Ultraflexible organic amplifier with biocompatible gel electrodes

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Abstract

In vivo electronic monitoring systems are promising technology to obtain biosignals with high spatiotemporal resolution and sensitivity. Here we demonstrate the fabrication of a biocompatible highly conductive gel composite comprising multi-walled carbon nanotube-dispersed sheet with an aqueous hydrogel. This gel composite exhibits admittance of 100 mS cm-2 and maintains high admittance even in a low-frequency range. On implantation into a living hypodermal tissue for 4 weeks, it showed a small foreign-body reaction compared with widely used metal electrodes. Capitalizing on the multi-functional gel composite, we fabricated an ultrathin and mechanically flexible organic active matrix amplifier on a 1.2-μm-thick polyethylene-naphthalate film to amplify (amplification factor: ∼200) weak biosignals. The composite was integrated to the amplifier to realize a direct lead epicardial electrocardiography that is easily spread over an uneven heart tissue.

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Sekitani, T., Yokota, T., Kuribara, K., Kaltenbrunner, M., Fukushima, T., Inoue, Y., … Someya, T. (2016). Ultraflexible organic amplifier with biocompatible gel electrodes. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms11425

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