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Multiwavelength Optoelectronic Synapse with 2D Materials for Mixed-Color Pattern Recognition

Neuromorphic visual systems emulating biological retina functionalities have enormous potential for in-sensor computing, with prospects of making artificial intelligence ubiquitous. Conventionally, visual information is captured by an image sensor, stored by memory units, and eventually processed by...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:ACS nano 2022-07, Vol.16 (7), p.10188-10198
Main Authors: Islam, Molla Manjurul, Krishnaprasad, Adithi, Dev, Durjoy, Martinez-Martinez, Ricardo, Okonkwo, Victor, Wu, Benjamin, Han, Sang Sub, Bae, Tae-Sung, Chung, Hee-Suk, Touma, Jimmy, Jung, Yeonwoong, Roy, Tania
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Language:English
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Summary:Neuromorphic visual systems emulating biological retina functionalities have enormous potential for in-sensor computing, with prospects of making artificial intelligence ubiquitous. Conventionally, visual information is captured by an image sensor, stored by memory units, and eventually processed by the machine learning algorithm. Here, we present an optoelectronic synapse device with multifunctional integration of all the processes required for real time object identification. Ultraviolet–visible wavelength-sensitive MoS2 FET channel with infrared sensitive PtTe2/Si gate electrode enables the device to sense, store, and process optical data for a wide range of the electromagnetic spectrum, while maintaining a low dark current. The device exhibits optical stimulation-controlled short-term and long-term potentiation, electrically driven long-term depression, synaptic weight update for multiple wavelengths of light ranging from 300 nm in ultraviolet to 2 μm in infrared. An artificial neural network developed using the extracted weight update parameters of the device can be trained to identify both single wavelength and mixed wavelength patterns. This work demonstrates a device that could potentially be used for realizing a multiwavelength neuromorphic visual system for pattern recognition and object identification.
ISSN:1936-0851
1936-086X
DOI:10.1021/acsnano.2c01035