Polymer Analog Memristive Synapse with Atomic-Scale Conductive Filament for Flexible Neuromorphic Computing System.

Journal: Nano letters
PMID:

Abstract

With the advent of artificial intelligence (AI), memristors have received significant interest as a synaptic building block for neuromorphic systems, where each synaptic memristor should operate in an analog fashion, exhibiting multilevel accessible conductance states. Here, we demonstrate that the transition of the operation mode in poly(1,3,5-trivinyl-1,3,5-trimethyl cyclotrisiloxane) (pV3D3)-based flexible memristor from conventional binary to synaptic analog switching can be achieved simply by reducing the size of the formed filament. With the quantized conductance states observed in the flexible pV3D3 memristor, analog potentiation and depression characteristics of the memristive synapse are obtained through the growth of atomically thin Cu filament and lateral dissolution of the filament via dominant electric field effect, respectively. The face classification capability of our memristor is evaluated via simulation using an artificial neural network consisting of pV3D3 memristor synapses. These results will encourage the development of soft neuromorphic intelligent systems.

Authors

  • Byung Chul Jang
    School of Electrical Engineering , Graphene/2D Materials Research Center, KAIST , Daejeon 34141 , Korea.
  • Sungkyu Kim
    Department of Materials Science and Engineering and NUANCE Center , Northwestern University , Evanston , Illinois 60208 , United States.
  • Sang Yoon Yang
    School of Electrical Engineering , Graphene/2D Materials Research Center, KAIST , Daejeon 34141 , Korea.
  • Jihun Park
    School of Electrical Engineering , Graphene/2D Materials Research Center, KAIST , Daejeon 34141 , Korea.
  • Jun-Hwe Cha
    School of Electrical Engineering , Graphene/2D Materials Research Center, KAIST , Daejeon 34141 , Korea.
  • Jungyeop Oh
    School of Electrical Engineering , Graphene/2D Materials Research Center, KAIST , Daejeon 34141 , Korea.
  • Junhwan Choi
    Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering , Graphene/2D Materials Research Center, KAIST , Daejeon 34141 , Korea.
  • Sung Gap Im
    Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering , Graphene/2D Materials Research Center, KAIST , Daejeon 34141 , Korea.
  • Vinayak P Dravid
    Department of Materials Science and Engineering and NUANCE Center , Northwestern University , Evanston , Illinois 60208 , United States.
  • Sung-Yool Choi
    School of Electrical Engineering , Graphene/2D Materials Research Center, KAIST , Daejeon 34141 , Korea.