Memory and learning in biomolecular soft materials
ORAL
Abstract
Neuromorphic elements have been predominantly solid-state devices which simulate the resistive and capacitive behaviors needed for neural networks and brain-inspired computing, but in non-brain-like ways. We are integrating lipid and polymer bilayer membranes with micro- and nanofabrication to develop fundamentally new types of neuromorphic elements that have the composition (biomolecules), structure (biomembranes), and switching mechanism (voltage-sensitive ion channels) of real biological synapses, and operate at lower power than the current state-of-the-art. Our devices consist of insulating, nm-thick lipid or polymer-based bilayer membranes that assemble at the interfaces of two or more aqueous droplets in oil, and that have demonstrated both memristive and memcapacitive behaviors, including memory resistance and capacitance, synaptic functions such as paired-pulse facilitation and depression, spike rate dependent plasticity, voltage-dependent inactivation and recovery, and charging hysteresis. These behaviors are linked to electrostriction, an electromechanical phenomenon that encompasses both electrowetting and electrocompression in the membrane, which are changes in membrane area and thickness due to charging in the presence of electric fields.
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Presenters
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Charles Collier
- Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, Oak Ridge National Lab