• IEEE Trans Biomed Eng · Apr 1994

    A micromachined silicon sieve electrode for nerve regeneration applications.

    • T Akin, K Najafi, R H Smoke, and R M Bradley.
    • Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109.
    • IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 1994 Apr 1; 41 (4): 305-13.

    AbstractA micromachined silicon sieve electrode has been developed and fabricated to record from and stimulate axons/fibers of the peripheral nervous system by utilizing the nerve regeneration principle. The electrode consists of a 15-microns-thick silicon support rim, a 4-microns-thick diaphragm containing different size holes to allow nerve regeneration, thin-film iridium recording/stimulating sites, and an integrated silicon ribbon cable, all fabricated using boron etch-step and silicon micromachining techniques. The thin diaphragm is patterned using reactive ion etching to obtain different size holes with diameters as small as 1 micron and center-center spacings as small as 10 microns. The holes are surrounded by 100-200 microns 2 anodized iridium oxide sites, which can be used for both recording and stimulation. These sites have impedances of less than 100 k omega @ 1 kHz and charge delivery capacities in the 4-6 mC/cm2 range. The fabrication process is single-sided, has high yield, requires only five masks, and is compatible with integrated multilead silicon ribbon cables. The electrodes were implanted between the cut ends of peripheral taste fibers of rats (glossopharyngeal nerve), and axons functionally regenerated through holes, responding to chemical, mechanical, and thermal stimuli.

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