Photonic-electronic spiking neuron with multi-modal and multi-wavelength excitatory and inhibitory operation for high-speed neuromorphic sensing and computing

Weikang Zhang, Matěj Hejda, Qusay Raghib Ali Al-Taai, Dafydd Owen-Newns, Bruno Romeira, José M. L. Figueiredo, Joshua Robertson*, Edward Wasige, Antonio Hurtado

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)
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Abstract

We report a multi-modal spiking neuron that allows optical and electronic input and control, and wavelength-multiplexing operation, for use in novel high-speed neuromorphic sensing and computing functionalities. The photonic-electronic neuron is built with a micro-scale, nanostructure resonant tunnelling diode (RTD) with photodetection (PD) capability. Leveraging the advantageous intrinsic properties of this RTD PD- system, namely highly nonlinear characteristics, photo-sensitivity, light-induced I-V curve shift, and the ability to deliver excitable responses under electrical and optical inputs, we successfully achieve flexible neuromorphic spike activation and inhibition regimes through photonic-electrical control. We also demonstrate the ability of this RTD-PD spiking sensing-processing neuron to operate under the simultaneous arrival of multiple wavelength-multiplexed optical signals, due to its large photodetection spectral window (covering the 1310 and 1550 nm telecom wavelength bands). Our results highlight the potential of RTD photonic-electronic neurons to reproduce multiple key excitatory and inhibitory spiking regimes, at high speed (ns-rate spiking responses, with faster sub-ns regimes theoretically predicted) and low energy (requiring only ~10 mV and ~150 µW, electrical and optical input amplitudes, respectively), similar in nature to those commonly found in the biological neurons of the visual system and the brain. This work offers a highly promising approach for the realisation of high-speed, energy-efficient photonic-electronic spiking neurons and spiking neural networks, enabling multi-modal and multi-wavelength operation for sensing and information processing tasks, whilst also yielding enhanced system capacity, performance and parallelism. This work therefore paves the way for innovative high-speed, photonic-electronic, and spike-based neuromorphic sensing and computing systems and artificial intelligence hardware
Original languageEnglish
Article number044006
Number of pages13
JournalNeuromorphic Computing and Engineering
Volume4
Issue number4
Early online date1 Nov 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2024

Funding

The authors acknowledge support by the European Commission (Grant 828841-ChipAI-H2020-FETOPEN-2018-2020) and by the UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Turing AI Acceleration Fellowships Programme (EP/V025198/1). The authors would also like to acknowledge IQE plc. for providing the semiconductor wafers used to fabricate the systems of this work.

Keywords

  • high-speed neuromorphic sensing and computing
  • artificial intelligence hardware
  • photonic-electronic spiking neurons
  • spiking neural networks

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