Self-Powered Multifunctional Transient Bioelectronics

Small. 2018 Aug;14(35):e1802050. doi: 10.1002/smll.201802050. Epub 2018 Aug 5.

Abstract

Controllable degradation and excellent biocompatibility during/after a lifetime endow emerging transient electronics with special superiority in implantable biomedical applications. Currently, most of these devices need external power sources, limiting their real-world utilizations. Optimizing existing bioresorbable electronic devices requires natural-material-based construction and, more importantly, diverse or even all-in-one multifunctionalization. Herein, silk-based implantable, biodegradable, and multifunctional systems, self-powered with transient triboelectric nanogenerators (T2 ENGs), for real-time in vivo monitoring and therapeutic treatments of epileptic seizures, are reported. These T2 ENGs are of customizable in vitro/in vivo operating life and biomechanical sensitivity via the adjustments of silk molecular size, surface structuralization, and device configuration. Functions, such as drug delivery and structural-integrity optical readout (parallel to electronic signals), are enabled for localized anti-infection and noninvasive degradation indication, respectively. A proof-of-principle wireless system is built with mobile-device readout and "smart" treatment triggered by specific symptoms (i.e., epilepsy), exhibiting the practical potential of these silk T2 ENGs as self-powered, transient, and multifunctional implantable bioelectronic platforms.

Keywords: epilepsy treatment; optical readout; silk fibroin; transient bioelectronics; triboelectric nanogenerators.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bombyx
  • Electric Power Supplies*
  • Electronics* / instrumentation
  • Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions
  • Nanoparticles / chemistry
  • Rats, Sprague-Dawley
  • Stress, Mechanical