Ion‐Mediated Recombination Dynamics in Perovskite‐Based Memory Light‐Emitting Diodes for Neuromorphic Control Systems

Author:

Yantara Natalia1,Ng Si En2ORCID,Sharma Divyam2,Zhou Biyan3,Sun Pao‐Sheng Vincent3,Chua Huei Min2,Jamaludin Nur Fadilah1,Basu Arindam3,Mathews Nripan12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Energy Research Institute @ NTU (ERI@N) Nanyang Technological University 50 Nanyang Drive Singapore 637553 Singapore

2. School of Materials Science and Engineering Nanyang Technological University 50 Nanyang Avenue Singapore 639798 Singapore

3. Department of Electrical Engineering City University of Hong Kong 83 Tat Chee Avenue Kowloon Hong Kong SAR Hong Kong

Abstract

AbstractNeuromorphic devices can help perform memory‐heavy tasks more efficiently due to the co‐localization of memory and computing. In biological systems, fast dynamics are necessary for rapid communication, while slow dynamics aid in the amplification of signals over noise and regulatory processes such as adaptation‐ such dual dynamics are key for neuromorphic control systems. Halide perovskites exhibit much more complex phenomena than conventional semiconductors due to their coupled ionic, electronic, and optical properties which result in modulatable drift, diffusion of ions, carriers, and radiative recombination dynamics. This is exploited to engineer a dual‐emitter tandem device with the requisite dual slow‐fast dynamics. Here, a perovskite‐organic tandem light‐emitting diode (LED) capable of modulating its emission spectrum and intensity owing to the ion‐mediated recombination zone modulation between the green‐emitting quasi‐2D perovskite layer and the red‐emitting organic layer is introduced. Frequency‐dependent response and high dynamic range memory of emission intensity and spectra in a LED are demonstrated. Utilizing the emissive read‐out, image contrast enhancement as a neuromorphic pre‐processing step to improve pattern recognition capabilities is illustrated. As proof of concept using the device's slow‐fast dynamics, an inhibition of the return mechanism is physically emulated.

Funder

National Research Foundation

Kementerian Pendidikan

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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