Jiawei Wang, Xin Wang, Yiting Li, Guoliang Yu, Yang Qiu, Yan Li, Mingmin Zhu, Hao-Miao Zhou
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
High-performance artificial synaptic devices that emulate the functions of biological synapses are crucial for advancing energy-efficient brain-inspired computing systems. Current studies predominantly focus on memristive devices, which achieve synaptic functions through nonvolatile electric current-assisted carrier modulation. However, these methods often suffer from excessive energy consumption. Here, a type of low-energy-consumption artificial synapse based on strain-mediated electric-field control of magnetic skyrmion's radius is demonstrated, where the energy consumption is 10 fJ per state and the non-volatility is achieved by local ferroelectric domain switching under bipolar electric fields. The proposed skyrmion-based synaptic device can replicate essential synaptic behaviors, including long-term potentiation (LTP), long-term depression (LTD), paired-pulse facilitation, paired-pulse depression, and spiking-time-dependent plasticity, aligning it closely with the biological synaptic system. The synaptic weight change and non-linearity of the artificial synapse are emulated by modulating the magnetic skyrmion's radius through precisely engineering the applied electric-field pulses. Simulation using the Modified National Institute of Standards and Technology database reveals that the pattern recognition rate decreases exponentially with increasing LTP/LTD non-linearity, quantifying the effect of the LTP/LTD non-linearity on the pattern recognition rate. This work underscores the potential of strain-mediated electric-field control of single skyrmion's radius as a groundbreaking approach for developing high density and low-energy consumption artificial synaptic devices.
期刊介绍:
Applied Physics Letters (APL) features concise, up-to-date reports on significant new findings in applied physics. Emphasizing rapid dissemination of key data and new physical insights, APL offers prompt publication of new experimental and theoretical papers reporting applications of physics phenomena to all branches of science, engineering, and modern technology.
In addition to regular articles, the journal also publishes invited Fast Track, Perspectives, and in-depth Editorials which report on cutting-edge areas in applied physics.
APL Perspectives are forward-looking invited letters which highlight recent developments or discoveries. Emphasis is placed on very recent developments, potentially disruptive technologies, open questions and possible solutions. They also include a mini-roadmap detailing where the community should direct efforts in order for the phenomena to be viable for application and the challenges associated with meeting that performance threshold. Perspectives are characterized by personal viewpoints and opinions of recognized experts in the field.
Fast Track articles are invited original research articles that report results that are particularly novel and important or provide a significant advancement in an emerging field. Because of the urgency and scientific importance of the work, the peer review process is accelerated. If, during the review process, it becomes apparent that the paper does not meet the Fast Track criterion, it is returned to a normal track.