Ionic-electronic halide perovskite memdiodes enabling neuromorphic computing with a second-order complexity

Author:

John Rohit Abraham12ORCID,Milozzi Alessandro3ORCID,Tsarev Sergey12ORCID,Brönnimann Rolf2,Boehme Simon C.12ORCID,Wu Erfu2ORCID,Shorubalko Ivan2ORCID,Kovalenko Maksym V.12ORCID,Ielmini Daniele3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry and Applied Biosciences, Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, ETH Zürich, Zürich CH-8093, Switzerland.

2. Empa-Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology, Dübendorf CH-8600, Switzerland.

3. Dipartimento di Elettronica, Informazione e Bioingegneria, Politecnico di Milano and IU.NET, Piazza L. da Vinci 32, Milano 20133, Italy.

Abstract

With increasing computing demands, serial processing in von Neumann architectures built with zeroth-order complexity digital circuits is saturating in computational capacity and power, entailing research into alternative paradigms. Brain-inspired systems built with memristors are attractive owing to their large parallelism, low energy consumption, and high error tolerance. However, most demonstrations have thus far only mimicked primitive lower-order biological complexities using devices with first-order dynamics. Memristors with higher-order complexities are predicted to solve problems that would otherwise require increasingly elaborate circuits, but no generic design rules exist. Here, we present second-order dynamics in halide perovskite memristive diodes (memdiodes) that enable Bienenstock-Cooper-Munro learning rules capturing both timing- and rate-based plasticity. A triplet spike timing–dependent plasticity scheme exploiting ion migration, back diffusion, and modulable Schottky barriers establishes general design rules for realizing higher-order memristors. This higher order enables complex binocular orientation selectivity in neural networks exploiting the intrinsic physics of the devices, without the need for complicated circuitry.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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