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Plasma etched carbon microelectrode arrays for bioelectrical measurements

Authors :
Jeon G. Han
Tatiana Sukhanova
Shokoufeh Khakipoor
Sung-Il Kim
Sami Franssila
Anastasia Ludwig
Tomi Taira
Tiina Kaarela
Sari E. Lauri
Ville Jokinen
Henri J. Huttunen
Claudio Rivera
Joonas J. Heikkinen
Department of Chemistry and Materials Science
University of Helsinki
Institut national de la santé et de la recherche médicale
Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
Sungkyunkwan University
Aalto-yliopisto
Aalto University
Veterinary Biosciences
Doctoral Programme in Clinical Veterinary Medicine
Doctoral Programme in Drug Research
Doctoral Programme in Biomedicine
Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind
Henri Juhani Huttunen / Principal Investigator
University Management
Neuroscience Center
Helsinki In Vivo Animal Imaging Platform (HAIP)
Doctoral Programme in Integrative Life Science
Claudio Rivera Baeza / Principal Investigator
Molecular and Integrative Biosciences Research Programme
Syn­aptic Plas­ti­city and De­vel­op­ment
Physiology and Neuroscience (-2020)
Synaptic Plasticity and Neuronal Synchronization
Tomi Taira / Principal Investigator
Source :
DIAMOND AND RELATED MATERIALS. 90:126-134
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Carbon-based materials have attracted much attention in biological applications like interfacing electrodes with neurons and cell growth platforms due to their natural biocompatibility and tailorable material properties. Here we have fabricated sputtered carbon thin film electrodes for bioelectrical measurements. Reactive ion etching (RIE) recipes were optimized with Taguchi method to etch the close field unbalanced magnetron sputtered carbon thin film (nanocarbon, nC) consisting of nanoscale crystalline sp(2)-domains in amorphous sp(3)-bonded backbone. Plasma etching processes used gas mixtures of Ar/O-2/SF6/CHF3 for RIE and O-2/SF6 for ICP-RIE. The highest achieved etch rate for nanocarbon was >> 389 nm/min and best chromium etch mask selectivity was 135:1. Biocompatibility of the material was tested with rat neuronal cultures. Next, we fabricated multielectrode arrays (MEA) with carbon recording electrodes and metal wiring. Organotypic brain slices grown on the MEAs were viable and showed characteristic spontaneous electrical network activity. The results demonstrate that interactions with nanocarbon substrate support neuronal survival and maturation of functional neuronal networks. Thus the material can have wide applications in biomedical research.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09259635
Volume :
90
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
DIAMOND AND RELATED MATERIALS
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a6944e2cb07305b59d5210d7edbe5e79