Transient Electronics: From Bioelectronic Medicines to Environmental Monitors
Speaker
John A. Rogers
- Louis Simpson and Kimberly Querrey Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, Biomedical Engineering and Neurological Surgery, McCormick School of Engineering, Northwestern University
- Director of the Querrey-Simpson Institute for Bioelectronics, Northwestern University
About This Talk
A remarkable feature of modern integrated circuit technology is its ability to operate in a stable fashion, almost indefinitely, without physical or chemical change. Recently developed classes of electronic materials and manufacturing approaches create an opportunity to engineer the opposite outcome, in the form of ‘transient’ devices that dissolve, disintegrate, degrade or otherwise physically disappear at triggered times or with controlled rates. Water-soluble transient electronic devices serve as the foundations for applications in zero-impact environmental monitors, “green” consumer electronic gadgetry and bio-resorbable medical implants. This talk describes the essential concepts in materials science, electrical engineering and assembly techniques for bio/ecoresorbable electronics in a variety of formats and with a range of functions. Wireless temporary pacemakers that minimize risks after cardiac surgeries and passive microfliers that enable tracking of environmental processes represent some recent system level examples.
Biography
About the MSE Seminar Series
The Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) Seminar Series features distinguished speakers from leading institutions, offering a platform for sharing groundbreaking research, innovative ideas, and entrepreneurial experiences. Held multiple times each semester, these seminars bring global perspectives world to MIT’s materials research community, exposing students, faculty, and postdocs to cutting-edge concepts and valuable networking opportunities.