13 research outputs found

    Nanometer-Sized Electrochemical Sensors

    Get PDF
    Nanometer-sized glass-sealed metal ultramicroelectrodes (UMEs) have been prepared using a laser-based micropipet puller. The tip was exposed to solution either by etching away a small portion of glass insulator or by micropolishing. The characterization of the UMEs was carried out by a combination of steady-state voltammetry, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM). The cyclic voltammograms obtained have a regular shape with very small capacitive and resistive background. The effective electrode radii obtained from voltammetry were between 2 and 500 nm. From the SEM micrographs, the shape of polished tips appears to be close to a microdisk, while the geometry of etched electrodes is closer to conical. Accordingly, the SECM current-distance curves (i T -d) obtained with polished electrodes fit well the theory for a disk-shaped tip, while a 20-nm-radius etched electrode was shown to be a fairly sharp cone with a height-to-radius ratio of about 2.5. The experimental data were compared to the theory developed for disk-shaped, conical, and recessed tips to demonstrate suitability of the produced electrodes for quantitative electrochemical experiments. The prospects of steady-state measurements of the rates of fast heterogeneous reactions are discussed. Submicrometer-sized ion selective electrodes (ISEs) were prepared by coating etched Ag tips with silver iodide. The concentration response of such ISEs remained stable and linear after coating of the ISEs with protective Nafion film. The introduction of micrometer-sized electrodes led to significant advances in studies of fast heterogeneous and homogeneous reactions, measurements in various microenvironments, and highresolution electrochemical imaging. 1 Even smaller, i.e., nanometer-sized, ultramicroelectrodes (UMEs) are required for characterization of the electrode/electrolyte interfacial processes with nanometer-scale resolution. 2 The initial stages of many important processes, such as metal corrosion and heterogeneous nucleation, include formation of nanometer-sized transient structures. 3 To probe such structures electrochemically, one needs a comparably sized electrode. Another important application of ultrasmall electrodes is single-molecule detection. 4 During the last several years, a few research groups have been exploring different methodologies of manufacturing nanometer-sized disks, bands, cones, and arrays of UMEs. [5][6][7][8][9][10] The main difficulty in using such electrodes for quantitative measurements is the shape uncertainty. In this paper, we develop procedures for easier preparation and better characterization of nanometer-sized electrochemical sensors. The voltammetric response of an UME does not provide sufficient information about the geometry of either the conductor exposed to electrolyte or the insulating sheath. The diffusion to a small electrode (hemisphere, cone, disk) rapidly becomes hemispherical when the electrode is in the bulk solution far from any object. 11 Thus, the shape of a reversible steady-state voltammogram is the same for any microelectrode geometry. In contrast, an irregularly shaped UME employed in kinetic measurements may result in highly erroneous values for rate constants extracted from experimental data. 12 Figure 1 presents several electrode shapes that can result from different preparation procedures. A perfect microdisk UME ( where c°is the bulk concentration of the mediator species, D is the diffusion coefficient, F is the Faraday constant, and n is the number of electrons transferred. Such electrodes have commonly been employed in both steady-state and non-steady-state measure

    Inner retinal preservation in rat models of retinal degeneration implanted with subretinal photovoltaic arrays

    Get PDF
    Photovoltaic arrays (PVA) implanted into the subretinal space of patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) are designed to electrically stimulate the remaining inner retinal circuitry in response to incident light, thereby recreating a visual signal when photoreceptor function declines or is lost. Preservation of inner retinal circuitry is critical to the fidelity of this transmitted signal to ganglion cells and beyond to higher visual targets. Post-implantation loss of retinal interneurons or excessive glial scarring could diminish and/or eliminate PVA-evoked signal transmission. As such, assessing the morphology of the inner retina in RP animal models with subretinal PVAs is an important step in defining biocompatibility and predicting success of signal transmission. In this study, we used immunohistochemical methods to qualitatively and quantitatively compare inner retinal morphology after the implantation of a PVA in two RP models: the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) or transgenic S334ter-line 3 (S334ter-3) rhodopsin mutant rat. Two PVA designs were compared. In the RCS rat, we implanted devices in the subretinal space at 4 weeks of age and histologically examined them at 8 weeks of age and found inner retinal morphology preservation with both PVA devices. In the S334ter-3 rat, we implanted devices at 6-12 weeks of age and again, inner retinal morphology was generally preserved with either PVA design 16-26 weeks post-implantation. Specifically, the length of rod bipolar cells and numbers of cholinergic amacrine cells were maintained along with their characteristic inner plexiform lamination patterns. Throughout the implanted retinas we found nonspecific glial reaction, but none showed additional glial scarring at the implant site. Our results indicate that subretinally implanted PVAs are well-tolerated in rodent RP models and that the inner retinal circuitry is preserved, consistent with our published results showing implant-evoked signal transmission

    Enhancing prosthetic vision by upgrade of a subretinal photovoltaic implant in situ

    Get PDF
    In patients with atrophic age-related macular degeneration, subretinal photovoltaic implant (PRIMA) provided visual acuity up to 20/440, matching its 100μm pixels size. Next-generation implants with smaller pixels should significantly improve the acuity. This study in rats evaluates removal of a subretinal implant, replacement with a newer device, and the resulting grating acuity in-vivo. Six weeks after the initial implantation with planar and 3-dimensional devices, the retina was re-detached, and the devices were successfully removed. Histology demonstrated a preserved inner nuclear layer. Re-implantation of new devices into the same location demonstrated retinal re-attachment to a new implant. New devices with 22μm pixels increased the grating acuity from the 100μm capability of PRIMA implants to 28μm, reaching the limit of natural resolution in rats. Reimplanted devices exhibited the same stimulation threshold as for the first implantation of the same implants in a control group. This study demonstrates the feasibility of safely upgrading the subretinal photovoltaic implants to improve prosthetic visual acuity

    Photodiode circuits for retinal prostheses

    No full text
    Photodiode circuits show promise for the development of high-resolution retinal prostheses. While several of these systems have been constructed and some even implanted in humans, existing descriptions of the complex optoelectronic interaction between light, photodiode, and the electrode/electrolyte load are limited. This study examines this interaction in depth with theoretical calculations and experimental measurements. Actively biased photoconductive and passive photovoltaic circuits are investigated, with the photovoltaic circuits consisting of one or more diodes connected in series, and the photoconductive circuits consisting of a single diode in series with a pulsed bias voltage. Circuit behavior and charge injection levels were markedly different for platinum and sputtered iridium-oxide film (SIROF) electrodes. Photovoltaic circuits were able to deliver 0.038 mC/cm2 (0.75 nC/phase) per photodiode with 50- μm platinum electrodes, and 0.54-mC/cm2 (11 nC/phase) per photodiode with 50-μ m SIROF electrodes driven with 0.5-ms pulses of light at 25 Hz. The same pulses applied to photoconductive circuits with the same electrodes were able to deliver charge injections as high as 0.38 and 7.6 mC/cm2 (7.5 and 150 nC/phase), respectively. We demonstrate photovoltaic stimulation of rabbit retina in-vitro, with 0.5-ms pulses of 905-nm light using peak irradiance of 1 mW/mm2. Based on the experimental data, we derive electrochemical and optical safety limits for pixel density and charge injection in various circuits. While photoconductive circuits offer smaller pixels, photovoltaic systems do not require an external bias voltage. Both classes of circuits show promise for the development of high-resolution optoelectronic retinal prostheses

    Image Processing for a High-Resolution Optoelectronic Retinal Prosthesis

    No full text
    corecore