Photonic neuromorphic computing using vertical cavity semiconductor lasers
Photonic realizations of neural network computing hardware are a promising approach to enable future scalability of neuromorphic computing. The number of special purpose neuromorphic hardware and neuromorphic photonics has accelerated on such a scale that one can now speak of a Cambrian explosion. W...
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Published in | Optical materials express Vol. 12; no. 6; p. 2395 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Washington
Optical Society of America
01.06.2022
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Photonic realizations of neural network computing hardware are a
promising approach to enable future scalability of neuromorphic
computing. The number of special purpose neuromorphic hardware and
neuromorphic photonics has accelerated on such a scale that one can
now speak of a Cambrian explosion. Work along these lines includes (i)
high performance hardware for artificial neurons, (ii) the efficient
and scalable implementation of a neural network’s connections,
and (iii) strategies to adjust network connections during the learning
phase. In this review we provide an overview on vertical-cavity
surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs) and how these high-performance
electro-optical components either implement or are combined with
additional photonic hardware to demonstrate points (i-iii). In the
neurmorphic photonics context, VCSELs are of exceptional interest as
they are compatible with CMOS fabrication, readily achieve 30%
wall-plug efficiency, >30 GHz modulation bandwidth and multiply and
accumulate operations at sub-fJ energy. They hence are highly energy
efficient and ultra-fast. Crucially, they react nonlinearly to optical
injection as well as to electrical modulation, making them highly
suitable as all-optical as well as electro-optical photonic neurons.
Their optical cavities are wavelength-limited, and standard
semiconductor growth and lithography enables non-classical cavity
configurations and geometries. This enables excitable VCSELs (i.e.
spiking VCSELs) to finely control their temporal and spatial
coherence, to unlock terahertz bandwidths through spin-flip effects,
and even to leverage cavity quantum electrodynamics to further boost
their efficiency. Finally, as VCSEL arrays they are compatible with
standard 2D photonic integration, but their emission vertical to the
substrate makes them ideally suited for scalable integrated networks
leveraging 3D photonic waveguides. Here, we discuss the implementation
of spatially as well as temporally multiplexed VCSEL neural networks
and reservoirs, computation on the basis of excitable VCSELs as
photonic spiking neurons, as well as concepts and advances in the
fabrication of VCSELs and microlasers. Finally, we provide an outlook
and a roadmap identifying future possibilities and some crucial
milestones for the field. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 |
ISSN: | 2159-3930 2159-3930 |
DOI: | 10.1364/OME.450926 |