Publication | Closed Access
Impedance and Noise Characterizations of Utah and Microwire Electrode Arrays
21
Citations
20
References
2018
Year
Noise CharacterizationsMedical ElectronicsEngineeringNeuromodulation TherapiesBiomedical EngineeringWireless Implantable DeviceMedical InstrumentationSocial SciencesElectromagnetic CompatibilityMicro-electromechanical SystemUtah Electrode ArrayNoiseBiomedical DevicesInstrumentationBio-electronic InterfacesElectrical EngineeringImplantable SensorImpedance CharacterizationImplantable DeviceMicroelectronicsNeural InterfaceNeural InterfacesBiomedical SensorsNeuroengineeringNeurophysiologyBioelectronicsApplied PhysicsHigh-impedance ElectrodesBiomedical InstrumentationBrain ElectrophysiologyElectrophysiologyNeuroscienceElectronic Instrumentation
This paper presents an in-depth noise and impedance characterization of two of the most widely used microelectrode arrays (the Utah Electrode Array (UEA) and the Tucker-Davis Technologies (TDT) Microwire Array) and provides quantitative analysis of how properties change when implanted in rodent cortex. Custom low-noise circuits and de-embedding methods were designed to acquire nV / √Hz noise power spectral densities from high-impedance electrodes. A total of 80 electrodes were implanted across five rats and measured under deep anesthesia, demonstrating a 1.5× to 3× increase in noise and 2.25× to 9× in impedance compared to in vitro measurements. Low-frequency biological noise was also observed and studied through postmortem measurements. These results are informative for designing neural interfacing systems for both neuroscience and medical applications.
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