Advanced Electrical and Optical Microsystems for Biointerfacing

Electrical and optical biointerfaces have contributed considerably to understanding biological systems. Recent advances in biocompatible materials, structure designs, and fabrication techniques have established flexible and minimally invasive electronic/optoelectronic platforms that laminate onto ta...

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Main Authors: Sofian N. Obaid, Zhiyuan Chen, Luyao Lu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-09-01
Series:Advanced Intelligent Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/aisy.202000091
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spelling doaj-fd8168608b9d4de6b88004fd2733abe02020-11-25T03:43:00ZengWileyAdvanced Intelligent Systems2640-45672020-09-0129n/an/a10.1002/aisy.202000091Advanced Electrical and Optical Microsystems for BiointerfacingSofian N. Obaid0Zhiyuan Chen1Luyao Lu2Department of Biomedical Engineering The George Washington University Washington DC 20052 USADepartment of Biomedical Engineering The George Washington University Washington DC 20052 USADepartment of Biomedical Engineering The George Washington University Washington DC 20052 USAElectrical and optical biointerfaces have contributed considerably to understanding biological systems. Recent advances in biocompatible materials, structure designs, and fabrication techniques have established flexible and minimally invasive electronic/optoelectronic platforms that laminate onto targeted surface regions or implant into precise locations of biosystems to monitor and control various biological processes at cell, tissue, and organ levels. Herein, recent progress in advanced biointegrated electrical and optical platforms is discussed. An overview of materials and device designs to form flexible and even stretchable electrodes is presented. Strategies to reduce tissue damage and foreign‐body response to improve chronic stability are described. State‐of‐the‐art wearable and implantable microsystems with/without wireless capabilities for bioelectrical sensing and stimulation, optical recording and modulation, and multimodal operation are highlighted. In conclusion, a discussion of the remaining obstacles for future research in these areas is provided.https://doi.org/10.1002/aisy.202000091biointegrated electronicsbiointerfaceselectrophysiologyflexible electronicsoptoelectronics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sofian N. Obaid
Zhiyuan Chen
Luyao Lu
spellingShingle Sofian N. Obaid
Zhiyuan Chen
Luyao Lu
Advanced Electrical and Optical Microsystems for Biointerfacing
Advanced Intelligent Systems
biointegrated electronics
biointerfaces
electrophysiology
flexible electronics
optoelectronics
author_facet Sofian N. Obaid
Zhiyuan Chen
Luyao Lu
author_sort Sofian N. Obaid
title Advanced Electrical and Optical Microsystems for Biointerfacing
title_short Advanced Electrical and Optical Microsystems for Biointerfacing
title_full Advanced Electrical and Optical Microsystems for Biointerfacing
title_fullStr Advanced Electrical and Optical Microsystems for Biointerfacing
title_full_unstemmed Advanced Electrical and Optical Microsystems for Biointerfacing
title_sort advanced electrical and optical microsystems for biointerfacing
publisher Wiley
series Advanced Intelligent Systems
issn 2640-4567
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Electrical and optical biointerfaces have contributed considerably to understanding biological systems. Recent advances in biocompatible materials, structure designs, and fabrication techniques have established flexible and minimally invasive electronic/optoelectronic platforms that laminate onto targeted surface regions or implant into precise locations of biosystems to monitor and control various biological processes at cell, tissue, and organ levels. Herein, recent progress in advanced biointegrated electrical and optical platforms is discussed. An overview of materials and device designs to form flexible and even stretchable electrodes is presented. Strategies to reduce tissue damage and foreign‐body response to improve chronic stability are described. State‐of‐the‐art wearable and implantable microsystems with/without wireless capabilities for bioelectrical sensing and stimulation, optical recording and modulation, and multimodal operation are highlighted. In conclusion, a discussion of the remaining obstacles for future research in these areas is provided.
topic biointegrated electronics
biointerfaces
electrophysiology
flexible electronics
optoelectronics
url https://doi.org/10.1002/aisy.202000091
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AT zhiyuanchen advancedelectricalandopticalmicrosystemsforbiointerfacing
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