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Main Authors: Noh, Yechan, Smolyanitsky, Alex
Format: Preprint
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.09439
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author Noh, Yechan
Smolyanitsky, Alex
author_facet Noh, Yechan
Smolyanitsky, Alex
contents In living organisms, information is processed in interconnected symphonies of ionic currents spiking through protein ion channels. As a result of dynamically switching their conductive states, ion channels exhibit a variety of current-voltage nonlinearities and memory effects. Fueled by the promise of computing architectures entirely different from von Neumann, recent attempts to identify and harness similar phenomena in artificial nanofluidic environments focused on demonstrating analog circuit elements with memory. Here we explore aqueous ionic transport through two-dimensional (2D) membranes featuring arrays of ion-trapping crown-ether-like pores. We demonstrate that for aqueous salts featuring ions with different ion-pore binding affinities, memristive effects emerge through coupling between the time-delayed state of the system and its transport properties. We also demonstrate a nanopore array that behaves as a capacitor with a strain-tunable built-in barrier, yielding behaviors ranging from current spiking to ohmic response. By focusing on the illustrative underlying mechanisms, we demonstrate that realistically observable memory effects may be achieved in nanofluidic systems featuring crown-porous 2D membranes.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2310_09439
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Memristive response and capacitive spiking in the aqueous ion transport through 2D nanopore arrays
Noh, Yechan
Smolyanitsky, Alex
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Materials Science
Computational Physics
In living organisms, information is processed in interconnected symphonies of ionic currents spiking through protein ion channels. As a result of dynamically switching their conductive states, ion channels exhibit a variety of current-voltage nonlinearities and memory effects. Fueled by the promise of computing architectures entirely different from von Neumann, recent attempts to identify and harness similar phenomena in artificial nanofluidic environments focused on demonstrating analog circuit elements with memory. Here we explore aqueous ionic transport through two-dimensional (2D) membranes featuring arrays of ion-trapping crown-ether-like pores. We demonstrate that for aqueous salts featuring ions with different ion-pore binding affinities, memristive effects emerge through coupling between the time-delayed state of the system and its transport properties. We also demonstrate a nanopore array that behaves as a capacitor with a strain-tunable built-in barrier, yielding behaviors ranging from current spiking to ohmic response. By focusing on the illustrative underlying mechanisms, we demonstrate that realistically observable memory effects may be achieved in nanofluidic systems featuring crown-porous 2D membranes.
title Memristive response and capacitive spiking in the aqueous ion transport through 2D nanopore arrays
topic Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Materials Science
Computational Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.09439