4.6 Article

Multiplexed neural sensor array of graphene solution-gated field-effect transistors

Journal

2D MATERIALS
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/2053-1583/ab7976

Keywords

multiplexed mu ECoGs; graphene solution-gated field-effect transistor; flexible probes; neurosensing

Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [785219, 732032]
  2. Generalitat de Catalunya [2017 SGR 1426]
  3. Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, the State Research Agency (AEI) [FIS2017-85787-R]
  4. European Regional Development Fund (FEDER/UE) [FIS2017-85787-R]
  5. Severo Ochoa Centres of Excellence programme - Spanish Research Agency (AEI) [SEV-2017-0706]
  6. CERCA programme/Generalitat de Catalunya
  7. International PhD Programme La Caixa-Severo Ochoa (Programa Internacional de Becas 'la Caixa'-Severo Ochoa)
  8. MICINN
  9. ICTS 'NANBIOSIS'
  10. MINECO/FEDER [CTQ2015-65439-R]
  11. FEDER [PROD-0000114]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Electrocorticography (ECoG) is a well-established technique to monitor electrophysiological activity from the surface of the brain and has proved crucial for the current generation of neural prostheses and brain-computer interfaces. However, existing ECoG technologies still fail to provide the resolution necessary to accurately map highly localized activity across large brain areas, due to the rapidly increasing size of connector footprint with sensor count. This work demonstrates the use of a flexible array of graphene solution-gated field-effect transistors (gSGFET), exploring the concept of multiplexed readout using an external switching matrix. This approach does not only allow for an increased sensor count, but due to the use of active sensing devices (i.e. transistors) over microelectrodes it makes additional buffer transistors redundant, which drastically eases the complexity of device fabrication on flexible substrates. The presented results pave the way for upscaling the gSGFET technology towards large-scale, high-density mu ECoG-arrays, eventually capable of resolving neural activity down to a single neuron level, while simultaneously mapping large brain regions.

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