Wafer-patterned, permeable, and stretchable liquid metal microelectrodes for implantable bioelectronics with chronic biocompatibility

  • Qiuna Zhuang
  • , Kuanming Yao
  • , Mengge Wu
  • , Zhuogui Lei
  • , Fan Chen
  • , Jiyu Li
  • , Quanjing Mei
  • , Yingying Zhou
  • , Qiyao Huang
  • , Xin Zhao
  • , Ying Li
  • , Xinge Yu
  • , Zijian Zheng

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

127 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Implantable bioelectronics provide unprecedented opportunities for real-Time and continuous monitoring of physiological signals of living bodies. Most bioelectronics adopt thin-film substrates such as polyimide and polydimethylsiloxane that exhibit high levels of flexibility and stretchability. However, the low permeability and relatively high modulus of these thin films hamper the long-Term biocompatibility. In contrast, devices fabricated on porous substrates show the advantages of high permeability but suffer from low patterning density. Here, we report a wafer-scale patternable strategy for the high-resolution fabrication of supersoft, stretchable, and permeable liquid metal microelectrodes (μLMEs). We demonstrate 2-μm patterning capability, or an ultrahigh density of ∼75,500 electrodes/cm2, of μLME arrays on a wafer-size (diameter, 100 mm) elastic fiber mat by photolithography. We implant the μLME array as a neural interface for high spatiotemporal mapping and intervention of electrocorticography signals of living rats. The implanted μLMEs have chronic biocompatibility over a period of eight months.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbereadg8602
JournalScience Advances
Volume9
Issue number22
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2023

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Wafer-patterned, permeable, and stretchable liquid metal microelectrodes for implantable bioelectronics with chronic biocompatibility'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this