Ionotronic halide perovskite drift-diffusive synapses for low-power neuromorphic computation

Rohit Abraham John, Natalia Yantara, Yan Fong Ng, Govind Narasimman, Edoardo Mosconi, Daniele Meggiolaro, Mohit R. Kulkarni, Pradeep Kumar Gopalakrishnan, Chien A. Nguyen, Filippo De Angelis, Subodh G. Mhaisalkar, Arindam Basu, Nripan Mathews*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

193 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Emulation of brain-like signal processing is the foundation for development of efficient learning circuitry, but few devices offer the tunable conductance range necessary for mimicking spatiotemporal plasticity in biological synapses. An ionic semiconductor which couples electronic transitions with drift-diffusive ionic kinetics would enable energy-efficient analog-like switching of metastable conductance states. Here, ionic–electronic coupling in halide perovskite semiconductors is utilized to create memristive synapses with a dynamic continuous transition of conductance states. Coexistence of carrier injection barriers and ion migration in the perovskite films defines the degree of synaptic plasticity, more notable for the larger organic ammonium and formamidinium cations than the inorganic cesium counterpart. Optimized pulsing schemes facilitates a balanced interplay of short-and long-term plasticity rules like paired-pulse facilitation and spike-time-dependent plasticity, cardinal for learning and computing. Trained as a memory array, halide perovskite synapses demonstrate reconfigurability, learning, forgetting, and fault tolerance analogous to the human brain. Network-level simulations of unsupervised learning of handwritten digit images utilizing experimentally derived device parameters, validates the utility of these memristors for energy-efficient neuromorphic computation, paving way for novel ionotronic neuromorphic architectures with halide perovskites as the active material.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1805454
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume30
Issue number51
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2018
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • General Materials Science
  • Mechanics of Materials
  • Mechanical Engineering

Keywords

  • Halide perovskites
  • Ion migration
  • Ionic semiconductors
  • Neuromorphic computing
  • Synaptic plasticity

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