Scaling Limits of Memristor-Based Routers for Asynchronous Neuromorphic Systems
Junren Chen, Siyao Yang, Huaqiang Wu, Giacomo Indiveri, Melika Payvand

TL;DR
This paper investigates the physical and scaling limitations of memristor-based crossbar routers in neuromorphic systems, combining theoretical analysis, simulations, and experimental validation to guide future device engineering.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of scaling limits for memristor-based routers in asynchronous neuromorphic systems, including experimental validation.
Findings
IR drop and leakage current limit routing functionality
Experimental validation with a 4K-ReRAM chip
Guidelines for memristor device optimization
Abstract
Multi-core neuromorphic systems typically use on-chip routers to transmit spikes among cores. These routers require significant memory resources and consume a large part of the overall system's energy budget. A promising alternative approach to using standard CMOS and SRAM-based routers is to exploit the features of memristive crossbar arrays and use them as programmable switch-matrices that route spikes. However, the scaling of these crossbar arrays presents physical challenges, such as "IR drop" on the metal lines due to the parasitic resistance, and leakage current accumulation on multiple active memristors in their "off" state. While reliability challenges of this type have been extensively studied in synchronous systems for compute-in-memory matrix-vector multiplication (MVM) accelerators and storage class memory, little effort has been devoted so far to characterizing the scaling…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Memory and Neural Computing · Ferroelectric and Negative Capacitance Devices · Neural dynamics and brain function
