An artificial synapse based on oxygen-ion-driven electrochemical random-access memory (O-ECRAM) devices is a promising candidate for building neural networks embodied in neuromorphic hardware. However, achieving commercial-level learning accuracy in O-ECRAM… Click to show full abstract
An artificial synapse based on oxygen-ion-driven electrochemical random-access memory (O-ECRAM) devices is a promising candidate for building neural networks embodied in neuromorphic hardware. However, achieving commercial-level learning accuracy in O-ECRAM synapses, analog conductance tuning at fast speed, and multibit storage capacity is challenging because of the lack of Joule heating, which restricts O2- ionic transport. Here, we propose the use of an atomically thin heater of monolayer graphene as a low-power heating source for O-ECRAM to increase thermally activated O2- migration within channel-electrolyte layers. Heating from graphene manipulates the electrolyte activation energy to establish and maintain discrete analog states in the O-ECRAM channel. Benefiting from the integrated graphene heater, the O-ECRAM features long retention (>104 s), good stability (switching accuracy <98% for >103 training pulses), multilevel analog states for 6-bit analog weight storage with near-ideal linear switching, and 95% pattern-identification accuracy. The findings demonstrate the usefulness of 2D materials as integrated heating elements in artificial synapse chips to accelerate neuromorphic computation.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.