Abstract

Artificial synapses based on ferroelectric Schottky barrier field-effect transistors (FE-SBFETs) are experimentally demonstrated. The FE-SBFETs employ single-crystalline NiSi2 contacts with an atomically flat interface to Si and Hf0.5Zr0.5O2 ferroelectric layers on silicon-on-insulator substrates. The ferroelectric polarization switching dynamics gradually modulate the NiSi2/Si Schottky barriers and the potential of the channel, thus programming the device conductance with input voltage pulses. The short-term synaptic plasticity is characterized in terms of excitatory/inhibitory post-synaptic current (EPSC) and paired-pulse facilitation/depression. The EPSC amplitude shows a linear response to the amplitude of the pre-synaptic spike. Very low energy/spike consumption as small as ∼2 fJ is achieved, demonstrating high energy efficiency. Long-term potentiation/depression results show very high endurance and very small cycle-to-cycle variations (∼1%) after 105 pulse measurements. Furthermore, spike-timing-dependent plasticity is also emulated using the gate voltage pulse as the pre-synaptic spike and the drain voltage pulse as the post-synaptic spikes. These findings indicate that FE-SBFET synapses have high potential for future neuromorphic computing applications.

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