Self-Selective
Multi-Terminal Memtransistor Crossbar
Array for In-Memory Computing
Posted on 2021-01-14 - 16:03
Two-terminal resistive switching
devices are commonly plagued with
longstanding scientific issues including interdevice variability and
sneak current that lead to computational errors and high-power consumption.
This necessitates the integration of a separate selector in a one-transistor-one-RRAM
(1T-1R) configuration to mitigate crosstalk issue, which compromises
circuit footprint. Here, we demonstrate a multi-terminal memtransistor
crossbar array with increased parallelism in programming via independent gate control, which allows in situ computation
at a dense cell size of 3–4.5 F2 and a minimal sneak
current of 0.1 nA. Moreover, a low switching energy of 20 fJ/bit is
achieved at a voltage of merely 0.42 V. The architecture is capable
of performing multiply-and-accumulate operation, a core computing
task for pattern classification. A high MNIST recognition accuracy
of 96.87% is simulated owing to the linear synaptic plasticity. Such
computing paradigm is deemed revolutionary toward enabling data-centric
applications in artificial intelligence and Internet-of-things.