New Method Makes Computer Memory from Titanium Oxide

  • Magazine Article
  • TBMG-38340
Published January 01, 2021 by Tech Briefs Media Group in United States
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  • English

A team has developed a method to imbue computer chips that power machine-learning applications with more processing power by using a common material found in house paint in an analog memory device that enables highly energy-efficient machine inference operations. The material, titanium oxide, is a commonly made material used in house paint. It is an oxide, which means it already contains oxygen. Subtracting some of the oxygen creates oxygen vacancies that make the material electrically conductive. Those oxygen vacancies can now store electrical data, giving almost any device more computing power.