Litcius/Paper detail

Biodegradable bioelectronics for biomedical applications

Seunghyeon Lee, Saimon Moraes Silva, Lilith M. Caballero Aguilar, Taesik Eom, Simon E. Moulton, Bong Sup Shim

2022Journal of Materials Chemistry B26 citationsDOI

Abstract

Biodegradable polymers have been widely used in tissue engineering with the potential to be replaced by regenerative tissue. While conventional bionic interfaces are designed to be implanted in living tissue and organs permanently, biocompatible and biodegradable electronic materials are now progressing a paradigm shift towards transient and regenerative bionic engineering. For example, biodegradable bioelectronics can monitor physiologies in a body, transiently rehabilitate disease symptoms, and seamlessly form regenerative interfaces from synthetic electronic devices to tissues by reducing inflammatory foreign-body responses. Conventional electronic materials have not readily been considered biodegradable. However, several strategies have been adopted for designing electroactive and biodegradable materials systems: (1) conductive materials blended with biodegradable components, (2) molecularly engineered conjugated polymers with biodegradable moieties, (3) naturally derived conjugated biopolymers, and (4) aqueously dissolvable metals with encapsulating layers. In this review, we endeavor to present the technical bridges from electrically active and biodegradable material systems to edible and biodegradable electronics as well as transient bioelectronics with pre-clinical bio-instrumental applications, including biodegradable sensors, neural and tissue engineering, and intelligent drug delivery systems.

Topics & Concepts

BioelectronicsMaterials scienceConjugated systemBiodegradable polymerNanotechnologyBiodegradationConductive polymerPolymerBiocompatible materialPolymer scienceBiosensorOrganic chemistryChemistryComposite materialBiomedical engineeringEngineeringAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsNeuroscience and Neural Engineering3D Printing in Biomedical Research