World's Smallest Fully Wireless Neural Implant Achieved

Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology

< (From left) Sunwoo Lee, KAIST Joint Professor, Alyosha Molnar, Cornell University Professor >

The human brain contains about 100 billion brain cells, and the chemical and electrical signals they exchange create most mental functions. Neural implant technology for precisely reading these signals is essential for the research and treatment of neurodegenerative diseases. A research team from KAIST and international collaborators has successfully implemented a fully wireless, ultra-small implant, which was previously only a theoretical possibility, going beyond simple miniaturization and weight reduction of neural implants.

KAIST announced on the November 27th that a joint research team led by Professor Sunwoo Lee (Joint Professor in Materials Science and Engineering at KAIST and from the School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering at Nanyang Technological University, NTU) and Professor Alyosha Molnar's team from Cornell University in the US has developed 'MOTE (Micro-Scale Opto-Electronic Tetherless Electrode)', an ultra-small wireless neural implant less than 100 micrometers (µm) — smaller than a grain of salt. The team successfully implanted this device into the brains of laboratory mice and stably measured brain waves for one year.

In the brain, invisible, minute electrical signals constantly move, creating our various mental activities such as memory, judgment, and emotion. The technology to directly measure these signals outside the body without connecting wires has been highlighted as key for brain research and the treatment of neurological disorders like dementia and Parkinson's disease.

However, existing implants have limitations: their thick wired structure causes movement in the brain, leading to inflammation and signal degradation over time, and their size and heat generation restrict long-term use.

To overcome these limitations, the research team created an ultra-small circuit based on the existing semiconductor process (CMOS) and combined it with their self-developed ultra-fine Micro-LEDs (µLEDs) to drastically miniaturize the device. They also applied a special surface coating to significantly enhance durability, allowing it to withstand the biological environment for a long time.

The resulting MOTE is less than 100 µm thick and has a volume of less than 1 nanoliter, making it thinner than a human hair and smaller than a grain of salt, the world's smallest level among currently reported wireless neural implants.

Another key feature of MOTE is that it is a fully wireless system that requires no battery. The device is structured to receive external light to generate power, detect brain waves, and then transmit the information back outside embedded in the light signal using Pulse Position Modulation (PPM).

This method drastically reduces energy consumption, minimizes the risk of heat generation, and eliminates the need for battery replacement, enabling long-term use.

The research team conducted a one-year long-term experiment by implanting the ultra-small MOTE into the brains of mice. The results showed normal brain wave measurement over the extended period, with almost no inflammation observed around the implant and no degradation in device performance.

This is considered the first clear demonstration that an ultra-small wireless implant can maintain normal function for a prolonged time inside a living body.

< MOTE neural implant on a salt crystal (left), MOTE neural implants after 296 days of implantation in a laboratory mouse (right) >

Professor Sunwoo Lee stated, "The greatest significance of the newly developed neural implant lies in its actual implementation of a fully wireless, ultra-small implant that was previously only anticipated as a possibility, going beyond simple miniaturization and weight reduction." He added, "This proves the technological possibility of resolving not only the known unknowns raised during the development and use of wireless neural implants, but also the unknown unknowns that newly emerge during the actual development process."

He further added, "This technology will be broadly applicable not only to brain science research but also to nervous system disease monitoring and the development of long-term recording-based treatment technologies."

The research results were published online in the prestigious journal Nature Electronics on November 3rd. ※ Paper Title: A subnanolitre tetherless optoelectronic microsystem for chronic neural recording in awake mice, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41928-025-01484-1

This research was supported by the US National Institutes of Health (NIH), Nanyang Technological University (Singapore), the Singapore National Research Foundation, the Singapore Ministry of Education, and the ASPIRE League Partnership Seed Fund 2024. The specialized fabrication processes were conducted at the Cornell NanoScale Facility (part of the US National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure, NNCI) and NTU's Nanyang NanoFabrication Centre.

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