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Article Dans Une Revue Advanced Functional Materials Année : 2010

An organic nanoparticle transistor behaving as a biological spiking synapse

F. Alibart
S. Pleutin
  • Fonction : Auteur
David Guérin
C. Novembre
  • Fonction : Auteur
S. Lenfant
K. Lmimouni
C. Gamrat
  • Fonction : Auteur

Résumé

Molecule-based devices are envisioned to complement silicon devices by providing new functions or by implementing existing functions at a simpler process level and lower cost, by virtue of their self-organization capabilities. Moreover, they are not bound to von Neuman architecture and this feature may open the way to other architectural paradigms. Neuromorphic electronics is one of them. Here, a device made of molecules and nanoparticles—a nanoparticle organic memory field-effect transistor (NOMFET)—that exhibits the main behavior of a biological spiking synapse is demonstrated. Facilitating and depressing synaptic behaviors can be reproduced by the NOMFET and can be programmed. The synaptic plasticity for real-time computing is evidenced and described by a simple model. These results open the way to rate-coding utilization of the NOMFET in dynamical neuromorphic computing circuits.

Dates et versions

hal-00548959 , version 1 (21-12-2010)

Identifiants

Citer

F. Alibart, S. Pleutin, David Guérin, C. Novembre, S. Lenfant, et al.. An organic nanoparticle transistor behaving as a biological spiking synapse. Advanced Functional Materials, 2010, 20, pp.330-337. ⟨10.1002/adfm.200901335⟩. ⟨hal-00548959⟩
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