Live
Black Hat USADark ReadingBlack Hat AsiaAI BusinessUK National Education Union poll: 66% of secondary school teachers in England say pupils using AI are losing their capacity for core skills like writing (Sally Weale/The Guardian)TechmemeHow Disney Imagineers are using AI and robotics to reshape the company’s theme parks - Fast CompanyGoogle News - AI roboticsAlibaba unveils agentic AI-focused model Qwen3.6-Plus - Seeking AlphaGNews AI AlibabaAutonomous AI systems depend on data governanceAI NewsExperian uncovers fraud paradox in financial services AI adoptionAI NewsHumanoid robot to power new robotics experiments at Durham University - Interesting EngineeringGoogle News - AI roboticsThe first AI cashier for cafes and restaurants was developed in Russia - www1.ruGNews AI RussiaInnovative firms driving AI adoption in Vietnam's shrimp sector - SeafoodSourceGoogle News - AI VietnamCollege students say they are changing their majors because of AIBusiness InsiderRamp and Visa expand partnership to use agentic AI for corporate bill pay - Electronic Payments InternationalGNews AI agenticPolitician Denies Using AI to Enhance Official Candidate Photo - PetaPixelGNews AI NetherlandsMen are ditching TV for YouTube as AI usage and social media fatigue growHacker News AI TopBlack Hat USADark ReadingBlack Hat AsiaAI BusinessUK National Education Union poll: 66% of secondary school teachers in England say pupils using AI are losing their capacity for core skills like writing (Sally Weale/The Guardian)TechmemeHow Disney Imagineers are using AI and robotics to reshape the company’s theme parks - Fast CompanyGoogle News - AI roboticsAlibaba unveils agentic AI-focused model Qwen3.6-Plus - Seeking AlphaGNews AI AlibabaAutonomous AI systems depend on data governanceAI NewsExperian uncovers fraud paradox in financial services AI adoptionAI NewsHumanoid robot to power new robotics experiments at Durham University - Interesting EngineeringGoogle News - AI roboticsThe first AI cashier for cafes and restaurants was developed in Russia - www1.ruGNews AI RussiaInnovative firms driving AI adoption in Vietnam's shrimp sector - SeafoodSourceGoogle News - AI VietnamCollege students say they are changing their majors because of AIBusiness InsiderRamp and Visa expand partnership to use agentic AI for corporate bill pay - Electronic Payments InternationalGNews AI agenticPolitician Denies Using AI to Enhance Official Candidate Photo - PetaPixelGNews AI NetherlandsMen are ditching TV for YouTube as AI usage and social media fatigue growHacker News AI Top
AI NEWS HUBbyEIGENVECTOREigenvector

New Cambridge human brain-inspired chip could slash AI energy use — new type of memristor has roughly a million times lower switching current than conventional devices

tomshardware.comby Luke JamesMarch 29, 20261 min read0 views
Source Quiz

New Cambridge human brain-inspired chip could slash AI energy use — new type of memristor has roughly a million times lower switching current than conventional devices

Researchers at the University of Cambridge published a paper in Science Advances earlier this month describing a new type of hafnium oxide memristor. The highlight of the new technology is that it operates at switching currents roughly a million times lower than conventional oxide-based devices.

Go deeper with TH Premium: Memory

Memristors are two-terminal devices that can store and process data in the same physical location, eliminating the energy-intensive data shuttling between separate memory and processing units in conventional computer architectures. Neuromorphic systems built from memristors could reduce computing power consumption by more than 70%, according to the paper.

Article continues below

Most existing HfO2-based memristors rely on filamentary resistive switching, where conductive paths grow and rupture inside the oxide. These filaments exhibit stochastic behavior, resulting in poor device-to-device and cycle-to-cycle uniformity that limits computational accuracy.

A different approach - adding strontium and titanium

The Cambridge team took a different approach by adding strontium and titanium to hafnium oxide and depositing the film in a two-step process, thereby creating a p-type Hf(Sr,Ti)O2 layer that self-assembles a p-n heterointerface with an underlying n-type titanium oxynitride layer. Resistance changes occur by shifting the energy barrier height at this interface rather than by growing or breaking filaments.

"Filamentary devices suffer from random behavior," Bakhit said in a Cambridge press release announcing the work. "But because our devices switch at the interface, they show outstanding uniformity from cycle to cycle and from device to device."

The devices demonstrated switching currents at or below 10-8 amps, retention exceeding 105 seconds, and endurance beyond 50,000 pulse-switching cycles. Using identical 1.0 V spikes comparable to biological neural signaling, the researchers achieved a conductance-modulation range exceeding 50 times across hundreds of distinct levels without saturation.

Synaptic update energy ranged from approximately 2.5 picojoules down to around 45 femtojoules. The devices also reproduced spike timing-dependent plasticity and maintained stable synaptic operation across roughly 40,000 electronic spikes.

One significant hurdle remains

The current deposition process requires temperatures of around 700°C, which exceeds standard CMOS manufacturing tolerances. "This is currently the main challenge in our device fabrication process," Bakhit said. "But we're now working on ways to bring the temperature down to make it more compatible with standard industry processes."

All materials used in the device stack are fully CMOS-compatible, and a patent application has been filed through Cambridge Enterprise.

Follow Tom's Hardware on Google News, or add us as a preferred source, to get our latest news, analysis, & reviews in your feeds.

Was this article helpful?

Sign in to highlight and annotate this article

AI
Ask AI about this article
Powered by Eigenvector · full article context loaded
Ready

Conversation starters

Ask anything about this article…

Daily AI Digest

Get the top 5 AI stories delivered to your inbox every morning.

Knowledge Map

Knowledge Map
TopicsEntitiesSource
New Cambrid…milliontomshardwar…

Connected Articles — Knowledge Graph

This article is connected to other articles through shared AI topics and tags.

Knowledge Graph100 articles · 177 connections
Scroll to zoom · drag to pan · click to open

Discussion

Sign in to join the discussion

No comments yet — be the first to share your thoughts!