successful deposition of PEDOT-PTS on Platinum
substrates for electrical stimulation in neural
prosthetics applications (Green et al., 2012, Green et
al., 2013) or as conductive films electro-sprayed onto
glass substrates (Kim et al., 2104). To our knowledge,
this is the first report of a PEDOT-PTS film
successfully deposited on Carbon substrates, on
commercially available screen-printed electrodes.
We have successfully designed a coating protocol
for PEDOT-PTS thin films that can be adjusted in
order to obtain varying charge delivery capacities.
The charge storage capacity of the films showed a
five to seven fold increase over the commercially
available carbon coating, and given the surface area
of the working electrode (7 mm
2
), and the highly non-
uniform surface, the cathodic charge storage capacity
of 0.25±0.10 mC was not surprising. A usual side
effect of thin film coatings, and in particular for
PEDOT electrodes, is the splitting of layers, also
known as delamination, over time. Factors that affect
delamination are the dynamic range of the voltage
applied during CV tests, the temperature at which the
characterizations are performed, the surface
roughness and the electrostatic interaction at the
material interface.
Delamination can usually be visualized on the
surface of the electrode seen as cracks when it is
substantial (Green et al., 2012), and it is a significant
concern in implantable applications since coating
technologies can be important to preserve
biocompatibility during chronic recording or
stimulation (Vallejo-Giraldo et al.). Critically, when
during the onset of delamination, electrochemical
methods can point to subtle or microscopic defects
that are not readily found microscopically. With the
combination of cyclic voltammetry and impedance
spectroscopy profiles, it was possible to ascertain
over time, the stability of the interface between the
working electrode or the electrode coating and an
electrolyte.
By characterizing electrodes over several months
we demonstrated that the charge and the impedance
can vary around a mean value but remained stable in
vitro. Robustness of the PEDOT-PTS could then be
demonstrated at room temperature and when
subjected to accelerated aging at elevated
temperatures. In can be hypothesized that for
applications utilizing implantable PEDOT-PTS
coated electrodes, a similar robust behavior can be
expected. The original motivation for electrochemical
analysis at 47 °C was derived from the hypothesis that
in general, for every 10 degree increase in
temperature, it can expected that the lifetime of the
polymer will decrease by a factor of two. In other
words, given that 10 days is the mean time to failure
cited in the literature for implanted PEDOT-PTS
coatings (Green et al, 2012), it could be expected that
the carbon-based electrodes investigated in this study
would fail within 5 days.
The robustness of the screen-printed electrodes
was a further unexpected result observed in this
exploration and the polymeric insulating coating did
not delaminate over the course of three months (total
test time) indicating the potential applications of these
cost-effective devices for implantable devices.
Future studies will focus on the miniaturization of
the deposition area and on validating the stability of
PEDOT-PTS coated electrodes in neuronal-glial
culture maintained for over three months, while
leveraging the electrodes for stimulation and
recording of extra-cellular activity.
5 CONCLUSIONS
PEDOT-PTS films, when deposited on Carbon-based
substrates, enhance the electrode-electrolyte interface
through increasing the charge delivery with a constant
surface area. The potential of this coating approach
for neuroelectrode applications is further validated
through the coating persistence and delamination was
not observed for up to two months in age-accelerated
conditions. We intend to test miniaturized electrodes
with the same coating process, and with neuronal-
glial cultures, in order to further characterize
PEDOT-PTS for biological applications.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We acknowledge the participation of our summer
students, Kevin Luu (UCSD) and Jose Pahuacho
Palomino (GMU), who performed some of the
experiments discussed here. M.J. Biggs is a Science
Foundation Ireland, Starting Investigator SIRG
COFUND fellow (grant agreement no.
11/SIRG/B2135), and a funded investigator through
the Science Foundation Ireland Centre for Research
in Medical Devices (CÚRAM) (Grant agreement no.
13/RC/2073).
REFERENCES
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