# Island-like Perovskite Photoelectric Synaptic Transistor with ZnO Channel Layer Deposited by Low-Temperature Atomic Layer Deposition

**Authors:** Jiahui Liu, Yuliang Ye, Zunxian Yang

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ma18122879 · Materials · 2025-06-18

## TL;DR

A new hybrid transistor using perovskite and ZnO layers was developed to mimic synaptic behaviors with low power and light.

## Contribution

A novel wavy-structured CsPbBr3/ZnO hybrid film was created using low-temperature ALD for efficient synaptic transistors.

## Key findings

- The device operated at low voltages and light intensities while achieving a quiescent current of ~0.5 nA.
- Patterning reduced the off-state current to 10−11 A and quiescent current to 0.02 nA.
- The transistor mimicked synaptic behaviors like EPSCs, PPF, and plasticity transitions.

## Abstract

Artificial photoelectric synapses exhibit great potential for overcoming the Von Neumann bottleneck in computational systems. All-inorganic halide perovskites hold considerable promise in photoelectric synapses due to their superior photon-harvesting efficiency. In this study, a novel wavy-structured CsPbBr3/ZnO hybrid film was realized by depositing zinc oxide (ZnO) onto island-like CsPbBr3 film via atomic layer deposition (ALD) at 70 °C. Due to the capability of ALD to grow high-quality films over small surface areas, dense and thin ZnO film filled the gaps between the island-shaped CsPbBr3 grains, thereby enabling reduced light-absorption losses and efficient charge transport between the CsPbBr3 light absorber and the ZnO electron-transport layer. This ZnO/island-like CsPbBr3 hybrid synaptic transistor could operate at a drain-source voltage of 1.0 V and a gate-source voltage of 0 V triggered by green light (500 nm) pulses with low light intensities of 0.035 mW/cm2. The device exhibited a quiescent current of ~0.5 nA. Notably, after patterning, it achieved a significantly reduced off-state current of 10−11 A and decreased the quiescent current to 0.02 nA. In addition, this transistor was able to mimic fundamental synaptic behaviors, including excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs), paired-pulse facilitation (PPF), short-term to long-term plasticity (STP to LTP) transitions, and learning-experience behaviors. This straightforward strategy demonstrates the possibility of utilizing neuromorphic synaptic device applications under low voltage and weak light conditions.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** ZnO (PubChem CID 14806)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** perovskites (MESH:C059910), ZnO (MESH:D015034), CsPbBr3 (-)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

36 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12195490/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12195490