15 research outputs found
Long-wavelength, confined optical phonons in InAs nanowires probed by Raman spectroscopy
Strongly confined nano-systems, such as one-dimensional nanowires, feature deviations in their
structural, electronic and optical properties from the corresponding bulk. In this work, we investigate the
behavior of long-wavelength, optical phonons in vertical arrays of InAs nanowires by Raman spectroscopy. We
attribute the main changes in the spectral features to thermal anharmonicity, due to temperature effects, and
rule out the contribution of quantum confinement and Fano resonances. We also observe the appearance of
surface optical modes, whose details allow for a quantitative, independent estimation of the nanowire
diameter. The results shed light onto the mechanisms of lineshape change in low-dimensional InAs
nanostructures, and are useful to help tailoring their electronic and vibrational properties for novel
functionalities
The Argo: a high channel count recording system for neural recording in vivo
ObjectiveDecoding neural activity has been limited by the lack of tools available to record from large numbers of neurons across multiple cortical regions simultaneously with high temporal fidelity. To this end, we developed the Argo system to record cortical neural activity at high data rates.ApproachHere we demonstrate a massively parallel neural recording system based on platinum-iridium microwire electrode arrays bonded to a CMOS voltage amplifier array. The Argo system is the highest channel count in vivo neural recording system, supporting simultaneous recording from 65â536 channels, sampled at 32 kHz and 12-bit resolution. This system was designed for cortical recordings, compatible with both penetrating and surface microelectrodes.Main resultsWe validated this system through initial bench testing to determine specific gain and noise characteristics of bonded microwires, followed by in-vivo experiments in both rat and sheep cortex. We recorded spiking activity from 791 neurons in rats and surface local field potential activity from over 30â000 channels in sheep.SignificanceThese are the largest channel count microwire-based recordings in both rat and sheep. While currently adapted for head-fixed recording, the microwire-CMOS architecture is well suited for clinical translation. Thus, this demonstration helps pave the way for a future high data rate intracortical implant