the natural sciences are no different than collaborations between scientists and re
searchers in other disciplines of study. Through the use of a certain approach, materials
with similar chemistries but different functionality may be used in combination to de
velop bioelectronic devices that have capabilities to exceed the capabilities of either
material alone. In the vast majority of cases, such strategies will provide extremely va
luable insights into the situation.
The utilization of hard-soft composites to lessen the impact of mechanical mismatch
between a device and a tissue, while simultaneously enabling unique sensing and stimu
lation avenues, serves as a mechanical example of this concept. Furthermore, discoveries in
disciplines that are adjacent to bioelectronics have the added benefit of opening up a wide
range of new possibilities for bioelectronics applications. One of the most often discussed
topics in the realm of energy input techniques with a good spatiotemporal resolution, such
as acoustic, optical, and magnetic impulses, is the application of these techniques to dra
matically enhance the localization of different therapies. New technologies are required to
successfully construct structures at the nanoscale, and new metrology and using biological
assemblages for nanoscale manufacturing are hot topics right now. Fabrication of complex
physical features onto substrates with essential dimensions of less than 1 nm, development
of metrology instruments for testing and measuring nanoscale features, and surfaces for
controlling antibody and antigen-binding are being developed.
Despite the significant advancements in bioelectronics, to move bioelectronics ahead
further, innovation is required in many broad areas, including measurements and analysis,
fabrication, biocompatibility, and power sources. In general, these cross-cutting issues are
caused by a lack of technological advancement, a lack of biological knowledge, or a com
bination of the two factors. To achieve the essential advances, it will be important to co
ordinate and bring together the expertise that exists across government agencies, university
research institutes, and industry. Among the manufacturing issues are the development
of improved sensors and the development of innovative fabrication processes. It is also
difficult to merge numerous sensing technologies with integrated circuit technologies.
Biosensors will play a critical part in addressing future bioelectronics needs, and increases
in bandwidth and detection limits will be required to satisfy these expectations.
Developing a detailed bioelectronics roadmap with input from the government, aca
demic institutions, and the private sector would be an excellent next step. Such a road
map would allow for more effective planning and resource management, as well as
an increase in the productivity and commercialization of bioelectronics research and
development. Such an activity would establish and explain expected application-specific
research metrics and metrology gaps and needs, as well as timescales for research,
development, and prototyping, as well as upcoming market and commercialization op
portunities and challenges in bioelectronics. To build synergistic combinations of some of
the recent results presented in this chapter, we predict that chemical considerations will
be used successfully soon, with considerable success being achieved in bioelectronics.
Moreover, the following shortcomings are also necessary for the development of this
field: (i) understanding molecule/cell-electronic interactions; (ii) understanding cellular
reactions to a stimulus; and (iii) researchers must understand how molecules interact
with each other to deliver appropriate therapeutic materials and stimuli in real time and
can detect, identify, and quantify thousands of biomarkers simultaneously. Collaboration
between the electronics and biomedical device industries, as well as university and
government research groups, will hasten the transition of this interdisciplinary research
to commercial devices. Leadership from diverse fields must be prepared to commit to
collaborative activities when multidisciplinary input is required for success.
14
Bioelectronics