Integrated Artificial Neurons from Metal Halide Perovskites
Abstract
Hardware neural networks could perform certain computational tasks orders of magnitude more energy-efficiently than conventional computers. Artificial neurons are a key component of these networks and are currently implemented with electronic circuits based on capacitors and transistors. However, artificial neurons based on memristive devices are a promising alternative, owing to their potentially smaller size and inherent stochasticity. But despite their promise, demonstrations of memristive artificial neurons have so far been limited. Here we demonstrate a fully on-chip artificial neuron based on microscale electrodes and halide perovskite semiconductors as the active layer. By connecting a halide perovskite memristive device in series with a capacitor, the device demonstrates stochastic leaky integrate-and-fire behavior, with an energy consumption of 20 to 60 pJ per spike, lower than that of a biological neuron. We simulate populations of our neuron and show that the stochastic firing allows the detection of sub-threshold inputs. The neuron can easily be integrated with previously-demonstrated halide perovskite artificial synapses in energy-efficient neural networks.
- Publication:
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arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- November 2024
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2411.19820
- Bibcode:
- 2024arXiv241119820D
- Keywords:
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- Condensed Matter - Materials Science;
- Computer Science - Emerging Technologies;
- Computer Science - Neural and Evolutionary Computing