Enhanced Flexible Mold Lifetime for Roll‐to‐Roll Scaled‐Up Manufacturing of Adhesive Complex Microstructures
Bioinspired Microstructured Adhesives with Facile and Fast Switchability for Part Manipulation in Dry and Wet Conditions
Smart Materials for manipulation and actuation of small-scale structures
3D nanofabrication of various materials for advanced multifunctional microrobots
Liquid Crystal Mesophase of Supercooled Liquid Gallium And Eutectic Gallium–Indium
Machine Learning-Based Pull-off and Shear Optimal Adhesive Microstructures
Information entropy to detect order in self-organizing systems
Individual and collective manipulation of multifunctional bimodal droplets in three dimensions
Microrobot collectives with reconfigurable morphologies and functions
Self-organization in heterogeneous and non-reciprocal regime
Biomimetic Emulsion Systems
Giant Unilamellar Vesicles for Designing Cell-like Microrobots
Bioinspired self-assembled colloidal collectives drifting in three dimensions underwater
Janus Microparticles-based Piezoelectric Neural Stimulation via Low-Intensity Focused Ultrasound

Electrical stimulation of the nervous system plays a crucial role in treating neurological diseases, sensory impairments, and movement disorders. However, conventional clinical approaches rely on the implantation of rigid metal electrodes, which can cause various issues such as low spatial resolution, poor selectivity, and long-term side effects. While recent advancements in nanoparticle systems that convert magnetic, optical, or mechanical energy into bioelectrical modulation have opened new avenues, challenges still remain. These include the need for genetic modification, diffusion of nanoparticles from the target site, and high-intensity thresholds to achieve effective neural stimulation at clinically relevant frequencies.
Our project introduces a novel wireless method for neural stimulation using piezoelectric magnetic Janus microparticles (PEMPs), which are designed to address these challenges. The microparticles, comparable in size to neural cells (20 μm in diameter), feature a unique dual-surface design. One side is conjugated with barium titanate nanoparticles for piezoelectric stimulation, while the other half is coated with a magnetically responsive material that allows precise orientation and movement using external magnetic fields. The functional design of PEMPs enables low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) stimulation at high therapeutic frequencies (up to 200 Hz), while significantly lowering the intensity threshold for neural activation (<100 mW/cm^2).
In our in vitro experiments, PEMPs were shown to selectively target and stimulate dopaminergic neurons when modified with cell-selective antibodies. This capability is essential for cell-specific treatments in neurological disorders. Additionally, the orientation control provided by the magnetic coating ensures precise spatial and temporal neuromodulation, enhancing both the selectivity and efficacy of neural stimulation. This innovative PEMP design not only offers a solution to current limitations in particle-based neuromodulation systems but also holds potential for non-genetic, wireless neural stimulation techniques with broad implications for neurotherapeutic applications and basic neuroscience research.
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