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A new miniature
battery is powering tiny, implantable devices that could help
millions who suffer from a variety of neurological
disorders, such as urinary-urge incontinence and stroke.
The devices,
called “bionic neurons” or bions®,
are implanted near nerves, where they emit electrical micropulses
that
stimulate nearby muscles and nerves. The strength and frequency
of the stimulation can be programmed from outside the body, and
the tiny batteries can be recharged wirelessly with an electrical
field.
The entire
bion system for implant is only about 1/35 the size of a standard
AA battery and can be implanted using
minimally
invasive techniques. Competing systems for treating these kinds
of muscular
impairments require large batteries and invasive surgery to
implant wires and electrical leads in the body.
Feasibility
trials are now under way on patients suffering from urinary-urge
incontinence.
This condition causes sufferers,
mostly
women, to leak substantial quantities of urine many times
a day.
The bion, currently
in feasibility trials, comprises three integrated parts:
- the battery,
which operates at normal body temperature, developed by Quallion
LLC and Argonne;
- an advanced
microstimulator, developed by Advanced
Bionics Corp.; and
- a control
system, developed by Advanced Bionics Corp., to manage remote
reprogramming and battery recharging.
“The
battery designed and engineered by Quallion is the smallest cylindrical,
rechargeable battery ever made,” said
Hisashi Tsukamoto, Chief Executive Officer of Quallion.
“It provides a long-life power source that overcomes
one of the primary hurdles
in medical microelectronics.”
Previous batteries
for medical microelectronics are large, have
short lives and are not rechargeable.
Consequently, only a few
implantable devices, such as cardiac pacemakers,
have evolved for patient use.
The key to
the battery’s success is an advanced
lithium-ion chemistry that provides a calendar life significantly
greater than commercially available lithium batteries. Argonne
has extensive
experience in developing advanced battery chemistries
with extended service life under the Department
of Energy’s
FreedomCAR and Vehicle Technologies Office, aimed at developing
advanced batteries
for hybrid electric vehicles.
Silicon polymers
were first studied by the organosilicon research group at
the University of Wisconsin-Madison under the leadership of
Professor Robert West. For the past few years,
Argonne and
the University of Wisconsin, working with
Quallion, have
actively pursued
this
chemistry and
developed a new class of polymer electrolytes,
made largely of silicon-oxygen chains, that
exhibit extraordinary
conductivity and safety properties.
“This
material has the highest conductivity ever reported for any polymer
electrolyte and is non-flammable,” said
Argonne’s
Khalil Amine, co-inventor of the battery
chemistry. “It is
leading-edge battery chemistry that has
enabled miniaturized batteries with the
long lifetimes needed for medical devices.”
Argonne
and the University of Wisconsin are working
with Quallion on a next-generation miniature
battery using the polymer electrolyte chemistry, which
developers anticipate
will have
a lifetime of 10 years
or possibly more.
Argonne’s
polymer battery research is funded by Quallion
under a grant from the National
Institute of Standards and Technology,
Advanced
Technology Program.
Argonne’s
battery chemistry is available for
licensing in selected fields of use.
For more information,
please contact David Baurac.
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