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Wood-Derived Nanopaper Dielectrics for Organic Synaptic Transistors.

Shilei DaiYan WangJunyao ZhangYiwei ZhaoFeipeng XiaoDapeng LiuTengrui WangJia Huang
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2018)
The use of biocompatible and biodegradable materials in electronic devices can be an important trend in the development of the next-generation green electronics. In addition, by integrating the advantages of low power consumption, low-cost processing, and flexibility, organic synaptic devices will be promising elements for the construction of brain-inspired computers. However, previously reported electrolyte-gated synaptic transistors are mainly made of non-biocompatible and non-biodegradable electrolytes. Woods are widely considered as one kind of sustainable and renewable materials. We found that wood-derived cellulose nanopapers have ionic conductivity and, therefore, can be used as dielectric materials for organic synaptic transistors. The fabricated wood-derived cellulose nanopapers exhibit decent ionic conductivity of 7.3 × 10-4 S m-1 and a high lateral coupling effective capacitance of 18.65 nF cm-2 at 30 Hz. The laterally coupled organic synaptic transistors using wood-derived cellulose nanopapers as the dielectric layer present excellent transistor performances at the operating voltage below 1.5 V. More significantly, some important synaptic behaviors, such as excitatory postsynaptic current, signal-filtering characteristics, and dendritic integration are successfully simulated in our synaptic transistors. Because the development of electronic devices with biocompatible and biodegradable materials is essential, this work may inspire new directions for the development of "green" neuromorphic electronics.
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