The ChroMOS project started by developing bare silicon probes with shank cross-sectional sizes of 23 to 83 µm in width, 3 to 5 mm in length and 15 µm in thickness. This probes were mechanically characterized by nanoindentation techniques and insertion force measurements. A setup for the measurement of the insertion forces involved in the implantation was developed with micro-Newton resolution. The development of such probes allowed to optimize the microfabrication processes, the handling of very small devices and to define the target dimensions for the final ChroMOS probes. Next, in collaboration of Dr. G.N. Angotzi, the CMOS circuit of the ChroMOS probes was designed to meet the target dimensions. The technology node 180 nm from TSMC was used in a multi-project-wafer (MPW) run to realize chips of ≈ 8 x 3 mm in size. After receiving these devices from the foundry, I successfully optimized a MEMS processing flow in order to realize structured ChroMOS probes. The use of MPW processes rather than full-wafer CMOS processes allowed to drastically drop the prototyping costs of these devices. However, microfabrication of small samples is particularly challenging because all the clean-room equipment is typically conceived for wafer substrates and handling of the devices between processing steps becomes more complicated. In order to improve the process reliability and mitigate these issues, a research spray-coater equipment was acquired by the lab, and I optimized the necessary photoresists for the process. This allowed to realize the unprecedented ChroMOS probes that integrate 64 electrodes in a 26 µm wide and 20 µm thick shank.
Finally, the ChroMOS probes were mounted on a dedicated PCB and wire bonded. Electrophysiological recordings were performed by adapting the SiNAPS acquisition system and software developed in the lab. Bench-top and in-vivo experiments indicate a significant gain in SNR when compared with the SiNAPS probes. Commercially available SiNAPS probes (currently commercialized by Plexon Inc. and NeuroNexus) were used for comparison with the ChroMOS probes realized in this project.
The ChroMOS project was presented in several recognized conferences both from engineering and neuroscience fields, such as the 11th International IEEE EMBS Conference on Neural Engineering (NER), the Micro and Nano Engineering conference (MNE), the Annual IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM) and the Neuroscience from the Society for Neuroscience (SFN). The results were also disseminated to the general public by setting a public website (
https://sinapsprobes.eu/(odnośnik otworzy się w nowym oknie)) by presentation at “Festival della Scienza” to undergraduate students and by media public interviews.