Concepedia

TLDR

Hardware redundancy is a major challenge for artificial synaptic devices, requiring neuromorphic devices that integrate sensing and processing functions. The study demonstrates a flexible, dual‑modulation synaptic field‑effect transistor inspired by biological visual and nervous systems. The device uses zinc‑oxide nanowires as the semiconductor and sodium alginate as the gate dielectric, enabling excitatory postsynaptic currents triggered by electrical and ultraviolet stimuli through electric double‑layer and photoelectric effects, while co‑modulation of light and voltage tunes short‑term to long‑term plasticity and memory retention, as characterized by FTIR, photoluminescence, and XPS. The devices successfully mimic visual memory and offer a promising strategy for future electronic eyes.

Abstract

Abstract A prominent challenge for artificial synaptic devices toward artificial perception systems is hardware redundancy, which demands neuromorphic devices that integrate both sensing and processing functions. Inspired by the biological visual and nervous systems, a novel flexible, dual‐modulation synaptic field‐effect transistor (SFET) is demonstrated in this work. The flexible SFET is constructed with zinc oxide nanowires and sodium alginate, which acts as the semiconductor layer and the gate dielectric, respectively. An excitatory postsynaptic current in this artificial synapse can be triggered by both electrical and ultraviolet stimuli as presynaptic spikes as a result of the electric double layer effect and the photoelectric effect. More importantly, through the co‐modulation of light and electric stimuli, the memory level of the artificial synapses can be tuned based on the transformation between short‐term plasticity and long‐term plasticity initiated by the gate voltage. Different voltages can modulate the memory retention levels of the optical inputs similar to the function of the optic nerve system. The underlying mechanisms for the SFET are investigated using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, photoluminescence, and X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Overall, the devices provide a novel idea to mimic visual memory, showing a promising strategy for future electronic eyes.

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