Abstract
This work reports a hardware-oriented hybrid reservoir computing (HRC) system based on a nanolaminate ferroelectric thin-film transistor (FeTFT) that unifies volatile and nonvolatile functions in a single three-terminal device. The HZO/HfO2/HZO gate stack modulates grain size and suppresses ferroelectric variability, enabling precise multilevel control and highly linear weight updates via the incremental step pulse with verify algorithm (ISPVA). Electrical input induces long-term memory, while optical excitation yields short-term memory, allowing dual-mode operation. Light-driven 4-bit reservoirs operate at picoampere currents (∼10 pW/device) and emulate nociceptive neuron behavior. Combining three wavelength-dependent reservoirs (405, 450, 532 nm) expands the feature space and improves classification accuracy. Using ISPVA-linearized readout, the system achieves 93.1% and 85.1% accuracies on MNIST and Fashion-MNIST, respectively exceeding prior FeTFT/memristor-based RC systems. This approach establishes a scalable, energy-efficient route toward multifunctional in-sensor neuromorphic computing based on a unified ferroelectric platform.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Advanced Materials |
| DOIs | |
| State | Accepted/In press - 2026 |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 7 Affordable and Clean Energy
Keywords
- electrical and optical functionality
- ferroelectric thin-film transistors
- multi-wavelength
- nanolaminate
- synaptic devices
- wide reservoir computing
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