Nanostructuring silicon probes via electrodeposition: characterization of electrode coatings for acute in vivo neural recordings


Autoria(s): Baião, Pedro de Abreu Avó
Contribuinte(s)

Kampff, Adam

Fortunato, Elvira

Data(s)

09/04/2015

09/04/2015

01/11/2014

01/04/2015

Resumo

Understanding how the brain works will require tools capable of measuring neuron elec-trical activity at a network scale. However, considerable progress is still necessary to reliably increase the number of neurons that are recorded and identified simultaneously with existing mi-croelectrode arrays. This project aims to evaluate how different materials can modify the effi-ciency of signal transfer from the neural tissue to the electrode. Therefore, various coating materials (gold, PEDOT, tungsten oxide and carbon nano-tubes) are characterized in terms of their underlying electrochemical processes and recording ef-ficacy. Iridium electrodes (177-706 μm2) are coated using galvanostatic deposition under different charge densities. By performing electrochemical impedance spectroscopy in phosphate buffered saline it is determined that the impedance modulus at 1 kHz depends on the coating material and decreased up to a maximum of two orders of magnitude for PEDOT (from 1 MΩ to 25 kΩ). The electrodes are furthermore characterized by cyclic voltammetry showing that charge storage capacity is im-proved by one order of magnitude reaching a maximum of 84.1 mC/cm2 for the PEDOT: gold nanoparticles composite (38 times the capacity of the pristine). Neural recording of spontaneous activity within the cortex was performed in anesthetized rodents to evaluate electrode coating performance.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10362/14666

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Neurons #Microelectrodes #Electrodeposition #Impedance #Cyclic voltammetry #Action potential
Tipo

masterThesis