All posts tagged: neuromorphic computing

New brain-inspired device sharply reduces AI hardware energy use

New brain-inspired device sharply reduces AI hardware energy use

A tiny change at the boundary between two oxide layers may point to a less power-hungry future for artificial intelligence. Researchers led by the University of Cambridge have built a nanoelectronic device that behaves a bit like a brain synapse, storing and processing information in the same place instead of shuttling data back and forth as standard computer chips do. That matters because today’s AI hardware burns through vast amounts of electricity, and the demand is still rising. The team’s device is a memristor, a component designed to mimic how neurons and synapses adjust their connections. In this case, the memristor is made from a modified form of hafnium oxide containing strontium and titanium. The work appears in Science Advances. “Energy consumption is one of the key challenges in current AI hardware,” lead author Dr. Babak Bakhit of Cambridge’s Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy said in a statement. “To address that, you need devices with extremely low currents, excellent stability, outstanding uniformity across switching cycles and devices, and the ability to switch between many …

Introducing the world’s first AI semiconductor that thinks with hydrogen

Introducing the world’s first AI semiconductor that thinks with hydrogen

Computers have always kept thinking and remembering in separate rooms. The processor works over here; the memory sits over there. Every time one needs to talk to the other, data travels back and forth across that gap, burning time and energy at a scale that has become one of the central bottlenecks of modern AI. A research team at DGIST in South Korea has built something that collapses that gap, and they did it using one of the smallest, most mobile elements in the periodic table. The device, developed by Senior Researcher Lee Hyun Jun and Associate Researcher Noh Hee Yeon from DGIST’s Division of Nanotechnology, is an artificial synapse that uses electrically controlled hydrogen movement to simultaneously perform computation and store results. The team describes it as the world’s first two-terminal AI semiconductor to achieve this using hydrogen as its active switching mechanism. The findings were published in ACS Nano. (a) Schematic of the proposed stacked structure of the memory device with hydrogen injection and control, (b) cross-sectional TEM image and EDS color mapping …