Few- and single-molecule reservoir computing experimentally demonstrated with surface-enhanced Raman scattering and ion gating

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Abstract

Molecule-based reservoir computing (RC) is promising for achieving low power consumption neuromorphic computing, although the information-processing capability of small numbers of molecules is not clear. Here, we report a few- and single-molecule RC that uses the molecular vibration dynamics in the para-mercaptobenzoic acid (pMBA) detected by surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) with tungsten oxide nanorod/silver nanoparticles. The Raman signals of the pMBA molecules, adsorbed at the SERS active site of the nanorod, were reversibly perturbated by the application of voltage-induced local pH changes near the molecules, and then used to perform time-series analysis tasks. Despite the small number of molecules used, our system achieved good performance, including >95% accuracy in various nonlinear waveform transformations, 94.3% accuracy in solving a second-order nonlinear dynamic system, and a prediction error of 25.0 milligrams per deciliter in a 15-minute-ahead blood glucose level prediction. Our work provides a concept of few-molecular computing with practical computation capabilities.

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APA

Nishioka, D., Shingaya, Y., Tsuchiya, T., Higuchi, T., & Terabe, K. (2024). Few- and single-molecule reservoir computing experimentally demonstrated with surface-enhanced Raman scattering and ion gating. Science Advances, 10(9). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adk6438

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