Ultrathin photovoltaic devices for stimulation of the peripheral and central nervous system

10th February 2022

Timing : 2 pm EST

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For a list of all talks at the NanoBio seminar Series Spring'22, see here


This talk covers our developments of ultrathin (opto)electronic devices for neurostimulation, particularly of peripheral nerves, and the cortex. We have developed conformal chronically-implantable cuff stimulators which are driven by deep red light. These wavelengths can penetrate through tissue to actuate implants roughly 15 mm below the surface of the skin. Our flagship technology is the organic electrolytic photocapacitor (OEPC) – a device that mimics biphasic current-pulse neurostimulation and thus transduces an optical signal into directly-evoked action potentials in neurons. I will discuss examples of chronic implants capable of stimulating peripheral nerves (sciatic and vagus), the cortical surface, as well as deeper brain structures. These types of minimalistic neurostimulation devices can provide easily-implantable and chronic solutions for novel animal experiments, but also hold potential for clinical translation.