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Title
Simultaneous Detection of Neural Activity and Temperature in Photothermal Neural Stimulation
Issued Date
2025-05
Citation
Kim, Duhee. (2025-05). Simultaneous Detection of Neural Activity and Temperature in Photothermal Neural Stimulation. Advanced Science, 12(19). doi: 10.1002/advs.202411725
Type
Article
Author Keywords
high-resolution direct temperature sensinglow-noise neural electrodesmultifunctional microelectrode arrayPhotothermal neuromodulationTransparent ultrathin Au
Keywords
INTRACELLULAR TEMPERATUREION CHANNELSNANOTHERMOMETERMICROELECTRODESINHIBITION
ISSN
2198-3844
Abstract
Photothermal neuromodulation is a promising non-electrical neural stimulation technology for treating brain diseases through optically induced cell membrane temperature changes. However, the technology faces limitations in understanding its mechanism and impact on cellular behavior due to the restriction of directly measuring temperature changes at the cell interface from a very close distance during optical stimulation of neural cells, necessitating advancements in high-precision temperature sensing and electrical recording without light interference. This challenge is addressed by developing ultrasensitive cell membrane interface temperature sensors integrated with low-noise electrical recording capabilities. Transparent resistive temperature detectors, composed of a 10 nm thickness of ultrathin Au film fabricated by polyelectrolyte seed layer-induced thermal evaporation, achieved precise measurement and control of temperature changes without significant light interference and self-heating. A transparent electrode composed of the same ultrathin Au layer shows low-noise electrical recordings of neural signals upon photothermal stimulation. Using this multifunctional system, it is demonstrated that an average increase of 2.34 degrees C at neuronal cell surfaces results in over 95% suppression of hippocampal neural spike activities. The approach provides unprecedented insights into the mechanisms of photothermal neuromodulation and its effects on cellular behavior, paving the way for advanced treatments of neurological disorders
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/58249
DOI
10.1002/advs.202411725
Publisher
Wiley
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권혁준
Kwon, Hyuk-Jun권혁준

Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

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