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Fall 2024: High-Performance Conductive Hydrogel Interface for Bioelectronic Stimulation and Recording

Affiliations: Aggie Research Mentoring Program
Project Leader: Md Saifur Rahman
msr@tamu.edu
Biomedical Engineering
Faculty Mentor: Limei Tian, Ph.D.
Meeting Times:
TBA
Team Size:
4
Open Spots: 0
Special Opportunities:
First semester hourly payment does not apply to new students, Best peformer will be recommended for Hourly-based payment fro Fall 2024 (Project leader discretion), Hands on training on materials engineering, earning co-authorship on publications
Team Needs:
(Level: Juniors and Seniors), Electrical Engineering, Circuit Design, Signal processing, Feedback Control, Dynamic Systems Modeling, Matlab, AutoCAD
Description:
Generally, bioelectronics made of electronic materials, such as metals and other rigid materials, have been used for implantable devices. Due to the mechanical mismatch between soft tissue and hard electronics, using such rigid bioelectronics results in a wall of scar tissue encapsulating implants, even though the hard electronics have excellent electrical properties. Consequently, mechanical mismatch gradually causes significant tissue damage and implant failure over time. Therefore, to reduce immune responses and maintain body movement, minimizing the mechanical discrepancy between tissue and implantable rigid electronics is crucial. However, the limited availability of the right electronic materials for configuring soft implants that simultaneously mimic soft tissue modulus and support electronic properties is highly demanded. By envisioning this, we demonstrate nontoxic additives doped poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS)-based conductive hydrogel for fabricating soft implantable microelectronics.

Written by:
América Soto-Arzat
Published on:
June 24, 2024

Categories: FullTags: Fall 2024

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