tracking, and recording people’s vital signs have seen advancements due to wearable and
implantable devices or electronics [3]. The factors at the interfaces between biosensors
and cellular membranes determine the efficacy of these kinds of devices. The electro
physiology recording and stimulating capabilities of biosensor implants integrated with
electrogenic cells, on the other hand, are reliant on the electrode impedance, the revealed
surfaces area, and the cell-electrode connectivity [4–7]. Smart watches, armbands, and
optics are among the accessories that are bringing some of these technologies into our
day-to-day lives [1,8,9]. The commercialization of these gadgets has been aided by
semiconductor nanostructured bio-nanotechnology. The flexibility of nanomaterials in
terms of alteration and modification of their localized structure during the synthesis, as
well as their doping and functionalization capabilities, allows them to serve the specific
requirements of such applications. This unique nature of the nanomaterials has
made them multi-functional prerequisites for the conception of flexible and wearable
electronics [10]. The downsizing of semiconductor devices is paving the way for new
biomedical research and commercial medical applications. A basic way for manu
facturing very flexible electronics is to utilize inorganic materials in form of either one-
dimensional (1D) or two-dimensional (2D) nanostructures [11]. Many inorganic materials,
namely nanosheet, nanoribbon, and nanowire, provided tunable and dynamic features
for conductor and semiconductor devices as well as dielectric materials [11].
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs), followed by several 2D materials, were among the first nano
materials to be investigated for the designing of wearable electronics [12]. With the best active
electrical conductivities and higher electron mobility, flexibility in single layer form, the
optical transparency of 98.7%, and extraordinarily high tensile strength, graphene materials
have emerged as the most promising and extensively researched 2D materials. The graphene
also demonstrates exceptional resistance to high temperatures, pressures, and highly
corrosive conditions. Graphene is a suitable candidate for wearable biosensors and other
biomedical applications because of its ease of fabrication and bio-compatibility [13,14].
Electronic and optical bio-interface studies mainly use inorganic semiconductors. They are
needed to make high-performance devices for applications like electrical sensing, signal
amplification, and transduction. Researchers have increasingly focused on semiconducting
Si because of its biocompatibility and well-developed micro-fabrication technologies. Other
inorganic semiconductors explored in bioelectronics and bioelectrical research include zinc
sulfide (ZnS), titanium dioxide (TiO2), and molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), which are
available as nanoparticles, nanowires, nanotubes, layered nanomaterial, and nanosheets [2].
Semiconducting oxides, in particular, are growing rapidly as silicon substitutes in active
matrix display backplane thin-film transistors, as well as opaque, elastic devices and energy
scavengers [15]. ZnO has a unique combination of properties such as excellent visible wa
velength transparency, rapid charge carrier mobility, and high piezoelectric susceptibility.
Therefore, it has been explored in a variety of forms, including films, wires, and rods, for
sensing, catalysis, optical emission, piezoelectric transduction, and actuation. ZnO is also
potentially ideal for chemical sensing, biological labeling and sensing, and energy transfer at
bio-interfaces due to its stability, various band gaps, and wide range of morphologies [15,16].
Transition metal dichalcogenide (MoS2) could be used in ultrathin wearable touch sensors,
owing to their outstanding photo-absorption and piezoresistivity [17].
The first functional implants, heart pacemakers, were introduced in the 1950s [18]. Since
then, the emergence of implantable electronic devices has streamlined the evolution of
nanoelectronics and nanofabrication technologies. Biomedical devices that help restore
and manage the activities of dysfunctional parts include hearing aid, nervous system
stimulators, and cardiac pacemakers [19]. These battery-operated implantable devices are
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