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Ferroelectric Semiconductors: A New Way to Control Light and Electricity
Wednesday, January 22, 2025
But wait, there's more! These FeSFETs also show great durability and memory retention, meaning they can keep their states for a long time without losing their special properties.
Scientists then used some cool tools like Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM) and optoelectronic measurements to study how electrons move around in these different states. They found that the carrier transport and the physics behind it in various polarization states were interesting and important to understand.
In a fun test, these transistors were trained to recognize handwritten digits from the MNIST dataset. They did an awesome job, getting it right about 95. 5% of the time.
This discovery is like opening a new door for designing advanced electronic and optoelectronic devices. It gives scientists new ideas and theoretical support for making devices that can both remember information and compute, like a smart sensor that can think and learn.
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