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New metal-semiconductor interface for brain-inspired computing by Staff Writers Groningen, Netherlands (SPX) Feb 03, 2018
One of the big challenges in computer architecture is integrating storage, memory and processing in one unit. This would make computers faster and more energy efficient. University of Groningen physicists have taken a big step towards this goal by combining a niobium doped strontium titanate (SrTiO3) semiconductor with ferromagnetic cobalt. At the interface, this creates a spin-memristor with storage abilities, paving the way for neuromorphic computing architectures. The results were published on 22 January in Scientific Reports. The device developed by the physicists combines the memristor effect of semiconductors with a spin-based phenomenon called tunnelling anisotropic magnetoresistance (TAMR) and works at room temperature. The SrTiO3 semiconductor has a non-volatile variable resistance when interfaced with cobalt: an electric field can be used to change it from low to high resistance and back. This is known as the electroresistance effect.
Tunability 'This means we can store additional information in a non-volatile way in the memristor, thus creating a very simple and elegant integrated spin-memristor device that operates at room temperature', explains Professor of Spintronics of Functional Materials Tamalika Banerjee. She works at the Zernike Institute for Advanced Materials at the University of Groningen. So far, attempts to combine spin-based storage, memory and computing have been hampered by a complex architecture in addition to other factors.
Brain The same coexistence can't be realized with silicon as a semiconductor: 'You need the heavy atoms in SrTiO3 for the spin orbit coupling at the interface that is responsible for the large TAMR effect at room temperature.' These devices could be used in a brain-like computer architecture. They would act like the synapses that connect the neurons. The synapse responds to an external stimulus, but this response also depends on the synapse's memory of previous stimuli. 'We are now considering how to create a bio-inspired computer architecture based on our discovery.' Such a system would move away from the classical Von Neumann architecture. The big advantage is that it is expected to use less energy and thus produce less heat. 'This will be useful for the "Internet of Things", where connecting different devices and networks generates unsustainable amounts of heat.'
Energy efficiency 'We are currently working on that. But it works well as it is, so we are also thinking of building a more complex system with such spin-memristors to test actual algorithms for specific cognition capabilities of the human brain.' Banerjee's device is relatively simple. Scaling it up to a full computing architecture is the next big step. How to integrate these devices in a parallel computing architecture that mimics the working of the brain is a question that fascinates Banerjee. 'Our brain is a fantastic computer, in the sense that it can process vast amounts of information in parallel with an energy efficiency that is far superior to that of a supercomputer.' Banerjee's team's findings could lead to new architectures for brain-inspired computing. Reference: Alexander M. Kamerbeek, Roald Ruiter and Tamalika Banerjee: Large room-temperature tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistance and electroresistance in single ferromagnet/Nb:SrTiO3 Schottky devices. Scientific Reports 22 January 2018
Method uses DNA, nanoparticles and lithography to make optically active structures Chicago IL (SPX) Feb 02, 2018 Northwestern University researchers have developed a first-of-its-kind technique for creating entirely new classes of optical materials and devices that could lead to light bending and cloaking devices - news to make the ears of Star Trek's Spock perk up. Using DNA as a key tool, the interdisciplinary team took gold nanoparticles of different sizes and shapes and arranged them in two and three dimensions to form optically active superlattices. Structures with specific configurations could be progr ... read more
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