irimia-Vladu; Martin Kaltenbrunner; Jacek Gsiorowski; Matthew S White; Uwe Monkowius; Giuseppe Romanazzi; Gian Paolo Suranna; Piero Mastrorilli; Tsuyoshi Sekitani; Siegfried Bauer; Takao Someya; Luisa Torsi; Niyazi Serdar Sariciftci Journal: Adv Mater Date: 2012-12-13 Impact factor: 30.849