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A Wireless Head-Mountable Device With Tapered Optical Fiber-Coupled Laser Diode for Light Delivery in Deep Brain Regions
Ist Teil von
IEEE transactions on biomedical engineering, 2019-07, Vol.66 (7), p.1996-2009
Ort / Verlag
United States: IEEE
Erscheinungsjahr
2019
Quelle
IEEE Electronic Library Online
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Optogenetics sets new experimental para-digms that can reveal cell type-specific contributions on the neural basis of behavior. Since most of the available systems for this purpose are based on approaches that tether animals to a set of cables, recent research activities have been focused on minimizing external factors that can alter animal movements. Current wireless optogenetic systems are based on waveguide-coupled light-emitting diodes (LED) and implanted μLEDs. However, each configuration separately suffers from significant limitations, such as low coupling efficiency, penetration depth, and invasiveness of waveguide-coupled LED, and local heat generated by implanted μLEDs. This work presents a novel wireless head-mountable stimulating system for a wide-volume light delivery. The device couples the output of a semiconductor laser diode (LD) to a tapered optical fiber (TF) on a wireless platform. The LD-TF coupling was engineered by setting up far-field analysis, which allows a full exploitation of mode division demultiplexing properties of TFs. The output delivered light along the tapered segment is capable of stimulating structures of depths up to ~2 mm. TFs are tapered to a gradual taper angle (Ψ ~ 2° to Ψ ~ 10°) that ends with a sharp tip (~500 nm) for smooth insertion and less invasiveness. Thus, the proposed system extends the capabilities of wireless optogenetic by offering a novel solution for wide volume light delivery in deep brain regions.