Development of Bio-Voltage Operated Humidity-Sensory Neurons Comprising Self-Assembled Peptide Memristors

  • Ziyu Lv
  • , Shirui Zhu
  • , Yan Wang
  • , Yanyun Ren
  • , Mingtao Luo
  • , Hanning Wang
  • , Guohua Zhang
  • , Yongbiao Zhai
  • , Shilong Zhao
  • , Ye Zhou
  • , Minghao Jiang
  • , Yan Bing Leng
  • , Su Ting Han (Corresponding Author)

Research output: Journal article publicationJournal articleAcademic researchpeer-review

42 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Biomimetic humidity sensors offer a low-power approach for respiratory monitoring in early lung-disease diagnosis. However, balancing miniaturization and energy efficiency remains challenging. This study addresses this issue by introducing a bioinspired humidity-sensing neuron comprising a self-assembled peptide nanowire (NW) memristor with unique proton-coupled ion transport. The proposed neuron shows a low Ag+ activation energy owing to the NW and redox activity of the tyrosine (Tyr)-rich peptide in the system, facilitating ultralow electric-field–driven threshold switching and a high energy efficiency. Additionally, Ag+ migration in the system can be controlled by a proton source owing to the hydrophilic nature of the phenolic hydroxyl group in Tyr, enabling the humidity-based control of the conductance state of the memristor. Furthermore, a memristor-based neuromorphic perception neuron that can encode humidity signals into spikes is proposed. The spiking characteristics of this neuron can be modulated to emulate the strength-modulated spike-frequency characteristics of biological neurons. A three-layer spiking neural network with input neurons comprising these highly tunable humidity perception neurons shows an accuracy of 92.68% in lung-disease diagnosis. This study paves the way for developing bioinspired self-assembly strategies to construct neuromorphic perception systems, bridging the gap between artificial and biological sensing and processing paradigms.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2405145
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume36
Issue number33
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Jun 2024

Keywords

  • artificial neuron
  • humidity-dependent modulation
  • neuromorphic perception
  • peptide memristor
  • self-assembled nanowire

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Materials Science
  • Mechanics of Materials
  • Mechanical Engineering

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Development of Bio-Voltage Operated Humidity-Sensory Neurons Comprising Self-Assembled Peptide Memristors'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this