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Bioelectronics on Mammalian Collagen
Author(s) -
Moreno Salvador,
Keshtkar Javad,
RodriguezDavila Rodolfo Antonio,
Bazaid Arwa,
Ibrahim Hossam,
Rodriguez Brian J.,
QuevedoLopez Manuel Angel,
MinaryJolandan Majid
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced electronic materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.25
H-Index - 56
ISSN - 2199-160X
DOI - 10.1002/aelm.202000391
Subject(s) - bioelectronics , materials science , substrate (aquarium) , nanotechnology , flexible electronics , wafer , transistor , fabrication , field effect transistor , silicon , optoelectronics , biosensor , electrical engineering , voltage , medicine , oceanography , alternative medicine , engineering , pathology , geology
Collagen has emerged as an attractive bioelectronics substrate candidate, given its biological origins as a structural protein found in organisms. Substrates for implantable electronics should be biocompatible and have similar mechanical properties to implant target tissues. Furthermore, the characteristic amino acid sequences in collagen promote cell adhesion, migration, and proliferation, all of which are advantageous when compared to commonly explored cellulose and silk. However, denaturation temperature and swelling in water/vacuum have been fundamental barriers to device fabrication on collagen. It is here described how these problems can be avoided for the fabrication of semiconductor devices on collagen. Transfer printing using a sacrificial layer of germanium oxide is used to fabricate capacitors, transistors, and an integrated inverter transistor circuits on the collagen substrate. The mobility and threshold voltage of the transistors on collagen show only ≈41% and ≈22% drop compared to the ones on rigid silicon substrate. The enzymatic digestion and swelling ratio of collagen can be decreased by 80% and 175%, respectively, via glutaraldehyde cross‐linking, while mechanical stiffness increases by more than 270%. This work demonstrates how collagen can be used as a bioelectronics substrate with tunable properties, thereby expanding its application range from transient to more permanent implantable electronics.