11

May 2023

Bioengineering Seminar

Mixed Conduction in Polymeric Materials: The Marriage of Electrons and Ions for Brain-Like Computing

Presenter
Professor Alberto Salleo
Date
11 May, 2023
Time
12:00 PM – 01:00 PM

Abstract:
Organic semiconductors have been traditionally developed for making low-cost and flexible transistors, solar cells and light-emitting diodes. In the last few years, emerging applications in health care and bioelectronics have been proposed. An interesting class of materials in this application area takes advantage of mixed ionic and electronic conduction in certain semiconducting polymers. In particular, mixed conductors can be used to emulate the compute-in-memory operation of the brain that is the key to its energy efficiency. This principle has been invoked as one of the keys to neuromorphic, or brain-like, computing. Indeed, the brain can perform massively parallel information processing while consuming only ~1- 100 fJ per synaptic event. I will describe a novel electrochemical neuromorphic device that switches at record-low energy (<0.1 fJ projected, <100 fJ measured), displays >500 distinct, non-volatile conductance states within a ~1 V operating range. The tunable resistance of the device behaves very linearly, allowing low write-noise and blind updates in a neural network when operated with the proper access device. Organic electrochemical synapses also display outstanding endurance achieving over 109 switching events with very little degradation. The mechanisms for such fast switching will be described. 
I will end by showing applications of these devices ranging from training of crossbar arrays into logic gates, training of a robot to recognize visual cues and finally, the organic synapses were interfaced with living matter and modulated by a neurotransmitter (dopamine) demonstrating promising operation as a bio-hybrid assembly.

Bio:
Alberto Salleo is currently Professor of Materials Science and Department Chair at Stanford University. Alberto Salleo holds a Laurea degree in Chemistry from La Sapienza and graduated as a Fulbright Fellow with a PhD in Materials Science from UC Berkeley in 2001. From 2001 to 2005 Salleo was first post-doctoral research fellow and successively member of research staff at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center. In 2005 Salleo joined the Materials Science and Engineering Department at Stanford as an Assistant Professor. Salleo is a Principal Editor of MRS Communications since 2011.While at Stanford, Salleo won the NSF Career Award, the 3M Untenured Faculty Award, the SPIE Early Career Award, the Tau Beta Pi Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award, and the Gores Award for Excellence in Teaching, Stanford’s highest teaching award. He has been a Thomson Reuters Highly Cited Researcher since 2015, recognizing that he ranks in the top 1% cited researchers in his field and was elected to the European Academy of Sciences in 2021 and Fellow of the Materials Research Society in 2022.

Event Quick Information

Date
11 May, 2023
Time
12:00 PM - 01:00 PM
Venue
Building 9 - Lecture Hall 2325