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Energy Efficient Computing R&D Roadmap Outline for Automated Vehicles

Aitken, Rob; Nakahira, Yorie; Strachan, John P.; Bresniker, Kirk; Young, Ian; Li, Zhiyong; Klebanoff, Leonard E.; Burchard, Carrie; Kumar, Suhas; Marinella, Matthew; Severa, William M.; Talin, Albert A.; Vineyard, Craig M.; Mailhiot, Christian; Dick, Robert; Lu, Wei; Mogill, Jace

Automated vehicles (AV) hold great promise for improving safety, as well as reducing congestion and emissions. In order to make automated vehicles commercially viable, a reliable and highperformance vehicle-based computing platform that meets ever-increasing computational demands will be key. Given the state of existing digital computing technology, designers will face significant challenges in meeting the needs of highly automated vehicles without exceeding thermal constraints or consuming a large portion of the energy available on vehicles, thus reducing range between charges or refills. The accompanying increases in energy for AV use will place increased demand on energy production and distribution infrastructure, which also motivates increasing computational energy efficiency.

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High-resolution planar electron beam induced current in bulk diodes using high-energy electrons

Applied Physics Letters

Warecki, Zoey; Allerman, A.A.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Talin, Albert A.; Cumings, John

Understanding the impact of high-energy electron radiation on device characteristics remains critical for the expanding use of semiconductor electronics in space-borne applications and other radiation harsh environments. Here, we report on in situ measurements of high-energy electron radiation effects on the hole diffusion length in low threading dislocation density homoepitaxial bulk n-GaN Schottky diodes using electron beam induced current (EBIC) in high-voltage scanning electron microscopy mode. Despite the large interaction volume in this system, quantitative EBIC imaging is possible due to the sustained collimation of the incident electron beam. This approach enables direct measurement of electron radiation effects without having to thin the specimen. Using a combination of experimental EBIC measurements and Monte Carlo simulations of electron trajectories, we determine a hole diffusion length of 264 ± 11 nm for n-GaN. Irradiation with 200 kV electron beam with an accumulated dose of 24 × 1016 electrons cm−2 led to an approximate 35% decrease in the minority carrier diffusion length.

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Carrier Diffusion Lengths in Continuously Grown and Etched-and-Regrown GaN Pin Diodes

IEEE Electron Device Letters

Celio, K.C.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Talin, Albert A.; Allerman, A.A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Pickrell, Gregory W.; Leonard, Francois

Advanced GaN power devices are promising for many applications in high power electronics but performance limitations due to material quality in etched-and-regrown junctions prevent their widespread use. Carrier diffusion length is a critical parameter that not only determines device performance but is also a diagnostic of material quality. Here we present the use of electron-beam induced current to measure carrier diffusion lengths in continuously grown and etched-and-regrown GaN pin diodes as models for interfaces in more complex devices. Variations in the quality of the etched-and-regrown junctions are observed and shown to be due to the degradation of the n-type material. We observe an etched-and-regrown junction with properties comparable to a continuously grown junction.

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Identification of localized radiation damage in power MOSFETs using EBIC imaging

Applied Physics Letters

Ashby, David S.; Garland, D.; Vizkelethy, Gyorgy; Marinella, Matthew; Mclain, Michael; Llinas, J.P.; Talin, Albert A.

The rapidly increasing use of electronics in high-radiation environments and the continued evolution in transistor architectures and materials demand improved methods to characterize the potential damaging effects of radiation on device performance. Here, electron-beam-induced current is used to map hot-carrier transport in model metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors irradiated with a 300 KeV focused He+ beam as a localized line spanning across the gate and bulk Si. By correlating the damage to the electronic properties and combining these results with simulations, the contribution of spatially localized radiation damage on the device characteristics is obtained. This identified damage, caused by the He+ beam, is attributed to localized interfacial Pb centers and delocalized positive fixed-charges, as surmised from simulations. Comprehension of the long-term interaction and mobility of radiation-induced damage are key for future design of rad-hard devices.

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Stabilized open metal sites in bimetallic metal-organic framework catalysts for hydrogen production from alcohols

Journal of Materials Chemistry A

Allendorf, Mark; Snider, Jonathan L.; Su, Ji; Verma, Pragya; El Gabaly, Farid; Sugar, Joshua D.; Chen, Luning; Chames, Jeffery M.; Talin, Albert A.; Dun, Chaochao; Urban, Jeffrey J.; Stavila, Vitalie; Prendergast, David; Somorjai, Gabor A.

Liquid organic hydrogen carriers such as alcohols and polyols are a high-capacity means of transporting and reversibly storing hydrogen that demands effective catalysts to drive the (de)hydrogenation reactions under mild conditions. We employed a combined theory/experiment approach to develop MOF-74 catalysts for alcohol dehydrogenation and examine the performance of the open metal sites (OMS), which have properties analogous to the active sites in high-performance single-site catalysts and homogeneous catalysts. Methanol dehydrogenation was used as a model reaction system for assessing the performance of five monometallic M-MOF-74 variants (M = Co, Cu, Mg, Mn, Ni). Co-MOF-74 and Ni-MOF-74 give the highest H2 productivity. However, Ni-MOF-74 is unstable under reaction conditions and forms metallic nickel particles. To improve catalyst activity and stability, bimetallic (NixMg1-x)-MOF-74 catalysts were developed that stabilize the Ni OMS and promote the dehydrogenation reaction. An optimal composition exists at (Ni0.32Mg0.68)-MOF-74 that gives the greatest H2 productivity, up to 203 mL gcat-1 min-1 at 300 °C, and maintains 100% selectivity to CO and H2 between 225-275 °C. The optimized catalyst is also active for the dehydrogenation of other alcohols. DFT calculations reveal that synergistic interactions between the open metal site and the organic linker lead to lower reaction barriers in the MOF catalysts compared to the open metal site alone. This work expands the suite of hydrogen-related reactions catalyzed by MOF-74 which includes recent work on hydroformulation and our earlier reports of aryl-ether hydrogenolysis. Moreover, it highlights the use of bimetallic frameworks as an effective strategy for stabilizing a high density of catalytically active open metal sites. This journal is

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Ionizing Radiation Effects in SONOS-Based Neuromorphic Inference Accelerators

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Xiao, Tianyao P.; Bennett, Christopher; Agarwal, Sapan; Hughart, David R.; Barnaby, Hugh J.; Puchner, Helmut; Prabhakar, Venkatraman; Talin, Albert A.; Marinella, Matthew

We evaluate the sensitivity of neuromorphic inference accelerators based on silicon-oxide-nitride-oxide-silicon (SONOS) charge trap memory arrays to total ionizing dose (TID) effects. Data retention statistics were collected for 16 Mbit of 40-nm SONOS digital memory exposed to ionizing radiation from a Co-60 source, showing good retention of the bits up to the maximum dose of 500 krad(Si). Using this data, we formulate a rate-equation-based model for the TID response of trapped charge carriers in the ONO stack and predict the effect of TID on intermediate device states between 'program' and 'erase.' This model is then used to simulate arrays of low-power, analog SONOS devices that store 8-bit neural network weights and support in situ matrix-vector multiplication. We evaluate the accuracy of the irradiated SONOS-based inference accelerator on two image recognition tasks - CIFAR-10 and the challenging ImageNet data set - using state-of-the-art convolutional neural networks, such as ResNet-50. We find that across the data sets and neural networks evaluated, the accelerator tolerates a maximum TID between 10 and 100 krad(Si), with deeper networks being more susceptible to accuracy losses due to TID.

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In situ Parallel Training of Analog Neural Network Using Electrochemical Random-Access Memory

Frontiers in Neuroscience (Online)

Talin, Albert A.; Li, Yiyang; Fuller, Elliot J.; Bennett, Christopher; Xiao, Tianyao P.; Salleo, Alberto; Melianas, Armantas; Isele, Erik; Marinella, Matthew; Tao, Hanbo

In-memory computing based on non-volatile resistive memory can significantly improve the energy efficiency of artificial neural networks. However, accurate in situ training has been challenging due to the nonlinear and stochastic switching of the resistive memory elements. One promising analog memory is the electrochemical random-access memory (ECRAM), also known as the redox transistor. Its low write currents and linear switching properties across hundreds of analog states enable accurate and massively parallel updates of a full crossbar array, which yield rapid and energy-efficient training. While simulations predict that ECRAM based neural networks achieve high training accuracy at significantly higher energy efficiency than digital implementations, these predictions have not been experimentally achieved. In this work, we train a 3 × 3 array of ECRAM devices that learns to discriminate several elementary logic gates (AND, OR, NAND). We record the evolution of the network’s synaptic weights during parallel in situ (on-line) training, with outer product updates. Due to linear and reproducible device switching characteristics, our crossbar simulations not only accurately simulate the epochs to convergence, but also quantitatively capture the evolution of weights in individual devices. The implementation of the first in situ parallel training together with strong agreement with simulation results provides a significant advance toward developing ECRAM into larger crossbar arrays for artificial neural network accelerators, which could enable orders of magnitude improvements in energy efficiency of deep neural networks.

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Ultralow Voltage GaN Vacuum Nanodiodes in Air

Nano Letters

Sapkota, Keshab R.; Leonard, Francois; Talin, Albert A.; Gunning, Brendan P.; Kazanowska, Barbara A.; Jones, Kevin S.; Wang, George T.

The III-nitride semiconductors have many attractive properties for field-emission vacuum electronics, including high thermal and chemical stability, low electron affinity, and high breakdown fields. Here, we report top-down fabricated gallium nitride (GaN)-based nanoscale vacuum electron diodes operable in air, with record ultralow turn-on voltages down to ∼0.24 V and stable high field-emission currents, tested up to several microamps for single-emitter devices. We leverage a scalable, top-down GaN nanofabrication method leading to damage-free and smooth surfaces. Gap-dependent and pressure-dependent studies provide new insights into the design of future, integrated nanogap vacuum electron devices. The results show promise for a new class of high-performance and robust, on-chip, III-nitride-based vacuum nanoelectronics operable in air or reduced vacuum.

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Filament-Free Bulk Resistive Memory Enables Deterministic Analogue Switching

Advanced Materials

Talin, Albert A.; Fuller, Elliot J.; Li, Yiyang; Marinella, Matthew; Sugar, Joshua D.; Bennett, Christopher; Bartsch, Michael S.; Horton, Robert D.; Yoo, Sangmin; Ashby, David S.; Lu, Edwin

Digital computing is nearing its physical limits as computing needs and energy consumption rapidly increase. Analogue-memory-based neuromorphic computing can be orders of magnitude more energy efficient at data-intensive tasks like deep neural networks, but has been limited by the inaccurate and unpredictable switching of analogue resistive memory. Filamentary resistive random access memory (RRAM) suffers from stochastic switching due to the random kinetic motion of discrete defects in the nanometer-sized filament. In this work, this stochasticity is overcome by incorporating a solid electrolyte interlayer, in this case, yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ), toward eliminating filaments. Filament-free, bulk-RRAM cells instead store analogue states using the bulk point defect concentration, yielding predictable switching because the statistical ensemble behavior of oxygen vacancy defects is deterministic even when individual defects are stochastic. Both experiments and modeling show bulk-RRAM devices using TiO2-X switching layers and YSZ electrolytes yield deterministic and linear analogue switching for efficient inference and training. Bulk-RRAM solves many outstanding issues with memristor unpredictability that have inhibited commercialization, and can, therefore, enable unprecedented new applications for energy-efficient neuromorphic computing. Beyond RRAM, this work shows how harnessing bulk point defects in ionic materials can be used to engineer deterministic nanoelectronic materials and devices.

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High-Performance Solid-State Lithium-Ion Battery with Mixed 2D and 3D Electrodes

ACS Applied Energy Materials

Talin, Albert A.; Ashby, David S.

It is well established that the miniaturization of batteries has not kept pace with the miniaturization of electronics. Three-dimensional (3D) batteries, which were developed with the intent of improving microbattery performance, have had limited success because of fabrication challenges and material constraints. Solid-state, 3D batteries have been particularly susceptible to these shortcomings. In this paper, we demonstrate that the incorporation of a high-conductivity, solid electrolyte is the key to achieving a nonplanar solid-state battery with high areal capacity and high power density. The model 2.5D platform used in this study is a modification of the more typical 3D configuration in that it is comprised of a cathode array of pillars (3D) and a planar (two-dimensional, 2D) anode. This 2.5D geometry exploits the use of a high-conductivity, ionogel electrolyte (10-3 S cm-1), which interpenetrates the 3D electrode array. The 2.5D battery offers high areal energy densities from the post array, while the high-conductivity, solid electrolyte enables high power densities (3.7 mWh cm-2 at 2.8 mW cm-2). The reported solid-state 2.5D device exceeds the energy and power densities of any 3D solid-state system and the derived multiphysics model provides guidance for achieving significantly higher energy and power densities.

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Redox transistors based on TiO2 for analogue neuromorphic computing

Li, Yiyang; Fuller, Elliot J.; Talin, Albert A.

The ability to train deep neural networks on large data sets have made significant impacts onto artificial intelligence, but consume significant amounts of energy due to the need to move information from memory to logic units. In-memory "neuromorphic" computing presents an alternative framework that processes information directly on memory elements. In-memory computing has been limited by the poor performance of the analogue information storage element, often phase-change memory or memristors. To solve this problem, we developed two types of "redox transistors" using TiO2 (anatase) which stores analogue information states through the electrochemical concentration of dopants in the crystal. The first type of redox transistor uses lithium as the electrochemical dopant ion, and its key advantage is low operating voltage. The second uses oxygen vacancies as the dopant, which is CMOS compatible and can retain state even when scaled to nanosized dimensions. Both devices offer significant advantages in terms of predictable analogue switching over conventional filamentary-based devices, and provide a significant advance in developing materials and devices for neuromorphic computing.

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A Novel Metal-to-Insulator Transition Found Promising for Neuromorphic Computing

Matter

Talin, Albert A.

Materials exhibiting metal-to-insulator transitions (MITs) could enable low power neuromorphic computing, but progress is hindered by insufficient mechanistic understanding. In this issue of Matter, Banerjee and colleagues describe with intricate detail a new MIT mechanism in β′-CuxV2O5, with potential applications to neuromorphic computing. Materials exhibiting metal-to-insulator transitions (MITs) could enable low power neuromorphic computing, but progress is hindered by insufficient mechanistic understanding. In this issue of Matter, Banerjee and colleagues describe with intricate detail a new MIT mechanism in β′-CuxV2O5, with potential applications to neuromorphic computing.

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Origami Terahertz Detectors Realized by Inkjet Printing of Carbon Nanotube Inks

ACS Applied Nano Materials

Llinas, Juan P.; Hekmaty, Michelle A.; Talin, Albert A.; Leonard, Francois

Terahertz (THz) technology has shown promise for several applications, but limitations in sources and detectors have prevented broader adoption. Existing THz detectors are rigid, planar, and fabricated using complex technology, making it difficult to integrate into systems. Here we demonstrate THz detectors fabricated by inkjet printing on submicrometer thick, ultraflexible substrates. By developing p- and n-type carbon nanotube inks, we achieve optically thick p–n junction and p-type devices, enabling antenna-free pixels for THz imaging. By further designing and folding the printed devices, we realize origami-inspired architectures with improved performance over single devices, achieving a noise-equivalent power of 12 nW/Hz1/2 at room temperature with no voltage bias. Our approach opens avenues for nonplanar, foldable, deployable, insertable, and retractable THz detectors for applications in nondestructive inspection.

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The organic redox transistor for neuromorphic computing

Nanotechnology

Talin, Albert A.

Inspired by the in-memory computing architectures of biological systems, neuromorphic computing using crossbar arrays of artificial synapses based on non-volatile memory (NVM) devices with variable conductances has emerged as a new paradigm to enable massively parallel and ultra-low power computing hardware for data centric applications. Although inference has been demonstrated successfully using crossbars based on a variety of NMV technologies, efficient learning and scaling to large arrays (>106 elements) remains a challenge due to the synaptic elements' non-ideal electrical characteristics which degrades ANN accuracy. A further challenge is that in the conductive state memristors draw large currents >μA resulting in significant voltage drops in the interconnect wires and increased probability of failure in scaled arrays. We suggest the organic polymer redox transistor (RT) is an alternate approach that could solve many of these challenges, enabling both inference and parallel outer product updates, as recently demonstrated by Fuller et al. An RT consists of redox-active channel and gate electrodes in contact with a liquid or solid electrolyte. lon insertion through the electrolyte controls the channel electronic conductivity, while electron transfer through an external circuit maintains overall charge neutrality. Unlike a rechargeable battery, in the RT the voltage built-up across the electrolyte is kept to a minimum (typically <100 mV) by using the same material for the gate and channel. Elimination of the voltage offset simplifies integration of the RT into programmable arrays by enabling the use of various selectors. RTs based on inorganic and organic materials have been recently demonstrated with conductance tuning occurring at potentials of just a few mV and hundreds to thousands of linearly and symmetrically programmable conductance states, enabling near ideal accuracy in neural network simulations. Introduced in the 1980's, redox transistors with metallic gate electrodes and organic channel materials, also known as organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs), have been explored for a variety of applications such as chem- and bio-sensing, neural interfaces, and low cost printed circuits. A typical channel material for OECTs is the conducting polymer poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) doped with poly(styrene sulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS). PEDOT is a p-type semiconducting polymer with mobile positively charged polarons that hop chain-to-chain.

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Evaluation of the Electrochemo-Mechanically Induced Stress in All-Solid-State Li-Ion Batteries

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Talin, Albert A.

The mechanical degradation of all-solid-state Li-ion batteries (ASSLBs) is expected to be more severe than that in traditional Li-ion batteries with liquid electrolytes due to the additional mechanical constraints imposed by the solid electrolyte on the deformation of electrodes. Cracks and fractures could occur both inside the solid electrolyte (SE) and at the SE/electrode interfconce. A coupled electrochemical-mechanical model was developed and solved by the Finite Element Method (FEM) to evaluate the stress development in ASSLBs. Two sources of volume change were considered, namely the expansion/shrinkage of electrodes due to lithium concentration change and the interphase formation at the SE/electrode interface due to the decomposition of SEs. The most plausible solid electrolyte decomposition reactions and their associated volume change were predicted by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. It was found that the stress associated with a volume change due to solid electrolyte decomposition can be much more significant than that of electrode volumetric changes associated with Li insertion/extraction. This model can be used to design 3D ASSLB architectures to minimize their internal stress generation.

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Dynamic Tuning of Gap Plasmon Resonances Using a Solid-State Electrochromic Device

Nano Letters

Li, Yiyang; Van De Groep, Jorik; Talin, Albert A.; Brongersma, Mark L.

Plasmonic antennas and metasurfaces can effectively control light-matter interactions, and this facilitates a deterministic design of optical materials properties, including structural color. However, these optical properties are generally fixed after synthesis and fabrication, while many modern-day optics applications require active, low-power, and nonvolatile tuning. These needs have spurred broad research activities aimed at identifying materials and resonant structures capable of achieving large, dynamic changes in optical properties, especially in the challenging visible spectral range. In this work, we demonstrate dynamic tuning of polarization-dependent gap plasmon resonators that contain the electrochromic oxide WO3. Its refractive index in the visible changes continuously from n = 2.1 to 1.9 upon electrochemical lithium insertion and removal in a solid-state device. By incorporating WO3 into a gap plasmon resonator, the resonant wavelength can be shifted continuously and reversibly by up to 58 nm with less than 2 V electrochemical bias voltage. The resonator can remain in a tuned state for tens of minutes under open circuit conditions.

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Low-Voltage, CMOS-Free Synaptic Memory Based on LiXTiO2 Redox Transistors

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

Li, Yiyang; Fuller, Elliot J.; Asapu, Shiva; Kurita, Tomochika; Agarwal, Sapan; Yang, J.J.; Talin, Albert A.

Neuromorphic computers based on analogue neural networks aim to substantially lower computing power by reducing the need to shuttle data between memory and logic units. Artificial synapses containing nonvolatile analogue conductance states enable direct computation using memory elements; however, most nonvolatile analogue memories require high write voltages and large current densities and are accompanied by nonlinear and unpredictable weight updates. Here, we develop an inorganic redox transistor based on electrochemical lithium-ion insertion into LiXTiO2 that displays linear weight updates at both low current densities and low write voltages. The write voltage, as low as 200 mV at room temperature, is achieved by minimizing the open-circuit voltage and using a low-voltage diffusive memristor selector. We further show that the LiXTiO2 redox transistor can achieve an extremely sharp transistor subthreshold slope of just 40 mV/decade when operating in an electrochemically driven phase transformation regime.

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Redox transistors for neuromorphic computing

IBM Journal of Research and Development

Talin, Albert A.; Fuller, Elliot J.; Bennett, Christopher; Marinella, Matthew; Li, Yiyang

Efficiency bottlenecks inherent to conventional computing in executing neural algorithms have spurred the development of novel devices capable of “in-memory” computing. Commonly known as “memristors,” a variety of device concepts including conducting bridge, vacancy filament, phase change, and other types have been proposed as promising elements in artificial neural networks for executing inference and learning algorithms. In this article, we review the recent advances in memristor technology for neuromorphic computing and discuss strategies for addressing the most significant performance challenges, including nonlinearity, high read/write currents, and endurance. As an alternative to two-terminal memristors, we introduce the three-terminal electrochemical memory based on the redox transistor (RT), which uses a gate to tune the redox state of the channel. Decoupling the “read” and “write” operations using a third terminal and storage of information as a charge-compensated redox reaction in the bulk of the transistor enables high-density information storage. These properties enable low-energy operation without compromising analog performance and nonvolatility. Finally, we discuss the RT operating mechanisms using organic and inorganic materials, approaches for array integration, and prospects for achieving the device density and switching speeds necessary to make electrochemical memory competitive with established digital technology.

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Results 51–100 of 262
Results 51–100 of 262