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Dive into the research topics where Alexandra Joshi-Imre is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandra Joshi-Imre.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Metamorphic Superomniphobic Surfaces

Wei Wang; Joshua Salazar; Hamed Vahabi; Alexandra Joshi-Imre; Walter Voit; Arun K. Kota

Superomniphobic surfaces are extremely repellent to virtually all liquids. By combining superomniphobicity and shape memory effect, metamorphic superomniphobic (MorphS) surfaces that transform their morphology in response to heat are developed. Utilizing the MorphS surfaces, the distinctly different wetting transitions of liquids with different surface tensions are demonstrated and the underlying physics is elucidated. Both ex situ and in situ wetting transitions on the MorphS surfaces are solely due to transformations in morphology of the surface texture. It is envisioned that the robust MorphS surfaces with reversible wetting transition will have a wide range of applications including rewritable liquid patterns, controlled drug release systems, lab-on-a-chip devices, and biosensors.


Journal of Neural Engineering | 2018

Amorphous silicon carbide ultramicroelectrode arrays for neural stimulation and recording

Felix Deku; Yarden Cohen; Alexandra Joshi-Imre; Aswini Kanneganti; Timothy J. Gardner; Stuart F. Cogan

OBJECTIVEnForeign body response to indwelling cortical microelectrodes limits the reliability of neural stimulation and recording, particularly for extended chronic applications in behaving animals. The extent to which this response compromises the chronic stability of neural devices depends on many factors including the materials used in the electrode construction, the size, and geometry of the indwelling structure. Here, we report on the development of microelectrode arrays (MEAs) based on amorphous silicon carbide (a-SiC).nnnAPPROACHnThis technology utilizes a-SiC for its chronic stability and employs semiconductor manufacturing processes to create MEAs with small shank dimensions. The a-SiC films were deposited by plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition and patterned by thin-film photolithographic techniques. To improve stimulation and recording capabilities with small contact areas, we investigated low impedance coatings on the electrode sites. The assembled devices were characterized in phosphate buffered saline for their electrochemical properties.nnnMAIN RESULTSnMEAs utilizing a-SiC as both the primary structural element and encapsulation were fabricated successfully. These a-SiC MEAs had 16 penetrating shanks. Each shank has a cross-sectional area less than 60 µm2 and electrode sites with a geometric surface area varying from 20 to 200 µm2. Electrode coatings of TiN and SIROF reduced 1u2009kHz electrode impedance to less than 100 kΩ from ~2.8 MΩ for 100 µm2 Au electrode sites and increased the charge injection capacities to values greater than 3 mC cm-2. Finally, we demonstrated functionality by recording neural activity from basal ganglia nucleus of Zebra Finches and motor cortex of rat.nnnSIGNIFICANCEnThe a-SiC MEAs provide a significant advancement in the development of microelectrodes that over the years has relied on silicon platforms for device manufacture. These flexible a-SiC MEAs have the potential for decreased tissue damage and reduced foreign body response. The technique is promising and has potential for clinical translation and large scale manufacturing.


Journal of Neural Engineering | 2018

Chronic softening spinal cord stimulation arrays

Aldo Garcia-Sandoval; Ajay Pal; Asht M. Mishra; Sydney Sherman; Ankit R. Parikh; Alexandra Joshi-Imre; David Arreaga-Salas; Gerardo Gutierrez-Heredia; Adriana C. Duran-Martinez; Jordan Nathan; Seyed Mahmoud Hosseini; Jason B. Carmel; Walter Voit

OBJECTIVEnWe sought to develop a cervical spinal cord stimulator for the rat that is durable, stable, and does not perturb the underlying spinal cord.nnnAPPROACHnWe created a softening spinal cord stimulation (SCS) array made from shape memory polymer (SMP)-based flexible electronics. We developed a new photolithographic process to pattern high surface area titanium nitride (TiN) electrodes onto gold (Au) interconnects. The thiol-ene acrylate polymers are stiff at room temperature and soften following implantation into the body. Durability was measured by the duration the devices produced effective stimulation and by accelerated aging in vitro. Stability was measured by the threshold to provoke an electromyogram (EMG) muscle response and by measuring impedance using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). In addition, spinal cord modulation of motor cortex potentials was measured. The spinal column and implanted arrays were imaged with MRI ex vivo, and histology for astrogliosis and immune reaction was performed.nnnMAIN RESULTSnFor durability, the design of the arrays was modified over three generations to create an array that demonstrated activity up to 29 weeks. SCS arrays showed no significant degradation over a simulated 29 week period of accelerated aging. For stability, the threshold for provoking an EMG rose in the first few weeks and then remained stable out to 16 weeks; the impedance showed a similar rise early with stability thereafter. Spinal cord stimulation strongly enhanced motor cortex potentials throughout. Upon explantation, device performance returned to pre-implant levels, indicating that biotic rather than abiotic processes were the cause of changing metrics. MRI and histology showed that softening SCS produced less tissue deformation than Parylene-C arrays. There was no significant astrogliosis or immune reaction to either type of array.nnnSIGNIFICANCEnSoftening SCS arrays meet the needs for research-grade devices in rats and could be developed into human devices in the future.


Micromachines | 2018

Characterization of the Neuroinflammatory Response to Thiol-ene Shape Memory Polymer Coated Intracortical Microelectrodes

Andrew J. Shoffstall; Melanie Ecker; Vindhya Danda; Alexandra Joshi-Imre; Allison Stiller; Marina Yu; Jennifer Paiz; Elizabeth Mancuso; Hillary W. Bedell; Walter Voit; Joseph J. Pancrazio; Jeffrey R. Capadona

Thiol-ene based shape memory polymers (SMPs) have been developed for use as intracortical microelectrode substrates. The unique chemistry provides precise control over the mechanical and thermal glass-transition properties. As a result, SMP substrates are stiff at room temperature, allowing for insertion into the brain without buckling and subsequently soften in response to body temperatures, reducing the mechanical mismatch between device and tissue. Since the surface chemistry of the materials can contribute significantly to the ultimate biocompatibility, as a first step in the characterization of our SMPs, we sought to isolate the biological response to the implanted material surface without regards to the softening mechanics. To accomplish this, we tightly controlled for bulk stiffness by comparing bare silicon ‘dummy’ devices to thickness-matched silicon devices dip-coated with SMP. The neuroinflammatory response was evaluated after devices were implanted in the rat cortex for 2 or 16 weeks. We observed no differences in the markers tested at either time point, except that astrocytic scarring was significantly reduced for the dip-coated implants at 16 weeks. The surface properties of non-softening thiol-ene SMP substrates appeared to be equally-tolerated and just as suitable as silicon for neural implant substrates for applications such as intracortical microelectrodes, laying the groundwork for future softer devices to improve upon the prototype device performance presented here.


Micromachines | 2018

Amorphous Silicon Carbide Platform for Next Generation Penetrating Neural Interface Designs

Felix Deku; Christopher L. Frewin; Allison Stiller; Yarden Cohen; Saher Aqeel; Alexandra Joshi-Imre; Bryan J. Black; Timothy J. Gardner; Joseph J. Pancrazio; Stuart F. Cogan

Microelectrode arrays that consistently and reliably record and stimulate neural activity under conditions of chronic implantation have so far eluded the neural interface community due to failures attributed to both biotic and abiotic mechanisms. Arrays with transverse dimensions of 10 µm or below are thought to minimize the inflammatory response; however, the reduction of implant thickness also decreases buckling thresholds for materials with low Youngs modulus. While these issues have been overcome using stiffer, thicker materials as transport shuttles during implantation, the acute damage from the use of shuttles may generate many other biotic complications. Amorphous silicon carbide (a-SiC) provides excellent electrical insulation and a large Youngs modulus, allowing the fabrication of ultrasmall arrays with increased resistance to buckling. Prototype a-SiC intracortical implants were fabricated containing 8 - 16 single shanks which had critical thicknesses of either 4 µm or 6 µm. The 6 µm thick a-SiC shanks could penetrate rat cortex without an insertion aid. Single unit recordings from SIROF-coated arrays implanted without any structural support are presented. This work demonstrates that a-SiC can provide an excellent mechanical platform for devices that penetrate cortical tissue while maintaining a critical thickness less than 10 µm.


Micromachines | 2018

Chronic Intracortical Recording and Electrochemical Stability of Thiol-ene/Acrylate Shape Memory Polymer Electrode Arrays

Allison Stiller; Joshua Usoro; Christopher L. Frewin; Vindhya Danda; Melanie Ecker; Alexandra Joshi-Imre; Kate Musselman; Walter Voit; Romil Modi; Joseph J. Pancrazio; Bryan J. Black

Current intracortical probe technology is limited in clinical implementation due to the short functional lifetime of implanted devices. Devices often fail several months to years post-implantation, likely due to the chronic immune response characterized by glial scarring and neuronal dieback. It has been demonstrated that this neuroinflammatory response is influenced by the mechanical mismatch between stiff devices and the soft brain tissue, spurring interest in the use of softer polymer materials for probe encapsulation. Here, we demonstrate stable recordings and electrochemical properties obtained from fully encapsulated shape memory polymer (SMP) intracortical electrodes implanted in the rat motor cortex for 13 weeks. SMPs are a class of material that exhibit modulus changes when exposed to specific conditions. The formulation used in these devices softens by an order of magnitude after implantation compared to its dry, room-temperature modulus of ~2 GPa.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2018

Chronic recording and electrochemical performance of Utah microelectrode arrays implanted in rat motor cortex

Bryan J. Black; Aswini Kanneganti; Alexandra Joshi-Imre; Rashed Rihani; Bitan Chakraborty; Justin Abbott; Joseph J. Pancrazio; Stuart F. Cogan

Multisite implantable electrode arrays serve as a tool to understand cortical network connectivity and plasticity. Furthermore, they enable electrical stimulation to drive plasticity, study motor/sensory mapping, or provide network input for controlling brain-computer interfaces. Neurobehavioral rodent models are prevalent in studies of motor cortex injury and recovery as well as restoration of auditory/visual cues due to their relatively low cost and ease of training. Therefore, it is important to understand the chronic performance of relevant electrode arrays in rodent models. In this report, we evaluate the chronic recording and electrochemical performance of 16-channel Utah electrode arrays, the current state-of-the-art in pre-/clinical cortical recording and stimulation, in rat motor cortex over a period of 6 mo. The single-unit active electrode yield decreased from 52.8u2009±u200910.0 ( week 1) to 13.4u2009±u20095.1% ( week 24). Similarly, the total number of single units recorded on all electrodes across all arrays decreased from 106 to 15 over the same time period. Parallel measurements of electrochemical impedance spectra and cathodic charge storage capacity exhibited significant changes in electrochemical characteristics consistent with development of electrolyte leakage pathways over time. Additionally, measurements of maximum cathodal potential excursion indicated that only a relatively small fraction of electrodes (10-35% at 1 and 24 wk postimplantation) were capable of delivering relevant currents (20 µA at 4 nC/ph) without exceeding negative or positive electrochemical potential limits. In total, our findings suggest mainly abiotic failure modes, including mechanical wire breakage as well as degradation of conducting and insulating substrates. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Multisite implantable electrode arrays serve as a tool to record cortical network activity and enable electrical stimulation to drive plasticity or provide network feedback. The use of rodent models in these fields is prevalent. We evaluated chronic recording and electrochemical performance of 16-channel Utah electrode arrays in rat motor cortex over a period of 6 mo. We primarily observed abiotic failure modes suggestive of mechanical wire breakage and/or degradation of insulation.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2018

Effect of oxidation on intrinsic residual stress in amorphous silicon carbide films: EFFECT OF OXIDATION ON INTRINSIC RESIDUAL STRESS

Felix Deku; Shakil Mohammed; Alexandra Joshi-Imre; Jimin Maeng; Vindhya Danda; Timothy J. Gardner; Stuart F. Cogan

The change in residual stress in plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition amorphous silicon carbide (a-SiC:H) films exposed to air and wet ambient environments is investigated. A close relationship between stress change and deposition condition is identified from mechanical and chemical characterization of a-SiC:H films. Evidence of amorphous silicon carbide films reacting with oxygen and water vapor in the ambient environment are presented. The effect of deposition parameters on oxidation and stress variation in a-SiC:H film is studied. It is found that the films deposited at low temperature or power are susceptible to oxidation and undergo a notable increase in compressive stress over time. Furthermore, the films deposited at sufficiently high temperature (≥325 C) and power density (≥0.2 W cm-2 ) do not exhibit pronounced oxidation or temporal stress variation. These results serve as the basis for developing amorphous silicon carbide based dielectric encapsulation for implantable medical devices.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2017

Diels–Alder Reversible Thermoset 3D Printing: Isotropic Thermoset Polymers via Fused Filament Fabrication

Kejia Yang; Jesse C. Grant; Patrice Lamey; Alexandra Joshi-Imre; Benjamin R. Lund; Ronald A. Smaldone; Walter Voit


Macromolecular Materials and Engineering | 2017

Sterilization of Thiol-ene/Acrylate Based Shape Memory Polymers for Biomedical Applications

Melanie Ecker; Vindhya Danda; Andrew J. Shoffstall; Samsuddin F. Mahmood; Alexandra Joshi-Imre; Christopher L. Frewin; Taylor Ware; Jeffrey R. Capadona; Joseph J. Pancrazio; Walter Voit

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Walter Voit

University of Texas at Dallas

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Joseph J. Pancrazio

University of Texas at Dallas

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Stuart F. Cogan

University of Texas at Dallas

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Felix Deku

University of Texas at Dallas

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Vindhya Danda

University of Texas at Dallas

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Allison Stiller

University of Texas at Dallas

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Bryan J. Black

University of Texas at Dallas

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Melanie Ecker

Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und -prüfung

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