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Nitrogen-Doped Ultrananocrystalline Diamond – Optoelectronic Biointerface for Wireless Neuronal Stimulation

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posted on 2025-07-18, 05:16 authored by Yue Yao, Arman AhnoodArman Ahnood, Andre Chambers, Wei Tong, Steven Prawer
This study presents a semiconducting optoelectronic system for light-controlled non-genetic neuronal stimulation using visible light. The system architecture is entirely wireless, comprising a thin film of nitrogen-doped ultrananocrystalline diamond directly grown on a semiconducting silicon substrate. When immersed in a physiological medium and subjected to pulsed illumination in the visible (595 nm) or near-infrared wavelength (808 nm) range, charge accumulation at the device-medium interface induces a transient ionic displacement current capable of electrically stimulating neurons with high temporal resolution. With a measured photoresponsivity of 7.5 mA W-1, the efficacy of this biointerface is demonstrated through optoelectronic stimulation of degenerate rat retinas using 595 nm irradiation, pulse durations of 50-500 ms, and irradiance levels of 1.1-4.3 mW mm-2, all below the safe ocular threshold. This work presents the pioneering utilization of a diamond-based optoelectronic platform, capable of generating sufficiently large photocurrents for neuronal stimulation in the retina.<p></p>

Funding

National Health and Medical Research Council | 2029454

Australian Research Council | DE220100302

Australian Research Council | DE210102750

History

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    PMID - Has metadata PubMed 39935067
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    DOI - Is published in DOI: 10.1002/adhm.202403901
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Journal

Advanced Healthcare Materials

Volume

14

Number

e2403901

Issue

9

Start page

1

End page

12

Total pages

12

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Language

eng

Copyright

© 2025 The Author(s).

Open access

  • Yes

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