JOURNAL ARTICLE

Conductive Polymer‐Coated 3D Printed Microneedles: Biocompatible Platforms for Minimally Invasive Biosensing Interfaces

Abstract

Abstract Conductive polymeric microneedle (MN) arrays as biointerface materials show promise for the minimally invasive monitoring of analytes in biodevices and wearables. There is increasing interest in microneedles as electrodes for biosensing, but efforts have been limited to metallic substrates, which lack biological stability and are associated with high manufacturing costs and laborious fabrication methods, which create translational barriers. In this work, additive manufacturing, which provides the user with design flexibility and upscale manufacturing, is employed to fabricate acrylic‐based microneedle devices. These microneedle devices are used as platforms to produce intrinsically‐conductive, polymer‐based surfaces based on polypyrrole (PPy) and poly(3,4‐ethylenedioxythiophene)‐poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS). These entirely polymer‐based solid microneedle arrays act as dry conductive electrodes while omitting the requirement of a metallic seed layer. Two distinct coating methods of 3D‐printed solid microneedles, in situ polymerization and drop casting, enable conductive functionality. The microneedle arrays penetrate ex vivo porcine skin grafts without compromising conductivity or microneedle morphology and demonstrate coating durability over multiple penetration cycles. The non‐cytotoxic nature of the conductive microneedles is evaluated using human fibroblast cells. The proposed fabrication strategy offers a compelling approach to manufacturing polymer‐based conductive microneedle surfaces that can be further exploited as platforms for biosensing.

Keywords:
Materials science Nanotechnology Conductive polymer PEDOT:PSS Biosensor Coating Fabrication Polymer Polypyrrole Polymerization Layer (electronics) Composite material

Metrics

85
Cited By
15.58
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
78
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
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Citation History

Topics

Advancements in Transdermal Drug Delivery
Life Sciences →  Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics →  Pharmaceutical Science
Neuroscience and Neural Engineering
Life Sciences →  Neuroscience →  Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
Advanced Fluorescence Microscopy Techniques
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Biophysics
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