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Centimeter-Scale Tellurium Oxide Films for Artificial Optoelectronic Synapses with Broadband Responsiveness and Mechanical Flexibility.

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Abstract

Prevailing over the bottleneck of von Neumann computing has been significant attention due to the inevitableness of proceeding through enormous data volumes in current digital technologies. Inspired by the human brain’s operational principle, the artificial synapse of neuromorphic computing has been explored as an emerging solution. Especially, the optoelectronic synapse is of growing interest as vision is an essential source of information in which dealing with optical stimuli is vital. Herein, flexible optoelectronic synaptic devices composed of centimeter-scale tellurium dioxide (TeO2) films detecting and exhibiting synaptic characteristics to broadband wavelengths are presented. The TeO2-based flexible devices demonstrate a comprehensive set of emulating basic optoelectronic synaptic characteristics; i.e., excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC), paired-pulse facilitation (PPF), conversion of short-term to long-term memory, and learning/forgetting. Furthermore, they feature linear and symmetric conductance synaptic weight updates at various wavelengths, which are applicable to broadband neuromorphic computations. Based on this large set of synaptic attributes, a variety of applications such as logistic functions or deep learning and image recognition as well as learning simulations are demonstrated. This work proposes a significant milestone of wafer-scale metal oxide semiconductor-based artificial synapses solely utilizing their optoelectronic features and mechanical flexibility, which is attractive toward scaled-up neuromorphic architectures.

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