Potentially implantable miniature batteries

Heller, A

HERO ID

4947145

Reference Type

Journal Article

Subtype

Review

Year

2006

Language

English

PMID

16538459

HERO ID 4947145
Material Type Review
In Press No
Year 2006
Title Potentially implantable miniature batteries
Authors Heller, A
Journal Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry
Volume 385
Issue 3
Page Numbers 469-473
Abstract All presently used batteries contain reactive, corrosive or toxic components and require strong cases, usually made of steel. As a battery is miniaturized, the required case dominates its size. Hence, the smallest manufactured batteries are about 50 mm3 in size, much larger then the integrated circuits or sensors of functional analytical packages, as exemplified by implantable glucose sensors for diabetes management. The status of the miniaturization of the power sources of such implantable packages is reviewed. Three microcells, consisting only of potentially harmless subcutaneously implantable anodes and cathodes, are considered. Because their electrolyte would be the subcutaneous interstitial fluid, the cells do not have a case. One potentially implantable cell has a miniature Nafion-coated Zn anode and a biocompatible hydrogel-shielded Ag/AgCl cathode. The core innovation on which the cell is based is the growth of a hopeite-phase Zn2+ conducting solid electrolyte film on the discharging anode. The film blocks the transport of O2 to the Zn, preventing its corrosion, while allowing the necessary transport of Zn2+. The second cell, with the same anode, would have a bioinert hydrogel-shielded wired bilirubin oxidase-coated carbon cathode, on which O2 dissolved in the subcutaneous fluid would be electroreduced to water. In the third cell, the glucose of the subcutaneous interstitial would be electrooxidized to gluconolactone at an implanted wired glucose anode, similar to that tested now for continuous glucose monitoring in diabetic people, and O2 in the subcutaneous fluid would be electroreduced to water on its wired bilirubin oxidase cathode.
Doi 10.1007/s00216-006-0326-4
Pmid 16538459
Wosid WOS:000237665600013
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Anodes; Glucose; Zinc; Cathodes; Diabetes mellitus; Batteries; Carbon; Bilirubin oxidase; Reviews; Steel; Corrosion; integrated circuits; Bilirubin
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