Abstract

Neuromorphic systems consisting of artificial neurons and synapses can process complex information with high efficiency to overcome the bottleneck of von Neumann architecture. Artificial neurons are essentially required to possess functions such as leaky integrate‐and‐fire and output spike. However, previous reported artificial neurons typically have high operation voltage and large leakage current, leading to significant power consumption, which is contrary to the energy‐efficient biological model. Here, an oscillatory neuron based on Ag filamentary threshold switching memristor (TS) that has a low operation voltage (<0.6 V) with ultralow power consumption (<1.8 µW) is presented. It can trigger neuronal functions, including leaky integrate‐and‐fire and threshold‐driven spiking output, with high endurance (>108 cycles). Being connected to an external resistor or a resistive switching memristor (RS) as synaptic weight, the TS clearly demonstrates self‐oscillation behavior once the input pulse voltage exceeds the threshold voltage. Meanwhile, the oscillation frequency is proportional to the input pulse voltage and the conductance of RS synapse, which can be used to integrate the weighted sum current. As an energy‐efficient memristor‐based spiking neural network, this combination of TS oscillatory neuron with RS synapse is further evaluated for image recognition achieving an accuracy of 79.2 ± 2.4% for CIFAR‐10 subset.

Highlights

  • Neuromorphic systems, which can leverage the distributed computing in neurons and process complex information with high efficiency to overcome the bottleneck of localized storage in synapses, is a promvon Neumann architecture

  • Artificial neurons are typically based on complex CMOS circuits[10] with several active components the threshold switching memristor (TS) clearly demonstrates self-oscillation behavior once the input pulse to implement neuronal functions, which voltage exceeds the threshold voltage

  • Oscillatory neurons are typically coupled to a resistive memory (i.e., resistive switching memristor (RS)) to form neural networks, which is very promising for implementing neuromorphic systems due to rapid recognition speed and low power consumption.[2,21]

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Summary

Introduction

Neuromorphic systems, which can leverage the distributed computing in neurons and process complex information with high efficiency to overcome the bottleneck of localized storage in synapses, is a promvon Neumann architecture. The oscillation frequency is proportional to the input pulse voltage and the conductance of RS synapse, which can be used to integrate the weighted sum current.

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