Silicon-based electronics have reached a physical impasse, where their rigid and brittle nature makes them incompatible with the soft, dynamic surfaces of the human body. This mechanical mismatch often triggers immune responses and tissue damage, while the resulting pile of electronic waste creates a global environmental burden.
In the International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing , Prof. Tae Geun Kim's team at Korea University and Dr. Tukaram D. Dongale's team at Shivaji University outline a shift toward a highly adaptable alternative: transient, flexible memristors. The researchers highlight recent advances in flexible, biocompatible, and biodegradable materials designed for brain-inspired computing. These devices operate like the synapses in a human brain, merging data storage and computing into a single, highly efficient unit.
Rather than relying on rigid silicon wafers, these artificial synapses are built from soft, bio-friendly materials ranging from polymers to natural silk fibroin and transient metals.
They function through a mechanism called resistive switching. When voltage hits the material, ions physically migrate to build microscopic conductive filaments. It works exactly like hikers trampling a new trail through dense brush: the more frequently an electrical pulse travels that route, the wider and more established the conductive path becomes, allowing the hardware to physically learn and adapt to incoming data.
Laboratory prototypes of these flexible memristors demonstrate immense capabilities. The devices can bend to a radius of just 2.5 millimeters while maintaining extreme electrical stability, easily achieving a high ON/OFF switching ratio. Because they mimic biological brains, they consume energy on the scale of femtojoules, a fraction of the power required by conventional transistors.
Most importantly, these materials are designed to vanish after use, offering a sustainable and eco-friendly solution. Depending on the chemical design, these components can dissolve completely in water in as little as 30 seconds for secure, temporary data applications, or harmlessly degrade in biological fluids over six months for postoperative medical implants.
For the manufacturing community, this signals a massive operational shift. Standard chip fabrication requires inflexible substrates, vacuum chambers, and extreme temperatures. In contrast, these soft, biocompatible materials can be processed at room temperature using solution-based printing techniques. This allows factory floors to adopt continuous, roll-to-roll manufacturing for large-area sensory arrays, drastically cutting production costs, energy overhead, and toxic byproducts.
Despite these material successes, these dissolving neuromorphic circuits remain mostly lab-scale prototypes. Scaling them to global assembly lines faces severe hurdles, primarily regarding cycle-to-cycle and cell-to-cell variability.
Natural biomaterials are highly sensitive to ambient humidity and temperature fluctuations, causing the microscopic conductive filaments to form inconsistently. To move from the laboratory to commercial production, engineers must perfect thin-film encapsulation strategies and barrier layers to shield the active components from environmental moisture.
Additionally, researchers must develop fully bioresorbable conducting polymers to replace the residual metal electrodes that currently limit full device integration.
Once these reliability and uniformity bottlenecks are solved, the manufacturing industry can reliably transition these soft, disappearing circuits into mainstream medical and consumer electronics.
DOI: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/2631-7990/ae542d
International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing (IJEM, IF: 21.3 ) is dedicated to publishing the best advanced manufacturing research with extreme dimensions to address both the fundamental scientific challenges and significant engineering needs.
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International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing
Flexible, biocompatible, and biodegradable memristive materials and devices for neuromorphic computing
8-Apr-2026