Dec 4, 2024
9:15am - 9:30am
Sheraton, Second Floor, Independence West
Jia Hui Bong1,Sergey Grebenchuk1,Konstantin Nikolaev1,Celestine Chee1,Kou Yang1,Siyu Chen1,Denis Baranov1,Colin Woods1,Daria Andreeva1,Konstantin Novoselov1
National University of Singapore1
Jia Hui Bong1,Sergey Grebenchuk1,Konstantin Nikolaev1,Celestine Chee1,Kou Yang1,Siyu Chen1,Denis Baranov1,Colin Woods1,Daria Andreeva1,Konstantin Novoselov1
National University of Singapore1
The behavior of polyelectrolytes in confined spaces has direct relevance to the protein mediated ion transport in living organisms. In this paper, we govern lithium chloride transport by the interface provided by polyelectrolytes, polycation, poly(diallyldimethylammonium chloride) (PDDA) and, polyanion, double stranded deoxyribonucleic acid (dsDNA), in confined graphene oxide (GO) membranes. Polyelectrolyte–GO interfaces demonstrate neuromorphic functions that were successfully applied with nanochannel ion interactions contributed, resulting in ion memory effects. Excitatory and inhibitory post-synaptic currents were tuned continuously as the number of pulses applied increased accordingly, increasing decay times. Furthermore, we demonstrated the short-term memory of a trained vs untrained device in computation. On account of its simple and safe production along with its robustness and stability, we anticipate our device to be a low dimensional building block for arrays to embed artificial neural networks in hardware for neuromorphic computing. Additionally, incorporating such devices with sensing and actuating parts for a complete feedback loop produces robotics with its own ability to learn by modifying actuation based on sensing data.