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Analog Programing of Conducting-Polymer Dendritic Interconnections and Control of their Morphology
Archive ouverte : Article de revue
Edité par HAL CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group
data available here: 10.6084/m9.figshare.16814710. International audience. Although materials and processes are different from biological cells', brain mimicries led to tremendous achievements in massively parallel information processing via neuromorphic engineering. Inexistent in electronics, we describe how to emulate dendritic morphogenesis by electropolymerization in water, aiming in operando material modification for hardware learning. The systematic study of applied voltage-pulse parameters details on tuning independently morphological aspects of micrometric dendrites': as fractal number, branching degree, asymmetry, density or length. Time-lapse image processing of their growth shows the spatial features to be dynamically-dependent and expand distinctively before and after forming a conductive bridging of two electrochemically grown dendrites. Circuit-element analysis and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy confirms their morphological control to occur in temporal windows where the growth kinetics can be finely perturbed by the input signal frequency and duty cycle. By the emulation of one of the most preponderant mechanisms responsible for brain's long-term memory, its implementation in the vicinity of sensing arrays, neural probes or biochips shall greatly optimize computational costs and recognition performances required to classify high-dimensional patterns from complex aqueous environments.