
On April 24, our undergraduate research assistants presented their work, “Aerosol Jet Printed Electrochemical Transistors for Neuromorphic Computing Applications.” Strahinja and Haoyi were selected to be a part of the 34 research posters from the ECE department.
Their work focuses on implementing neuromorphic devices by aerosol jet printing: a versatile electronic printing technique. They work heavily on ink development and optimizing the print fabrication process to output the highest performing devices. Their goal is to introduce flexible and printable materials into neuromorphic devices without sacrificing performance and to enable a new on-sensor computing paradigm. Their future work will concentrate on designing neuromorphic circuits using their devices that can operate between biological and digital interfaces in real-world applications such as soil-sensing or personalized medicine.