4.8 Article

A Flexible Artificial Sensory Nerve Enabled by Nanoparticle-Assembled Synaptic Devices for Neuromorphic Tactile Recognition

Journal

ADVANCED SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/advs.202106124

Keywords

flexible synaptic electronics; nanomaterial self-assembly; neuromorphic perception; robotics and smart interfaces; tactile recognition

Funding

  1. National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars of China [T2125005]
  2. Tianjin Science Foundation for Distinguished Young Scholars [19JCJQJC61000]
  3. Shenzhen Science and Technology Project [JCYJ20210324121002008]
  4. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [2020MC2GD01]
  5. Qianjiang Talent Plan of Zhejiang Province of China [2020MC2GE01]

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A flexible artificial sensory nerve mimicking the human somatosensory system has been developed to improve cognition and intelligence in advanced robots and interactive systems.
Tactile perception enabled by somatosensory system in human is essential for dexterous tool usage, communication, and interaction. Imparting tactile recognition functions to advanced robots and interactive systems can potentially improve their cognition and intelligence. Here, a flexible artificial sensory nerve that mimics the tactile sensing, neural coding, and synaptic processing functions in human sensory nerve is developed to achieve neuromorphic tactile recognition at device level without relying on algorithms or computing resources. An interfacial self-assembly technique, which produces uniform and defect-less thin film of semiconductor nanoparticles on arbitrary substrates, is employed to prepare the flexible synaptic device. The neural facilitation and sensory memory characteristics of the proton-gating synaptic device enable this system to identify material hardness during robotic grasping and recognize tapping patterns during tactile interaction in a continuous, real-time, high-accuracy manner, demonstrating neuromorphic intelligence and recognition capabilities. This artificial sensory nerve produced in wearable and portable form can be readily integrated with advanced robots and smart human-machine interfaces for implementing human-like tactile cognition in neuromorphic electronics toward robotic and wearable applications.

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