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Article Abstract

The fast development of artificial intelligence has called for high-efficiency neuromorphic computing hardware. While two-dimensional floating-gate memories show promise, their limited state numbers and stability hinder practical use. Here, we report gate-injection-mode two-dimensional floating-gate memories as a candidate for large-scale neural network accelerators. Through a coplanar device structure design and a bi-pulse state programming strategy, 8-bit states with intervals larger than three times of the standard deviations and stability over 10,000 s are achieved at 3 V. The cycling endurance is over 10 and the fabricated 256 devices show a yield of 94.9%. Leveraging this, we carry out experimental image convolutions and 38,592 kernels transplanting on an integrated 9 × 2 array that exhibits results matching well with simulations. We also show that fix-point neural networks with 8-bit precision have inference accuracies approaching the ideal values. Our work validates the potential of gate-injection-mode two-dimensional floating-gate memories for high-efficiency neuromorphic computing hardware.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11920423PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-58005-zDOI Listing

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