1,868 research outputs found

    From biomaterial-based data storage to bio-inspired artificial synapse

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    The implementation of biocompatible and biodegradable information storage would be a significant step toward next-generation green electronics. On the other hand, benefiting from high density, multifunction, low power consumption and multilevel data storage, artificial synapses exhibit attractive future for built-in nonvolatile memories and reconstructed logic operations. Here, we provide a comprehensive and critical review on the developments of bio-memories with a view to inspire more intriguing ideas on this area that may finally open up a new chapter in next-generation consumer electronics. We will discuss that biomolecule-based memory employed evolutionary natural biomaterials as data storage node and artificial synapse emulated biological synapse function, which is expected to conquer the bottleneck of the traditional von Neumann architecture. Finally, challenges and opportunities in the aforementioned bio-memory area are presented

    Partial wave effects in the heavy quarkonium radiative electromagnetic decays

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    In a previous paper \cite{Bc}, it was pointed out that the wave functions of all particles are not pure waves, besides the main partial waves, they all contain {other partial waves}. It is very interesting to know what role these different partial waves play in particle transitions. Therefore, by using the Bethe-Salpeter equation method, we study the radiative electromagnetic decays ψ→γχcJ\psi\rightarrow\gamma\chi_{_{cJ}} and Υ→γχbJ\Upsilon\rightarrow\gamma\chi_{_{bJ}} (J=0,1,2J=0,1,2). We find that for the SS and PP wave dominated states, like the ψ(2S)\psi(2S), Υ(2S)\Upsilon(2S), χcJ(1P)\chi_{_{cJ}}(1P), and χbJ(1P)\chi_{_{bJ}}(1P) etc., the dominant SS and PP waves provide main and nonrelativistic contrition to the decays; other partial waves mainly contribute to the relativistic correction. For the states like the ψ(1D)\psi(1D), Υ(2D)\Upsilon(2D), χc2(1F)\chi_{c2}(1F), and χb2(1F)\chi_{b2}(1F) etc., they are the S−P−DS-P-D mixing state dominated by DD wave or the P−D−FP-D-F mixing state dominated by FF wave. Large decay widths are found in the transitions ψ(2D)→χc2(1F)\psi(2D)\to \chi_{c2}(1F), Υ(1D)→χbJ(1P)\Upsilon(1D)\to \chi_{bJ}(1P), and Υ(2D)→χbJ(2P)\Upsilon(2D)\to \chi_{bJ}(2P) etc., which may be helpful to study the missing states χc2(1F)\chi_{c2}(1F), Υ(1D)\Upsilon(1D), and Υ(2D)\Upsilon(2D).Comment: 31 pages, 19 table

    Photonic Memristor for Future Computing: A Perspective

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    Photonic computing and neuromorphic computing could address the inherent limitations of traditional von Neumann architecture and gradually invalidate Moore’s law. As photonics applications are capable of storing and processing data in an optical manner with unprecedented bandwidth and high speed, twoâ terminal photonic memristors with a remote optical control of resistive switching behaviors at defined wavelengths ensure the benefit of onâ chip integration, low power consumption, multilevel data storage, and a large variation margin, suggesting promising advantages for both photonic and neuromorphic computing. Herein, the development of photonic memristors is reviewed, as well as their application in photonic computing and emulation on optogeneticsâ modulated artificial synapses. Different photoactive materials acting as both photosensing and storage media are discussed in terms of their opticalâ tunable memory behaviors and underlying resistive switching mechanism with consideration of photogating and photovoltaic effects. Moreover, lightâ involved logic operations, systemâ level integration, and lightâ controlled artificial synaptic memristors along with improved learning tasks performance are presented. Furthermore, the challenges in the field are discussed, such as the lack of a comprehensive understanding of microscopic mechanisms under light illumination and a general constraint of inferior nearâ infrared (NIR) sensitivity.The development of photonic memristors and their application in photonic computing and emulation on optogeneticsâ modulated artificial synapses are reviewed. Photoactive materials as photosensing and storage media are discussed, considering their opticalâ tunable memory behavior and resistive switching mechanism including photogating and photovoltaic effect. Lightâ involved logic operations, system level integration, and artificial synaptic memristors along with improved learning tasks performance are presented.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/153103/1/adom201900766.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/153103/2/adom201900766_am.pd

    Recent Advances in Ambipolar Transistors for Functional Applications

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    Ambipolar transistors represent a class of transistors where positive (holes) and negative (electrons) charge carriers both can transport concurrently within the semiconducting channel. The basic switching states of ambipolar transistors are comprised of common offâ state and separated onâ state mainly impelled by holes or electrons. During the past years, diverse materials are synthesized and utilized for implementing ambipolar charge transport and their further emerging applications comprising ambipolar memory, synaptic, logic, and lightâ emitting transistors on account of their special bidirectional carrierâ transporting characteristic. Within this review, recent developments of ambipolar transistor field involving fundamental principles, interface modifications, selected semiconducting material systems, device structures, ambipolar characteristics, and promising applications are highlighted. The existed challenges and prospective for researching ambipolar transistors in electronics and optoelectronics are also discussed. It is expected that the review and outlook are well timed and instrumental for the rapid progress of academic sector of ambipolar transistors in lighting, display, memory, as well as neuromorphic computing for artificial intelligence.Ambipolar transistors represent transistors that allow synchronous transport of electrons and holes and their accumulation within semiconductors. This review provides a comprehensive summary of recent advances in various semiconducting materials realized in ambipolar transistors and their functional memory, synapse, logic, as well as lightâ emitting applications.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151885/1/adfm201902105_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151885/2/adfm201902105.pd

    Solution processed molecular floating gate for flexible flash memories

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    Solution processed fullerene (C60) molecular floating gate layer has been employed in low voltage nonvolatile memory device on flexible substrates. We systematically studied the charge trapping mechanism of the fullerene floating gate for both p-type pentacene and n-type copper hexadecafluorophthalocyanine (F16CuPc) semiconductor in a transistor based flash memory architecture. The devices based on pentacene as semiconductor exhibited both hole and electron trapping ability, whereas devices with F16CuPc trapped electrons alone due to abundant electron density. All the devices exhibited large memory window, long charge retention time, good endurance property and excellent flexibility. The obtained results have great potential for application in large area flexible electronic devices

    Super resolution dual-layer CBCT imaging with model-guided deep learning

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    Objective: This study aims at investigating a novel super resolution CBCT imaging technique with the dual-layer flat panel detector (DL-FPD). Approach: In DL-FPD based CBCT imaging, the low-energy and high-energy projections acquired from the top and bottom detector layers contain intrinsically mismatched spatial information, from which super resolution CBCT images can be generated. To explain, a simple mathematical model is established according to the signal formation procedure in DL-FPD. Next, a dedicated recurrent neural network (RNN), named as suRi-Net, is designed by referring to the above imaging model to retrieve the high resolution dual-energy information. Different phantom experiments are conducted to validate the performance of this newly developed super resolution CBCT imaging method. Main Results: Results show that the proposed suRi-Net can retrieve high spatial resolution information accurately from the low-energy and high-energy projections having lower spatial resolution. Quantitatively, the spatial resolution of the reconstructed CBCT images of the top and bottom detector layers is increased by about 45% and 54%, respectively. Significance: In future, suRi-Net provides a new approach to achieve high spatial resolution dual-energy imaging in DL-FPD based CBCT systems

    Learning Fine-Grained Visual Understanding for Video Question Answering via Decoupling Spatial-Temporal Modeling

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    While recent large-scale video-language pre-training made great progress in video question answering, the design of spatial modeling of video-language models is less fine-grained than that of image-language models; existing practices of temporal modeling also suffer from weak and noisy alignment between modalities. To learn fine-grained visual understanding, we decouple spatial-temporal modeling and propose a hybrid pipeline, Decoupled Spatial-Temporal Encoders, integrating an image- and a video-language encoder. The former encodes spatial semantics from larger but sparsely sampled frames independently of time, while the latter models temporal dynamics at lower spatial but higher temporal resolution. To help the video-language model learn temporal relations for video QA, we propose a novel pre-training objective, Temporal Referring Modeling, which requires the model to identify temporal positions of events in video sequences. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our model outperforms previous work pre-trained on orders of magnitude larger datasets.Comment: BMVC 2022. Code is available at https://github.com/shinying/des

    Self-aligned, full solution process polymer field-effect transistor on flexible substrates

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    Conventional techniques to form selective surface energy regions on rigid inorganic substrates are not suitable for polymer interfaces due to sensitive and soft limitation of intrinsic polymer properties. Therefore, there is a strong demand for finding a novel and compatible method for polymeric surface energy modification. Here, by employing the confined photo-catalytic oxidation method, we successfully demonstrate full polymer filed-effect transistors fabricated through four-step spin-coating process on a flexible polymer substrate. The approach shows negligible etching effect on polymeric film. Even more, the insulating property of polymeric dielectric is not affected by the method, which is vital for polymer electronics. Finally, the self-aligned full polymer field-effect transistors on the flexible polymeric substrate are fabricated, showing good electrical properties and mechanical flexibility under bending tests
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