12 - 16 April 2026
Strasbourg, France
Conference 14085 > Paper 14085-37
Paper 14085-37

Synaptic plasticity based on photo-activated materials for mobile neuromorphic computing

16 April 2026 • 11:50 - 12:10 CEST | Luxembourg/Salon 2 (Niveau/Level 0)

Abstract

In the era of artificial intelligence, neuromorphic computing systems that emulate the efficiency of the human brain have emerged as promising alternatives to conventional architectures. The exploration of novel materials capable of low-power, high-speed optical operation is becoming increasingly critical. Among these, stimulus-responsive photoluminescent materials have attracted interest due to optical behaviors that resemble synaptic plasticity. We present a photonic computing layer based on carbon nanomaterials exhibiting dual fluorescence-phosphorescence emission and photoactivation dynamics, mimicking short- and long-term memory as well as synaptic potentiation. The layer was engineered to convert optical inputs into characteristic visible emission time decays. To evaluate its computational capability, the MNIST digit classification task was employed. Due to the material’s brightness, the optical responses were recorded using a mobile device by sampling discrete time points from the emission dynamics. These readouts were used as inputs to an artificial neural network for offline training and inference. The system achieved a maximum training accuracy of 95.3% and a testing accuracy of 93.5%. These results demonstrate that the proposed photonic layer can perform optical computation suitable for neuromorphic information processing. Furthermore, mobile-based implementation highlights the system’s accessibility and portability, enabling low-cost deployment with consumer-grade devices.

Presenter

Instituto de Telecomunicações (Portugal)
Paulo André’s doctoral studies in Physics at the University of Aveiro (UA) were completed in 2002. Focused on optoelectronic components for high-speed networks, this research was conducted in Instituto de Telecomunicações (IT), and it laid the foundation for his fascination with light and communications. Today, Paulo is a Full Professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering department (DEEC) at Instituto Superior Técnico (IST) and serves as a member of the IST Scientific Council and president of the IT Lisbon site. Paulo’s contributions have included the development of state-of-the-art science for optical communications, optical sensors, photonics, and quantum technologies. His professional endeavours extend to the successful coordination of R&D projects, including public and private sectors. Proficient in managing multifaceted teams, Paulo has held administrative roles within UA, IST, and IT.
Application tracks: AI/ML
Author
Ana R. Bastos
Instituto de Telecomunicações (Portugal)
Author
Department of Physics and CICECO-Aveiro Institute of Materials, University of Aveiro, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal (Portugal)
Author
Department of Physics and CICECO-Aveiro Institute of Materials, University of Aveiro, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal (Portugal)
Author
Maria R. Ferreira
Department of Physics and CICECO-Aveiro Institute of Materials, University of Aveiro, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal (Portugal)
Presenter/Author
Instituto de Telecomunicações (Portugal)