Abstract
As essential units in an artificial neural network (ANN), artificial synapses have to adapt to various environments. In particular, the development of synaptic transistors that can work above 125 °C is desirable. However, it is challenging due to the failure of materials or mechanisms at high temperatures. Here, we report a synaptic transistor working at hundreds of degrees Celsius. It employs monolayer MoS2 as the channel and Na+-diffused SiO2 as the ionic gate medium. A large on/off ratio of 106 can be achieved at 350 °C, 5 orders of magnitude higher than that of a normal MoS2 transistor in the same range of gate voltage. The short-term plasticity has a synaptic transistor function as an excellent low-pass dynamic filter. Long-term potentiation/depression and spike-timing-dependent plasticity are demonstrated at 150 °C. An ANN can be simulated, with the recognition accuracy reaching 90%. Our work provides promising strategies for high-temperature neuromorphic applications.
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