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Neuromorphic sensorimotor loop embodied by monolithically integrated, low-voltage, soft e-skin
Author(s) -
Weichen Wang,
Yuanwen Jiang,
Donglai Zhong,
Zhitao Zhang,
Snehashis Choudhury,
JianCheng Lai,
Huaxin Gong,
Simiao Niu,
Xuzhou Yan,
Yu Zheng,
ChienChung Shih,
Ning Rui,
Qing Lin,
Deling Li,
YunHi Kim,
Jingwan Kim,
Yixuan Wang,
Chuanzhen Zhao,
Chengyi Xu,
Xiaozhou Ji,
Yuya Nishio,
Hao Lyu,
Jeffrey B.H. Tok,
Zhenan Bao
Publication year - 2023
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.ade0086
Subject(s) - neuromorphic engineering , electronic skin , materials science , computer science , transistor , piezoresistive effect , soft robotics , electronic engineering , voltage , nanotechnology , electrical engineering , optoelectronics , robot , artificial neural network , engineering , artificial intelligence
Artificial skin that simultaneously mimics sensory feedback and mechanical properties of natural skin holds substantial promise for next-generation robotic and medical devices. However, achieving such a biomimetic system that can seamlessly integrate with the human body remains a challenge. Through rational design and engineering of material properties, device structures, and system architectures, we realized a monolithic soft prosthetic electronic skin (e-skin). It is capable of multimodal perception, neuromorphic pulse-train signal generation, and closed-loop actuation. With a trilayer, high-permittivity elastomeric dielectric, we achieved a low subthreshold swing comparable to that of polycrystalline silicon transistors, a low operation voltage, low power consumption, and medium-scale circuit integration complexity for stretchable organic devices. Our e-skin mimics the biological sensorimotor loop, whereby a solid-state synaptic transistor elicits stronger actuation when a stimulus of increasing pressure is applied.

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