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Chalcogenide phase-change devices for neuromorphic photonic computing.

Authors :
Brückerhoff-Plückelmann, Frank
Feldmann, Johannes
Wright, C. David
Bhaskaran, Harish
Pernice, Wolfram H. P.
Source :
Journal of Applied Physics; 4/21/2021, Vol. 129 Issue 15, p1-8, 8p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The integration of artificial intelligence systems into daily applications like speech recognition and autonomous driving rapidly increases the amount of data generated and processed. However, satisfying the hardware requirements with the conventional von Neumann architecture remains challenging due to the von Neumann bottleneck. Therefore, new architectures inspired by the working principles of the human brain are developed, and they are called neuromorphic computing. The key principles of neuromorphic computing are in-memory computing to reduce data shuffling and parallelization to decrease computation time. One promising framework for neuromorphic computing is phase-change photonics. By switching to the optical domain, parallelization is inherently possible by wavelength division multiplexing, and high modulation speeds can be deployed. Non-volatile phase-change materials are used to perform multiplications and non-linear operations in an energetically efficient manner. Here, we present two prototypes of neuromorphic photonic computation units based on chalcogenide phase-change materials. First is a neuromorphic hardware accelerator designed to carry out matrix vector multiplication in convolutional neural networks. Due to the neuromorphic architecture, this prototype can already operate at tera-multiply-accumulate per second speeds. Second is an all-optical spiking neuron, which can serve as a building block for large-scale artificial neural networks. Here, the whole computation is carried out in the optical domain, and the device only needs an electrical interface for data input and readout. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00218979
Volume :
129
Issue :
15
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Applied Physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
149946371
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0042549