Abstract

The aim of the neuromorphic computing is to emulate energy-efficient and smart data-processing ability of the biological brain, which is achieved by massively interconnected neurons and synapses. The strength of a connection between two neurons is modified by homosynaptic and heterosynaptic plasticity. As current research in the neuromorphic device is mainly focused on emulating homosynaptic plasticity, complex biological functions are not easy to mimic because they require both homosynaptic and heterosynaptic plasticity. We demonstrate the use of a liquid crystal-carbon nanotube (LC-CNT) composite as a resistive switching material that can emulate both the homosynaptic and heterosynaptic functions of biological neurons. The LC-CNT composite undergoes resistance change by CNT alignment and aggregated wire formation subjected to an applied electric field. A two-terminal device that exploits this mechanism achieves analog switching and homosynaptic potentiation. In a multiterminal device structure, the modulatory interneuron could tune the synaptic properties to perform heterosynaptic functions such as heterosynaptic potentiation, heterosynaptic facilitation, and synaptic weight normalization to emulate complex biological functions of a brain. Artificial synapses that exploit this multifunctionality of the LC-CNT composite have uses in next-generation neuromorphic devices.

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