Dissolvable electronics are being developed that could allow improvements to clinical medicine, such as temporary electrical brain monitors, or electrical simulators to accelerate bone growth, or even progreammed for drug delivery.
Electronic devices that dissolve completely in water, leaving behind only harmless end products, are part of a rapidly emerging class of technology pioneered by researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Early results demonstrate the entire complement of building blocks for integrated circuits, along with various sensors and actuators with relevance to clinical medicine, including most recently intracranial monitors for patients with traumatic brain injury. The advances suggest a new era of devices that range from green consumer electronics to ‘electroceutical’ therapies, to biomedical sensor systems that do their work and then disappear.
(Score: 1) by Lazarus on Monday October 13 2014, @06:39PM
stimulators, programmed.
(Score: 2) by frojack on Monday October 13 2014, @07:02PM
Poster's circuits dissolving perhaps?
With spell checking built into every modern browsing, You have to wonder how "progreammed" got through.
Being a horrible speller, I'd be lost without browser based spell checking.
No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.