Bioinspired Three-Mode Photosensitive Synaptic LED for Optical Information Processing

Nano Lett. 2024 Oct 28. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.4c04444. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Inspired by human sense organs, AI is advancing toward multimodal perception, with display technology evolving into intelligent human-computer interaction tools. However, hardware networks with multimodal responses connected by different devices bring problems such as delayed information transfer and inefficiency. Thus, an innovative three-mode photosensitive synaptic LED (PSSL) is first proposed by adding a photosensitive layer indacenodithiophene-benzothiadiazole (IDTBT) to the quantum-dot light-emitting diode (QLED), switched by changing the bias voltage. The self-powered PSSL has a photoresponse range from 310 nm to 808 nm (ultraviolet-near-infrared, UV-NIR). The device exhibits a bipolar response under red and UV light at 1 V. When the voltage reaches the turn-on voltage, the PSSL device turns into a neuromorphic LED, exhibiting conductivity enhancement under red-light irradiation and suppression under UV-light irradiation. As a result, the PSSLs are expected to be applied in the field of optical encryption communication and in neuromorphic display.

Keywords: Self-power photodetection; bipolar; convolution; neuromorphic light-emitting; optical encryption communication.