biodegradable electronics

Junpyo Kwon, a Ph.D. student researcher from the Xu Group at UC Berkeley, is shown holding a recyclable, biodegradable printed circuit. The advance could divert wearable devices and other flexible electronics from landfill, and mitigate the health and environmental hazards posed by heavy metal waste. Credit: Marilyn Sargent/Berkeley Lab
A fully recyclable and biodegradable printed circuit
Junpyo Kwon, a Ph.D. student researcher from the Xu Group at UC Berkeley, is shown
Biodegradable circuits that are able to release painkillers on demand in the body

EPFL researchers have developed biodegradable microresonators that can be heated locally with a wireless system.

Have flexible, transient and biodegradable electronics finally arrived?

Pitt researchers find that nanotube interactions with silk fibroins hold the key to developing flexible,

Biodegradable implant provides electrical stimulation that speeds nerve regeneration

Researchers demonstrate first example of a bioelectronic medicine Northwestern University and Washington University School of

Biodegradable materials from Rogers’ lab could one day transform electronics for consumer and medical devices, as illustrated here in a dissolvable RFID tag prototype. Credit: John Rogers
Toward ‘vanishing’ electronics and unlocking nanomaterials’ power potential

Brain sensors and electronic tags that dissolve. Boosting the potential of renewable energy sources. These