Abstract

We demonstrate a synaptic transistor that uses a thermally crosslinked three-dimensional network to accommodate ionic liquid to form an ion gel layer. The synaptic transistor successfully emulated important synaptic plasticity, such as paired-pulse facilitation, spike-number dependent plasticity, spike-voltage dependent plasticity, and spike-rate dependent plasticity; these responses imply successful use of the ion gel. Moreover, the device realized “OR” and “AND” logic operations, and high-pass filtering behavior. Energy consumption of the device can be reduced to sub-femtojoule level, which is below that of biological synapses. Compared with traditional physical cross-linking using block copolymers, this method provides a facile strategy to prepare ion gels with tunable properties by altering the polymers and crosslinkers, and to enormously reduce the price by replacing expensive block copolymers or eliminating additional synthesis processes. This report provides a versatile strategy for design of synaptic transistors and their applications in neuromorphic electronics.

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