Mixed-halide perovskite for ultrasensitive two-terminal artificial synaptic devices
Abstract
Coexisting-Cooperative-Cognitive (Tri-Co) neuromorphic electronics emulate humankind in order to interact with robotic peers and dynamic environments. To fulfill synaptic functional emulation in a single ultrasensitive and energy-efficient electronic device is of vital importance in this field. This study reports the design and fabrication of two-terminal synaptic devices that are based on mixed halide perovskites (HPs). These devices emulate fundamental synaptic principles by the successive modulation of conductance, for example, excitatory post-synaptic current, paired-pulse facilitation, spike-number dependent plasticity, spike-duration dependent plasticity, spike-voltage dependent plasticity, and spike-rate dependent plasticity. The artificial HP synapses show high sensitivity of 100 mV to external stimuli. These results demonstrate the applicability of the HP synapses in Tri-Co neuromorphic electronics and sensory-motor nervetronics.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Celebrating the 100th anniversary of Nankai University