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Active HORIZON European Commission

In-Materio Reservoir Computing Using Tailored Epitaxial Complex Oxides


Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Country Netherlands
Start Date Apr 01, 2025
End Date Mar 31, 2027
Duration 729 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101203197
Grant Description

The ever-increasing power consumption of electronics necessitates the development of new energy-efficient device paradigms for data storage and computation.

In this pursuit, approaches aimed at mimicking the functionality of the human brain in artificial devices, so-called neuromorphic engineering, have attracted a lot of attention.

Reservoir computing relying on a random, untrained reservoir provides a powerful platform to exploit materials for brain-inspired computing without strict requirements on the device-to-device variability.

Implementing reservoir computing in-materio is, however, challenging because of difficulties to adapt the two main reservoir properties nonlinearity and memory capacity - to computational tasks.

Epitaxial complex oxides offer a wealth of nonlinear material properties with tunable memory characteristics, making them ideal candidates for task-adaptive physical reservoir computing.

With RECOMPUTE, I aim to establish in-materio reservoir computing using epitaxial complex oxides to efficiently perform computational tasks.

I propose to achieve this by combining in thin-film epitaxial heterostructures (i) rare-earth nickelates with a tunable nonlinear negative differential resistance and (ii) relaxor ferroelectrics with a memory capacity that is tunable via the chemical composition.

By fabricating prototypical thin-film devices, characterizing and optimizing their electrical transport characteristics, and simulating their computational performance, I intend to shed light on the fundamental relationship between the intrinsic material properties of reservoir devices and their performance in solving different cognitive tasks a crucial insight that has been elusive so far.Ultimately, the successful implementation of the proposed research will establish novel reservoir computing devices based on complex oxides and serve as a template for the study of other nonlinear systems for unconventional computing among and beyond complex oxides.

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Rijksuniversiteit Groningen

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