Abstract

In artificial synaptic devices aimed at mimicking neuromorphic computing systems, electrical or optical pulses, or both, are generally used as stimuli. In this work, we introduce chiral materials for tailoring the characteristics of photonic synaptic devices to achieve handedness-dependent neuromorphic computing and in-memory logic gates. In devices based on a pair of chiral perovskites, the use of circularly polarized light (CPL) as the optical stimuli mimicked a series of electrical and opto-synaptic functionalities in order to emulate the multifunctional complex behavior of the human brain. Upon illumination in this two-terminal device, anisotropy in current has been observed due to the out-of-plane carrier transport, originating from spin-selective carrier transport. More importantly, the logic gate achieved in devices based on optoelectronic memristors turned out to be chirality-dependent; while an R-device functioned as an AND gate, the device based on the same perovskite of the opposite chirality (S-device) acted as a NOR gate toward in-memory logic operations. These findings in chiral perovskite-based artificial synapses can identify further strategies for future neuromorphic computing, vision simulation, and artificial intelligence.

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