This title appears in the Scientific Report :
2016
Please use the identifier:
http://hdl.handle.net/2128/11673 in citations.
Wafer-scale fabrication of graphene field effect transistors for neuronal interfacing
Wafer-scale fabrication of graphene field effect transistors for neuronal interfacing
There are plenty of invasive methods for studying a neuronal network’s activities [1]. Of course, the invasiveness of the processes makes them undesired. In recent years, there has been vast research in the field of non-invasive neuronal interfacing and extracellular neuronal recordings [2]. Differe...
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Personal Name(s): | Kireev, Dmitry |
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Seyock, Silke / Schnitker, Jan / Maybeck, Vanessa / Wolfrum, Bernhard / Offenhäusser, Andreas (Corresponding author) | |
Contributing Institute: |
Bioelektronik; PGI-8 Bioelektronik; ICS-8 |
Imprint: |
2015
|
Conference: | ImagineNano 2015, Bilbao (Spain), 2015-03-10 - 2015-03-13 |
Document Type: |
Poster |
Research Program: |
Engineering Cell Function |
Link: |
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Publikationsportal JuSER |
There are plenty of invasive methods for studying a neuronal network’s activities [1]. Of course, the invasiveness of the processes makes them undesired. In recent years, there has been vast research in the field of non-invasive neuronal interfacing and extracellular neuronal recordings [2]. Different methods (passive – MEAs and active – FETs) and different materials (carbon, silicon, PEDOT:PSS) have been used for the purpose.Graphene’s excellent electrical, mechanical and biological properties make it a perfect candidate for such a role. Firstly, liquid-gated graphene field effect transistors (GFETs, see fig. 1) show very high transconductance, and therefore sensitivity [3]. Secondly, graphene is a very stable and biocompatible material (fig.2). Thirdly, flexibility and bendability of graphene make it the most promising material for future bio-implantable devices [3].Therefore we established our 4-inch wafer fabrication process based on CVD-grown graphene (fig. 3a). Each fabricated wafer results in 52 biocompatible chips (fig. 3b). Each chip comprises 32 GFETs (fig. 3c). The size of graphene active area is varied in order to study the noise of the system. Each chip is measured on a multi-channel measurement system, which allows us to measure all the GFETs simultaneously. Thus, it is possible to measure not just single action potentials of the electrogenic cells, but even propagation of the potential through the network. |