4.4 Article

Model validation of untethered, ultrasonic neural dust motes for cortical recording

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE METHODS
Volume 244, Issue -, Pages 114-122

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jneumeth.2014.07.025

Keywords

Ultrasonic energy harvesting; Backscatter communication; Chronic extra-cellular recording systems; Brain-machine interfaces

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Bakar Fellowship

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A major hurdle in brain-machine interfaces (BMI) is the lack of an implantable neural interface system that remains viable for a substantial fraction of the user's lifetime. Recently, sub-mm implantable, wireless electromagnetic (EM) neural interfaces have been demonstrated in an effort to extend system longevity. However, EM systems do not scale down in size well due to the severe inefficiency of coupling radio-waves at those scales within tissue. This paper explores fundamental system design trade-offs as well as size, power, and bandwidth scaling limits of neural recording systems built from low-power electronics coupled with ultrasonic power delivery and backscatter communication. Such systems will require two fundamental technology innovations: (1) 10-100 mu m scale, free-floating, independent sensor nodes, or neural dust, that detect and report local extracellular electrophysiological data via ultrasonic backscattering and (2) a sub-cranial ultrasonic interrogator that establishes power and communication links with the neural dust We provide experimental verification that the predicted scaling effects follow theory; (127 mu m)(3) neural dust motes immersed in water 3 cm from the interrogator couple with 0.002064% power transfer efficiency and 0.04246 ppm backscatter, resulting in a maximum received power of similar to 0.5 with similar to 1 nW of change in backscatter power with neural activity. The high efficiency of ultrasonic transmission can enable the scaling of the sensing nodes down to 10s of micrometer. We conclude with a brief discussion of the application of neural dust for both central and peripheral nervous system recordings, and perspectives on future research directions. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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