Compact intracerebral probe with yellow phosphor-based light conversion for optogenetic control

2017 
This paper reports on the use of phosphor particles to alter the emission spectrum of blue light-emitting diodes (LED) integrated in MEMS-based neural probes. For this purpose, we apply drop-casting to deposit the phosphor particles embedded in a transparent polymer matrix onto LED chips. The light emission is confined to spots as small as 100 μm in diameter by implementing micro-machined apertures in a probe stiffening structure made of silicon. Additionally, stray light emission from the probe rear through the semi-transparent polyimide substrate is effectively blocked by a metallic shielding layer. We demonstrate the optical down-conversion towards yellow wavelengths of 570–590 nm. A time-averaged output intensity of 0.679 mW/mm 2 was measured at 5 m A modulated at a duty cycle of 10%. The output intensity strongly depends on the amount of phosphor covering the LED surface.
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