Considerations for neuromorphic supercomputing in semiconducting and superconducting optoelectronic hardware
Bryce A. Primavera, Jeffrey M. Shainline

TL;DR
This paper explores two optoelectronic neuromorphic hardware platforms—semiconducting and superconducting—analyzing their potential, challenges, and key metrics for large-scale brain-like computing systems.
Contribution
It compares semiconductor and superconducting approaches for neuromorphic systems, highlighting their development pathways, advantages, and technical challenges.
Findings
Semiconductor platforms benefit from existing fabrication ecosystems.
Superconducting systems offer near-minimal light source burdens.
Both platforms require significant technological advances for large-scale deployment.
Abstract
Any large-scale spiking neuromorphic system striving for complexity at the level of the human brain and beyond will need to be co-optimized for communication and computation. Such reasoning leads to the proposal for optoelectronic neuromorphic platforms that leverage the complementary properties of optics and electronics. Starting from the conjecture that future large-scale neuromorphic systems will utilize integrated photonics and fiber optics for communication in conjunction with analog electronics for computation, we consider two possible paths towards achieving this vision. The first is a semiconductor platform based on analog CMOS circuits and waveguide-integrated photodiodes. The second is a superconducting approach that utilizes Josephson junctions and waveguide-integrated superconducting single-photon detectors. We discuss available devices, assess scaling potential, and provide…
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