3D spatiotemporally scalable in vivo neural probes based on fluorinated elastomers.
Paul Le FlochSiyuan ZhaoRen LiuNicola MolinariEder MedinaHao ShenZheliang WangJunsoo KimZhigang SuoSebastian PartarrieuWenbo WangChanan SesslerGuogao ZhangHyunsu ParkXian GongAndrew SpencerJongha LeeTianyang YeXin TangXiao WangKatia BertoldiNanshu LuBoris KozinskyZhigang SuoJia LiuPublished in: Nature nanotechnology (2023)
Electronic devices for recording neural activity in the nervous system need to be scalable across large spatial and temporal scales while also providing millisecond and single-cell spatiotemporal resolution. However, existing high-resolution neural recording devices cannot achieve simultaneous scalability on both spatial and temporal levels due to a trade-off between sensor density and mechanical flexibility. Here we introduce a three-dimensional (3D) stacking implantable electronic platform, based on perfluorinated dielectric elastomers and tissue-level soft multilayer electrodes, that enables spatiotemporally scalable single-cell neural electrophysiology in the nervous system. Our elastomers exhibit stable dielectric performance for over a year in physiological solutions and are 10,000 times softer than conventional plastic dielectrics. By leveraging these unique characteristics we develop the packaging of lithographed nanometre-thick electrode arrays in a 3D configuration with a cross-sectional density of 7.6 electrodes per 100 µm 2 . The resulting 3D integrated multilayer soft electrode array retains tissue-level flexibility, reducing chronic immune responses in mouse neural tissues, and demonstrates the ability to reliably track electrical activity in the mouse brain or spinal cord over months without disrupting animal behaviour.