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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38990740

RESUMO

Low-intensity focused ultrasound (FUS) is an emerging non-invasive and spatially/temporally precise method for modulating the firing rates and patterns of peripheral nerves. This paper describes an image-guided platform for chronic and patient-specific FUS neuromodulation. The system uses custom wearable probes containing separate ultrasound imaging and modulation transducer arrays realized using piezoelectric transducers assembled on a flexible printed circuit board (PCB). Dual-mode probes operating around 4 MHz (imaging) and 1.3 MHz (modulation) were fabricated and tested on tissue phantoms. The resulting B-mode images were analyzed using a template-matching algorithm to estimate the location of the target nerve and then direct the modulation beam toward the target. The ultrasound transmit voltage used to excite the modulation array was optimized in real-time by automatically regulating functional feedback signals (the average rates of emulated muscle twitches detected by an on-board motion sensor) through a proportional and integral (PI) controller, thus providing robustness to inter-subject variability and probe positioning errors. The proposed closed-loop neuromodulation paradigm was experimentally demonstrated in vitro using an active tissue phantom that integrates models of the posterior tibial nerve and nearby blood vessels together with embedded sensors and actuators.

2.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 12207, 2021 06 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34108501

RESUMO

Automatic recognition of unique characteristics of an object can provide a powerful solution to verify its authenticity and safety. It can mitigate the growth of one of the largest underground industries-that of counterfeit goods-flowing through the global supply chain. In this article, we propose the novel concept of material biometrics, in which the intrinsic chemical properties of structural materials are used to generate unique identifiers for authenticating individual products. For this purpose, the objects to be protected are modified via programmable additive manufacturing of built-in chemical "tags" that generate signatures depending on their chemical composition, quantity, and location. We report a material biometrics-enabled manufacturing flow in which plastic objects are protected using spatially-distributed tags that are optically invisible and difficult to clone. The resulting multi-bit signatures have high entropy and can be non-invasively detected for product authentication using [Formula: see text]Cl nuclear quadrupole resonance (NQR) spectroscopy.

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