Using microneedle array electrodes for non-invasive electrophysiological signal acquisition and sensory feedback evoking

Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 2023 Aug 3:11:1238210. doi: 10.3389/fbioe.2023.1238210. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Introduction: Bidirectional transmission of information is needed to realize a closed-loop human-machine interaction (HMI), where electrophysiological signals are recorded for man-machine control and electrical stimulations are used for machine-man feedback. As a neural interface (NI) connecting man and machine, electrodes play an important role in HMI and their characteristics are critical for information transmission. Methods: In this work, we fabricated a kind of microneedle array electrodes (MAEs) by using a magnetization-induced self-assembly method, where microneedles with a length of 500-600 μm and a tip diameter of ∼20 μm were constructed on flexible substrates. Part of the needle length could penetrate through the subjects' stratum corneum and reach the epidermis, but not touch the dermis, establishing a safe and direct communication pathway between external electrical circuit and internal peripheral nervous system. Results: The MAEs showed significantly lower and more stable electrode-skin interface impedance than the metal-based flat array electrodes (FAEs) in various testing scenarios, demonstrating their promising impedance characteristics. With the stable microneedle structure, MAEs exhibited an average SNR of EMG that is more than 30% higher than FAEs, and a motion-intention classification accuracy that is 10% higher than FAEs. The successful sensation evoking demonstrated the feasibility of the MAE-based electrical stimulation for sensory feedback, where a variety of natural and intuitive feelings were generated in the subjects and thereafter objectively verified through EEG analysis. Discussion: This work confirms the application potential of MAEs working as an effective NI, in both electrophysiological recording and electrical stimulation, which may provide a technique support for the development of HMI.

Keywords: EMG; electrophysiological; human-machine interaction; microneedle array electrode; neural interface; sensory feedback; transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation.

Grants and funding

This work was supported in part by the National Key Research & Development Program of China under Grant 2017YFA0701103, National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant U21A20479 and 81927804, CAS Youth Innovation Promotion Association under Grant Y2022094, Shenzhen Fundamental Research Program under Grant JCYJ20200109114805984, and Shenzhen Engineering Laboratory of Neural Rehabilitation Technology.