The retina, the most crucial unit of the human visual perception system, combines sensing with wavelength selectivity and signal preprocessing. Incorporating energy conversion into these superior neurobiological features to generate core visual signals directly from incoming light under various conditions is essential for artificial optoelectronic synapses to emulate biological processing in the real retina. Herein, self-powered optoelectronic synapses that can selectively detect and preprocess the ultraviolet (UV) light are presented, which benefit from high-quality organic asymmetric heterojunctions with ultrathin molecular semiconducting crystalline films, intrinsic heterogeneous interfaces, and typical photovoltaic properties. These devices exhibit diverse synaptic behaviors, such as excitatory postsynaptic current, paired-pulse facilitation, and high-pass filtering characteristics, which successfully reproduce the unique connectivity among sensory neurons. These zero-power optical-sensing synaptic operations further facilitate a demonstration of image sharpening. Additionally, the charge transfer at the heterojunction interface can be modulated by tuning the gate voltage to achieve multispectral sensing ranging from the UV to near-infrared region. Therefore, this work sheds new light on more advanced retinomorphic visual systems in the post-Moore era.
Organic UV photodetectors using a transistor architecture can yield higher photoresponsivity than diode‐based devices because of the presence of a gate electrode. However, a long‐term issue of these phototransistor devices is the slow response speed, which hinders their practical applications. Here, organic UV phototransistors are constructed using few‐layer organic crystalline van der Waals (vdW) heterojunctions as the photoactive layers. The thickness of the photoactive layers is even less than the exciton diffusion length, thus removing the exciton‐diffusion bottleneck and giving rise to the confinement of charge separation and recombination within the adjacent molecular layers across the heterojunction interface. Hence, the phototransistor devices can exhibit a remarkably enhanced response speed (rise and decay times as short as only ≈4 and 6 ms, respectively). The layer‐dependent photoresponse characteristics are also observed, reinforcing the great importance of few‐layer organic heterostructures in phototransistor devices. This work not only provides a promising avenue toward fast response optoelectronic devices but also presents an in‐depth understanding on the microscopic nature of photogenerated charge carriers at the precision of molecular layers.
Ferroelectric organic field-effect transistors (Fe-OFETs) have attracted considerable attention because of their promising potential for memory applications, while a critical issue is the large energy consumption mainly caused by a high operating voltage and slow data switching. Here, we employ ultrathin ferroelectric polymer and semiconducting molecular crystals to create low-voltage Fe-OFET memories. Devices require only pJ-level energy consumption. The writing and erasing processes require ∼1.2 and 1.6 pJ/bit, respectively, and the reading energy is ∼1.9 pJ/bit (on state) and ∼0.2 fJ/bit (off state). Thus, our memories consume only <0.1% of the energy required for devices using bulk functional layers. Besides, our devices also exhibit low contact resistance and steep subthreshold swing. Therefore, we provide a strategy that opens up a path for Fe-OFETs toward emerging applications, such as wearable electronics.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.