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Dive into the research topics where Flavio Heer is active.

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Featured researches published by Flavio Heer.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2009

Microelectronic system for high-resolution mapping of extracellular electric fields applied to brain slices

Urs Frey; Ulrich Egert; Flavio Heer; Sadik Hafizovic; Andreas Hierlemann

There is an enduring quest for technologies that provide - temporally and spatially - highly resolved information on electric neuronal or cardiac activity in functional tissues or cell cultures. Here, we present a planar high-density, low-noise microelectrode system realized in microelectronics technology that features 11,011 microelectrodes (3,150 electrodes per mm(2)), 126 of which can be arbitrarily selected and can, via a reconfigurable routing scheme, be connected to on-chip recording and stimulation circuits. This device enables long-term extracellular electrical-activity recordings at subcellular spatial resolution and microsecond temporal resolution to capture the entire dynamics of the cellular electrical signals. To illustrate the device performance, extracellular potentials of Purkinje cells (PCs) in acute slices of the cerebellum have been analyzed. A detailed and comprehensive picture of the distribution and dynamics of action potentials (APs) in the somatic and dendritic regions of a single cell was obtained from the recordings by applying spike sorting and spike-triggered averaging methods to the collected data. An analysis of the measured local current densities revealed a reproducible sink/source pattern within a single cell during an AP. The experimental data substantiated compartmental models and can be used to extend those models to better understand extracellular single-cell potential patterns and their contributions to the population activity. The presented devices can be conveniently applied to a broad variety of biological preparations, i.e., neural or cardiac tissues, slices, or cell cultures can be grown or placed directly atop of the chips for fundamental mechanistic or pharmacological studies.


IEEE Journal of Solid-state Circuits | 2010

Switch-Matrix-Based High-Density Microelectrode Array in CMOS Technology

Urs Frey; Jan Sedivy; Flavio Heer; Rene Pedron; Marco Ballini; Jan Mueller; Douglas J. Bakkum; Sadik Hafizovic; Francesca Dalia Faraci; Frauke Greve; K.-U. Kirstein; Andreas Hierlemann

We report on a CMOS-based microelectrode array (MEA) featuring 11, 011 metal electrodes and 126 channels, each of which comprises recording and stimulation electronics, for extracellular bidirectional communication with electrogenic cells, such as neurons or cardiomyocytes. The important features include: (i) high spatial resolution at (sub)cellular level with 3150 electrodes per mm2 (electrode diameter 7 ¿m, electrode pitch 18 ¿m); (ii) a reconflgurable routing of the recording sites to the 126 channels; and (iii) low noise levels.


IEEE Journal of Solid-state Circuits | 2006

CMOS microelectrode array for bidirectional interaction with neuronal networks

Flavio Heer; Sadik Hafizovic; W. Franks; Axel Blau; Christiane Ziegler; Andreas Hierlemann

A CMOS metal-electrode-based micro system for bidirectional communication (stimulation and recording) with neuronal cells in vitro is presented. The chip overcomes the interconnect challenge that limits todays bidirectional microelectrode arrays. The microsystem has been fabricated in an industrial CMOS technology with several post-CMOS processing steps to realize 128 biocompatible electrodes and to ensure chip stability in physiological saline. The system comprises all necessary control circuitry and on-chip A/D and D/A conversion. A modular design has been implemented, where individual stimulation- and signal-conditioning circuitry units are associated with each electrode. Stimulation signals with a resolution of 8 bits can be sent to any subset of electrodes at a rate of 60 kHz, while all electrodes of the chip are continuously sampled at a rate of 20 kHz. The circuitry at each electrode can be individually reset to its operating point in order to suppress artifacts evoked by the stimulation pulses. Biological measurements from cultured neuronal networks originating from dissociated cortical tissue of fertilized chicken eggs with amplitudes of up to 500 muVpp are presented


Proceedings of the IEEE | 2011

Growing Cells Atop Microelectronic Chips: Interfacing Electrogenic Cells In Vitro With CMOS-Based Microelectrode Arrays

Andreas Hierlemann; Urs Frey; Sadik Hafizovic; Flavio Heer

Complementary semiconductor-metal-oxide (CMOS) technology is a very powerful technology that can be more or less directly interfaced to electrogenic cells, like heart or brain cells in vitro. To this end, the cells are cultured directly atop the CMOS chips, which usually undergo dedicated postprocessing to obtain a reliable bidirectional interface via noble-metal microelectrodes or high-k dielectrics. The big advantages of using CMOS integrated circuits (ICs) include connectivity, the possibility to address a large number of microelectrodes on a tiny chip, and signal quality, the possibility to condition small signals right at the spot of their generation. CMOS will be demonstrated to constitute an enabling technology that opens a route to high-spatio-temporal-resolution and low-noise electrophysiological recordings from a variety of biological preparations, such as brain slices, or cultured cardiac and brain cells. The recording technique is extracellular and noninvasive, and the CMOS chips do not leak out any toxic compounds, so that the cells remain viable for extended times. In turn, the CMOS chips have been demonstrated to survive several months of culturing while being fully immersed in saline solution and being exposed to cellular metabolic products. The latter requires dedicated passivation and packaging techniques as will be shown. Fully integrated, monolithic microelectrode systems, which feature large numbers of tightly spaced microelectrodes and the associated circuitry units for bidirectional interaction (stimulation and recording), will be in the focus of this review. The respective dense microelectrode arrays (MEAs) with small pixels enable subcellular-resolution investigation of regions of interest in, e.g., neurobiological preparations, and, at the same time, the large number of electrodes allows for studying the activity of entire neuronal networks . Application areas include neuroscience, as the devices enable fundamental neurophysiological insights at the cellular and circuit level, as well as medical diagnostics and pharmacology.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2007

A CMOS-based microelectrode array for interaction with neuronal cultures

Sadik Hafizovic; Flavio Heer; T. Ugniwenko; Urs Frey; Axel Blau; Christiane Ziegler; Andreas Hierlemann

We report on the system integration of a CMOS chip that is capable of bidirectionally communicating (stimulation and recording) with electrogenic cells such as neurons or cardiomyocytes and that is targeted at investigating electrical signal propagation within cellular networks in vitro. The overall system consists of three major subunits: first, the core component is a 6.5 mm x 6.5 mm CMOS chip, on top of which the cells are cultured. It features 128 bidirectional electrodes, each equipped with dedicated analog filters and amplification stages and a stimulation buffer. The electrodes are sampled at 20 kHz with 8-bit resolution. The measured input-referred circuitry noise is 5.9 microV root mean square (10 Hz to 100 kHz), which allows to reliably detect the cell signals ranging from 1 mVpp down to 40 microVpp. Additionally, temperature sensors, a digital-to-analog converter for stimulation, and a digital interface for data transmission are integrated. Second, there is a reconfigurable logic device, which provides chip control, event detection, data buffering and an USB interface, capable of processing the 2.56 million samples per second. The third element includes software that is running on a standard PC performing data capturing, processing, and visualization. Experiments involving the stimulation of neurons with two different spatio-temporal patterns and the recording of the triggered spiking activity have been carried out. The response patterns have been successfully classified (83% correct) with respect to the different stimulation patterns. The advantages over current microelectrode arrays, as has been demonstrated in the experiments, include the capability to stimulate (voltage stimulation, 8 bit, 60 kHz) spatio-temporal patterns on arbitrary sets of electrodes and the fast stimulation reset mechanism that allows to record neuronal signals on a stimulating electrode 5 ms after stimulation (instantaneously on all other electrodes). Other advantages of the overall system include the small number of needed electrical connections due to the digital interface and the short latency time that allows to initiate a stimulation less than 2 ms after the detection of an action potential in closed-loop configurations.


IEEE Journal of Solid-state Circuits | 2014

A 1024-Channel CMOS Microelectrode Array With 26,400 Electrodes for Recording and Stimulation of Electrogenic Cells In Vitro

Marco Ballini; Jan Müller; Paolo Livi; Yihui Chen; Urs Frey; Alexander Stettler; Amir Shadmani; Vijay Viswam; Ian L. Jones; David Jäckel; Milos Radivojevic; Marta K. Lewandowska; Wei Gong; Michele Fiscella; Douglas J. Bakkum; Flavio Heer; Andreas Hierlemann

To advance our understanding of the functioning of neuronal ensembles, systems are needed to enable simultaneous recording from a large number of individual neurons at high spatiotemporal resolution and good signal-to-noise ratio. Moreover, stimulation capability is highly desirable for investigating, for example, plasticity and learning processes. Here, we present a microelectrode array (MEA) system on a single CMOS die for in vitro recording and stimulation. The system incorporates 26,400 platinum electrodes, fabricated by in-house post-processing, over a large sensing area (3.85 2.10 mm ) with sub-cellular spatial resolution (pitch of 17.5 μm). Owing to an area and power efficient implementation, we were able to integrate 1024 readout channels on chip to record extracellular signals from a user-specified selection of electrodes. These channels feature noise values of 2.4 μV in the action-potential band (300 Hz-10 kHz) and 5.4 μV in the local-field-potential band (1 Hz-300 Hz), and provide programmable gain (up to 78 dB) to accommodate various biological preparations. Amplified and filtered signals are digitized by 10 bit parallel single-slope ADCs at 20 kSamples/s. The system also includes 32 stimulation units, which can elicit neural spikes through either current or voltage pulses. The chip consumes only 75 mW in total, which obviates the need of active cooling even for sensitive cell cultures.


international solid-state circuits conference | 2008

CMOS Electro-Chemical DNA-Detection Array with On-Chip ADC

Flavio Heer; Manuel Keller; George Yu; Jiri Janata; Mira Josowicz; Andreas Hierlemann

We report on a CMOS-based microsensor array, featuring 576 electrodes and 24 channels, for label-free electrochemical detection of DNA hybridization. Each channel comprises a potentiostatic circuit that keeps the electrode at a defined potential and measures the respective electrical current. The readout channels rely on a first-order delta-sigma architecture, where the electrode-electrolyte capacitance is used as the integrator. This results in a very compact recording circuit inclusive of A/D conversion; the circuit consists of only the measurement electrode, a comparator, a feedback capacitance and a few switches. Biological experiments with short DNA samples and DNA extracted from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are presented.


international solid-state circuits conference | 2007

An 11k-Electrode 126-Channel High-Density Microelectrode Array to Interact with Electrogenic Cells

Urs Frey; Flavio Heer; Rene Pedron; Sadik Hafizovic; Frauke Greve; Jan Sedivy; K.-U. Kirstein; Andreas Hierlemann

A microelectrode array allows an arbitrary group of 126 electrodes to be selected from a total of 11,016 in order to do cell or neural recordings from areas of interest with 18 mum spatial resolution and 2.4 muv input-referred noise. Signals are amplified by 0 to 80dB, bandpass filtered (0.3 to 4kHz), and finally digitized (20kS/s, 8b). Example recordings from acute brain slices are shown


international conference on solid state sensors actuators and microsystems | 2003

CMOS monolithic microelectrode array for stimulation and recording of natural neural networks

W. Franks; Flavio Heer; I. McKay; S. Taschini; R. Sunier; Christoph Hagleitner; Andreas Hierlemann; H. Baltes

An array of platinum electrodes has been integrated with analog and digital circuitry in standard CMOS technology for stimulation and recording of natural neural networks. The array utilizes a shifted electrode design that has been electrically characterized and modeled. The electrode and its circuitry form a repeatable unit, which can be multiplied to achieve a larger array. Each circuitry unit contains a buffer for stimulation and a bandpass filter for readout. In contrast to traditional electrode arrays used for measuring action potentials, this device is capable of on-chip signal filtering, improving the signal to noise ratio (SNR), on-chip analog to digital conversation (preventing further signal degradation), and simultaneous recording and stimulation.


IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems | 2010

Compact Voltage and Current Stimulation Buffer for High-Density Microelectrode Arrays

Paolo Livi; Flavio Heer; Urs Frey; Douglas J. Bakkum; Andreas Hierlemann

We report on a compact (0.02 mm2 ) buffer for both voltage and current stimulation of electrogenic cells on a complementary metal-oxide semiconductor microelectrode array. In voltage mode, the circuit is a high-current class-AB voltage follower, based on a local common-mode feedback (LCMFB) amplifier. In current mode, the circuit is a current conveyor of type II, using the same LCMFB amplifier with cascode stages to increase the gain. The circuit shows good linearity in the 0.5-3.5 V input range and has extensively been used for stimulation of neuronal cultures.

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Axel Blau

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Christiane Ziegler

Kaiserslautern University of Technology

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