Affiliation:
1. Micro/Nanoelectronic and Energy Laboratory School of Engineering and Computer Science Washington State University Vancouver WA 98686 USA
2. Materials Science and Nanodevice Laboratory Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering Portland State University Portland OR 97201 USA
Abstract
AbstractArtificial synaptic devices are the essential hardware component in emerging neuromorphic computing systems by mimicking biological synapse and brain functions. When made from natural organic materials such as protein and carbohydrate, they have potential to improve sustainability and reduce electronic waste by enabling environmentally‐friendly disposal. In this paper, a new natural organic memristor based artificial synaptic device is reported with the memristive film processed by a honey and carbon nanotube (CNT) admixture, that is, honey‐CNT memristor. Optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and micro‐Raman spectroscopy are employed to analyze the morphology and chemical structure of the honey‐CNT film. The device demonstrates analog memristive potentiation and depression, with the mechanism governing these functions explained by the formation and dissolution of conductive paths due to the electrochemical metal filaments which are assisted by CNT clusters and bundles in the honey‐CNT film. The honey‐CNT memristor successfully emulates synaptic functionalities such as short‐term plasticity and its transition to long‐term plasticity for memory rehearsal, spatial summation, and shunting inhibition, and for the first time, the classical conditioning behavior for associative learning by mimicking the Pavlov's dog experiment. All these results testify that honey‐CNT memristor based artificial synaptic device is promising for energy‐efficient and eco‐friendly neuromorphic systems.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Washington State University Vancouver
Subject
Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science
Cited by
9 articles.
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