Millennium Post

Graphene camera to help ‘see’ electrical signals in heart, brain

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LOS ANGELES: Scientists have developed a highly sensitive camera system with graphene film that can help map tiny electric fields in a liquid - an advance that will allow more extensive and precise imaging of electrical signals in our hearts and brains.

The ability to visually depict the strength and motion of very faint electrical fields may also aid in the developmen­t of ‘lab-on-achip’ devices that use very small quantities of fluids on a microchip-like platform to diagnose disease or aid in drug developmen­t.

The setup could potentiall­y be adapted for sensing or trapping specific chemicals and for studies of light-based electronic­s.

“This was a completely new, innovative idea that graphene could be used as a material to sense electrical fields in a liquid,” said Jason Horng, from Kavli Energy Nanoscienc­es Institute, a joint institute at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and University of California, Berkeley in the US.

“The basic concept was how graphene could be used as a very general and scalable method for resolving very small changes in the magnitude, position, and timing pattern of a local electric field, such as the electrical impulses produced by a single nerve cell,” said Halleh B Balch, a PHD student at UC Berkeley.

“One of the outstandin­g problems in studying a large network of cells is understand­ing how informatio­n propagates between them,” Balch said. Other techniques developed to measure electrical signals from small arrays of cells can be difficult to scale up to larger arrays and in some cases cannot trace individual electrical impulses to a specific cell.

“This new method does not perturb cells in any way, which is fundamenta­lly different from existing methods that use either genetic or chemical modificati­ons of the cell membrane,” said Bianxiao Cui, from Stanford University.

The new platform should more easily permit single-cell measuremen­ts of electrical impulses traveling across networks containing 100 or more living cells, researcher­s said.

Researcher­s first used infrared light to understand the effects of an electric field on graphene’s absorption of infrared light.

In the experiment, they aimed an infrared laser through a prism to a thin layer called a waveguide. The waveguide was designed to precisely match graphene’s light-absorbing properties so that all of the light was absorbed along the graphene layer in the absence of an electric field.

Researcher­s then fired tiny electrical pulses in a liquid solution above the graphene layer that very slightly disrupted the graphene layer’s light absorption, allowing some light to escape in a way that carried a precise signature of the electrical field.

They captured a sequence of images of this escaping light in thousandth­s-of-a-second intervals and these images provided a direct visualisat­ion of the electrical field’s strength and location along the surface of the graphene.

 ??  ?? New graphene camera sensors are 1,000 times more sensitive to light
New graphene camera sensors are 1,000 times more sensitive to light

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