Abstract

Considering that the human brain uses ≈1015 synapses to operate, the development of effective artificial synapses is essential to build brain-inspired computing systems. In biological synapses, the voltage-gated ion channels are very important for regulating the action-potential firing. Here, an electrolyte-gated transistor using WO3 with a unique tunnel structure, which can emulate the ionic modulation process of biological synapses, is proposed. The transistor successfully realizes synaptic functions of both short-term and long-term plasticity. Short-term plasticity is mimicked with the help of electrolyte ion dynamics under low electrical bias, whereas the long-term plasticity is realized using proton insertion in WO3 under high electrical bias. This is a new working approach to control the transition from short-term memory to long-term memory using different gate voltage amplitude for artificial synapses. Other essential synaptic behaviors, such as paired pulse facilitation, the depression and potentiation of synaptic weight, as well as spike-timing-dependent plasticity are also implemented in this artificial synapse. These results provide a new recipe for designing synaptic electrolyte-gated transistors through the electrostatic and electrochemical effects.

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