The human somatosensory system, consisting of receptors, transmitters, and synapses, functions as the medium for external mechanical stimuli perception and sensing signal delivery/processing. Developing sophisticated artificial sensory synapses with a high performance, uncomplicated fabrication process, and low power consumption is still a great challenge. Here, a piezotronic graphene artificial sensory synapse developed by integrating piezoelectric nanogenerator (PENG) with an ion gel-gated transistor is demonstrated. The piezopotential originating from PENG can efficiently power the synaptic device due to the formation of electrical double layers at the interface of the ion gel/ electrode and ion gel/graphene. Meanwhile, the piezopotential coupling is capable of linking the spatiotemporal strain information (strain amplitude and duration) with the postsynaptic current. The synaptic weights can be readily modulated by the strain pulses. Typical properties of a synapse including excitation/inhibition, synaptic plasticity, and paired pulse facilitation are successfully demonstrated. The dynamic modulation of a sensory synapse is also achieved based on dual perceptual presynaptic PENGs coupling to a single postsynaptic transistor. This work provides a new insight into developing piezotronic synaptic devices in neuromorphic computing, which is of great significance in future self-powered electronic skin with artificial intelligence, a neuromorphic interface for neurorobotics, human-robot interaction, an intelligent piezotronic transistor, etc.
Developing multifunctional and diversified artificial neural systems to integrate multimodal plasticity, memory, and supervised learning functions is an important task toward the emulation of neuromorphic computation. Here, we present a bioinspired mechano-photonic artificial synapse with synergistic mechanical and optical plasticity. The artificial synapse is composed of an optoelectronic transistor based on graphene/MoS2 heterostructure and an integrated triboelectric nanogenerator. By controlling the charge transfer/exchange in the heterostructure with triboelectric potential, the optoelectronic synaptic behaviors can be readily modulated, including postsynaptic photocurrents, persistent photoconductivity, and photosensitivity. The photonic synaptic plasticity is elaborately investigated under the synergistic effect of mechanical displacement and the light pulses embodying different spatiotemporal information. Furthermore, artificial neural networks are simulated to demonstrate the improved image recognition accuracy up to 92% assisted with mechanical plasticization. The mechano-photonic artificial synapse is highly promising for implementing mixed-modal interaction, emulating complex biological nervous system, and promoting the development of interactive artificial intelligence.
A plasma-induced p-type MoS2 flake and n-type ZnO film diode, which exhibits an excellent rectification ratio, is demonstrated. Under 365 nm optical irradiation, this p-n diode shows a strong photoresponse with an external quantum efficiency of 52.7% and a response time of 66 ms. By increasing the pressure on the junction to 23 MPa, the photocurrent can be enhanced by a factor of four through the piezophototronic effect.
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