4.6 Article

Single Germanium MOSFET-Based Low Energy and Controllable Leaky Integrate-and-Fire Neuron for Spiking Neural Networks

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES
Volume 69, Issue 8, Pages 4265-4270

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TED.2022.3186274

Keywords

Neurons; Germanium; Behavioral sciences; Logic gates; Integrated circuit modeling; Semiconductor process modeling; Mathematical models; Germanium (Ge); leaky integrate-and-fire (LIF) neuron; mosfet; spiking neural network (SNN)

Funding

  1. University Grants Commission, Government of India, through the Junior Research Fellowship [3742/(NET-JULY 2018)]

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In this work, a single transistor based on germanium (Ge) is used to construct a leaky integrate-and-fire (LIF) neuron, providing significant improvements in energy efficiency, area efficiency, and reduction in cost. Through 2-D calibrated simulation, it is validated that the Ge-mosfet LIF neuron accurately imitates the behavior of a neuron. The Ge-mosfet exhibits low breakdown voltage, high impact ionization coefficient, and sharp breakdown, contributing to low energy per spike and higher spiking current. Compared to a recently reported silicon-based silicon-on-insulator (SOI) mosfet, the proposed Ge-mosfet LIF neuron requires only 8 pJ/spike of energy. The use of gate voltage allows for controllable firing of the Ge-mosfet LIF neuron, improving the energy efficiency of the spiking neural network (SNN) by inducing sparse action.
In this work, a single transistor based on germanium (Ge) is used to construct a leaky integrate-and-fire (LIF) neuron with significant improvement in energy efficiency, area efficiency, and reduction in cost. Using 2-D calibrated simulation, we validated that Ge-mosfet LIF neuron is able to imitate the neuron behavior accurately. The Ge-mosfet shows low breakdown voltage, high impact ionization coefficient, and sharp breakdown. All these factors are responsible for achieving low energy per spike and higher spiking current. The proposed Ge-mosfet-based spiking LIF neuron needs only 8 pJ/spike of energy as compared to recently reported silicon-based silicon-on-insulator (SOI) mosfet, which needs 45 pJ/spike of energy. The use of gate voltage makes Ge-mosfet LIF neuron firing controllable, which can improve the energy efficiency of the spiking neural network (SNN) by inducing sparse action.

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