Chemically Regulated Conical Channel Synapse for Neuromorphic and Sensing Applications
Fluidic iontronics offer a unique capability for emulating the chemical processes found in neurons. We extract multiple distinct chemically regulated synaptic features from a single conical microfluidic channel carrying functionalized surface groups, using finite-element calculations of continuum tr...
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
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Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
05-06-2024
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Fluidic iontronics offer a unique capability for emulating the chemical
processes found in neurons. We extract multiple distinct chemically regulated
synaptic features from a single conical microfluidic channel carrying
functionalized surface groups, using finite-element calculations of continuum
transport equations. Such channels have long been employed for fluidic sensing
and are therefore experimentally well established. By modeling a Langmuir-type
surface reaction on the channel wall we couple fast voltage-induced volumetric
salt accumulation with a long-term channel surface charge modulation by means
of fast charging and slow discharging. These nonlinear charging dynamics are
understood through an analytic approximation rooted in first-principles. We
show how short-and long-term potentiation and depression, frequency-dependent
plasticity, and chemical-electrical signal coincidence detection (acting like a
chemical-electrical AND logic gate), akin to the NMDA mechanism for Hebbian
learning in biological synapses, can all be emulated with a single channel. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2406.03195 |