Impedance Properties of Multi-Optrode Biopotential Sensing Arrays

IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 2022 May;69(5):1674-1684. doi: 10.1109/TBME.2021.3126849. Epub 2022 Apr 21.

Abstract

Recording and monitoring electrically-excitable cells is critical to understanding the complex cellular networking within organs as well as the processes underlying many electro-physiological pathologies. Biopotential recording using an optical-electrode (optrode) is a novel approach which has potential to significantly improve interface-instrumentation impedance mismatching as recording contact-sizes become smaller and smaller. Optrodes incorporate a conductive interface that can sense extracellular potential and an underlying layer of liquid crystals that passively transduces electrical signals into measurable optical signals. This study investigates the impedance properties of this optical technology by varying the diameter of recording sites and observing the corresponding changes in the impedance values. The results show that the liquid crystals in this optrode platform exhibit input impedance values (1 MΩ - 100 GΩ) that are three orders of magnitude higher than the corresponding interface impedance, which is appropriate for voltage sensing. The automatic scaling of the input impedance enabled within the optrode system maintains a relatively constant ratio between input and total system impedance of about one for sensing areas with diameters ranging from 40 µm to 1 mm, at which the calculated signal loss is predicted to be <1%. This feature preserves the interface-transducer impedance ratio, regardless of the size of the recording site, allowing development of passive optrode arrays capable of very high spatial-resolution recordings.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Electric Impedance*
  • Electrodes