bioelectronic materials include advanced materials synthesis, bacterial, neural, and car
diac interfaces, function recovery and gain (i.e. vision and auditory system), and photo
tactic guidance of animaloid soft robots or cyborgs [1–3].
For decades, inorganic materials have been routinely used in clinical settings and basic
research to stimulate and record signals from cells and tissues. These include both metals
and semiconducting systems. For the former case, most applications usually rely on metal
electrodes (i.e. made of Au, Pt, and Pd) that enable direct electrical stimulation of cells and
tissues and, more recently, on nanostructures, i.e. gold nanorods and nanoparticles [4],
which allows photoelectrical/thermal stimulation. Silicon represents another popular
semiconducting bioelectronic material, given its large availability and relatively low
toxicity. Recently, the use of silicon nanowires has been proposed to achieve optically
induced neuronal firing [5]. However, inorganic bioelectronic materials are relatively far
from living matter, for instance in regards to conformability, stiffness, and, in many cases,
biocompatibility. Furthermore, while conventional electronics is based on electron con
duction, bioelectricity usually consists of ionic currents and stems from differences in
ionic concentration that are regulated by the activity of ion channels. Those discrepancies
in mechanical, compositional, and electrical properties between inorganic materials and
biological matter demand an alternative approach in bioelectronic materials.
On the other hand, the increasing number of studies reporting striking results using
organic semiconductors make these materials a competitive alternative in this field [3].
From the biocompatibility side, these systems are kin to proteins, carbohydrates, and
nucleic acids, as well as being biodegradable, soft, and conformable. On the functional
side, they can sustain both electronic and ionic transport and can be easily functionalized
to enable specific excitation and probing capabilities. Organic bioelectronics has strongly
benefitted from the advances in the field of organic semiconductors, driven mainly by the
development of organic light-emitting diodes [6], solar cells [7,8], and transistors [9].
Briefly, these materials exhibit semiconducting behavior owing to their delocalized
π-electron system. Chemical doping of organic semiconductors to highly conductive
states, either p-type or less frequently n-type, can be achieved via the addition of an
oxidizing or reducing agent. Doping can also occur when ions from an electrolyte enter
an organic film or vice versa. In this case, the compensating charge is supplied by
an electrode and the process is called “electrochemical doping.” Apart from largely
π-delocalized polymers, also small molecules with different degrees of conjugation and
photochemical properties have been employed for the modification of the abiotic/biotic
interface. These include the use of conjugated oligomers, organic pigments, and
membrane-targeting photochromic materials for direct neuronal stimulation. Last but not
least, carbon-based nanomaterials such as graphene and carbon-nanotubes have also
attracted increasing attention recently. Their use has gained momentum owing to the
spectacular developments in the field of graphene derivatives and general 2D materials.
Therefore, given their ability to interface effectively with biological matter, organic ma
terials have entered quietly but steadily the realm of bioelectronics. From the seminal review
by Magnus Berggren and Agneta Richter-Dahlfors in which the term “organic bioelec
tronics” was coined [10], the field has recorded many advances in material synthesis/design,
with several dozen groups in Europe, the Americas, Asia, and Australia that are active in the
field. The scope of this chapter is to give an overview of the most employed organic materials
as abiotic bioelectronic interfaces. Our motivation stems from the fact that bioelectronics is a
field that is limited by the materials that transduce signals across the biotic/abiotic interface.
For this reason, several breakthrough results in the field of organic bioelectronics have been
fueled by progress in materials chemistry and physics.
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Bioelectronics