‘Graphene camera’ captures real-time electrical activity of beating heart

Scientists from UC Berkeley and Stanford University have captured the real-time electrical activity of a beating heart, using a sheet of graphene to record an optical image — almost like a video camera — of the faint electric fields generated by the rhythmic firing of the heart’s muscle cells.

Graphene-based CAGE sensor image

The ‘graphene camera’ is a new type of sensor that could prove useful for studying cells and tissues that generate electrical voltages, including groups of neurons or cardiac muscle cells. To date, electrodes or chemical dyes have been used to measure electrical firing in these cells. But electrodes and dyes measure the voltage at one point only; a graphene sheet measures the voltage continuously over all the tissue it touches.

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Graphene applications, Graphene Sensors, Medicine, Technical / Research, Stanford