Recent Progress of Protein‐Based Data Storage and Neuromorphic Devices

By virtue of energy efficiency, high speed, and parallelism, brain‐inspired neuromorphic computing is a promising technology to overcome the von Neumann bottleneck and capable of processing massive sophisticated tasks in the background of big data. The abilities of perceiving and reacting to events...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced Intelligent Systems 2021-01, Vol.3 (1), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Junjie, Qian, Fangsheng, Huang, Shenming, Lv, Ziyu, Wang, Yan, Xing, Xuechao, Chen, Meng, Han, Su-Ting, Zhou, Ye
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:By virtue of energy efficiency, high speed, and parallelism, brain‐inspired neuromorphic computing is a promising technology to overcome the von Neumann bottleneck and capable of processing massive sophisticated tasks in the background of big data. The abilities of perceiving and reacting to events in artificial neuromorphic systems allow us to build the communicative electronic–biological interfaces to get closer to electronic life. Protein materials offer great application potentials in such a system due to their sustainability, low cost, controllable hierarchical structure, intrinsic biocompatibility, and biodegradability. Herein, a timely review of the development of protein‐based memories for data storage and neuromorphic computing is provided. Proteins’ unique mechanical, electronic, optical properties, and their broad applications are discussed. Then, the progress of protein‐based two‐terminal memristor and three‐terminal transistor‐type memory is reviewed, and their applications for data storage, logic circuit, and neuromorphic computing are introduced. Finally, the major challenges and outlook toward the future developing directions of protein‐based computing systems are pointed out. Protein‐based memory devices for the applications of data storage and neuromorphic computing are reviewed, from materials to device optimization. The superior electrical, chemical, mechanical, optical, and thermal properties of proteins endow memory and neuromorphic devices controllable multifunctionality, driving the development of communicative electronic–biological interfaces toward versatile applications. Finally, major challenges and future perspectives are discussed.
ISSN:2640-4567
2640-4567
DOI:10.1002/aisy.202000180