Wirelessly supplying power to brain
Implantable device composed of a flexible antenna and silicon large-scale integration chips
- Date:
- February 8, 2016
- Source:
- Toyohashi University of Technology
- Summary:
- Researchers have developed a technique to implement silicon large-scale integration chips in a very thin film of thickness. This fabrication method has the potential to realize a low-invasive flexible device for monitoring brain activity. This study will contribute to the development of brain-machine interface systems.
- Share:
Human and animal movements generate slight neural signals from their brain cells. These signals obtained using a neural interface are essential for realizing brain-machine interfaces (BMI). Such neural recording systems using wires to connect the implanted device to an external device can cause infections through the opening in the skull. One method of solving this issue is to develop a wireless neural interface that is fully implantable on the brain.
However, the neural interface implanted on the brain surface should be of small size and minimally invasive. Furthermore, it requires the integration of a power source, antenna for wireless communication, and many functional circuits.
Now, a research team at the Department of Electrical and Electronic Information Engineering at Toyohashi University of Technology has developed a wafer-level packaging technique to integrate a silicon large-scale integration (LSI) chip in a very thin film of a thickness 10 μm. The approach is realized using flip-chip bonding. The researchers have fabricated a wireless power transmission (WPT) device including a flexible antenna and rectifier chip by using the proposed method.
The first author PhD candidate Kenji Okabe said, "We have investigated how to integrate flexible antenna and high-performance circuits and tried this fabrication method with process conditions obtained through experiments." Assistant Professor Ippei Akita, who is leading the project, said, "Using flexible device technology is a good solution to implement bio-compatible passive devices such as antennas or sensor electrodes. On the other hand, silicon-based integrated circuit technology, which has long history, is suitable for ultra-low-power systems with many functionalities. So, we believe that combining these technologies is essential to establish such minimum invasive implantable devices."
The fabricated device is of size 27 mm × 5 mm, and 97% of the device area is composed of a flexible film as the silicon chip has a small area. Therefore, it has sufficient flexibility to fit the shape of the brain surface. In addition, the researchers achieved WPT to the device immersed in saline.
This WPT device can supply electricity to other circuits included in the neural interface. The researchers are trying to integrate more functions (e.g., amplifiers, analog-to-digital converters, signal processors, and radio frequency circuits) to an LSI chip. This study may contribute to the development of safer BMI systems.
Story Source:
Materials provided by Toyohashi University of Technology. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
Journal Reference:
- Kenji Okabe, Horagodage Prabhath Jeewan, Shota Yamagiwa, Takeshi Kawano, Makoto Ishida, and Ippei Akita. Co-design method and wafer-level packaging technique of thin-film flexible antenna and silicon CMOS rectifier chips for wireless-powered neural interface systems. Sensors, 2016 DOI: 10.3390/s15229885
Cite This Page: