Device-system Co-design of Photonic Neuromorphic Processor using Reinforcement Learning (2203.06061v1)
Abstract: The incorporation of high-performance optoelectronic devices into photonic neuromorphic processors can substantially accelerate computationally intensive operations in ML algorithms. However, the conventional device design wisdom is disconnected with system optimization. We report a device-system co-design methodology to optimize a free-space optical general matrix multiplication (GEMM) hardware accelerator by engineering a spatially reconfigurable array made from chalcogenide phase change materials. With a highly-parallelized hardware emulator constructed based on experimental information, we demonstrate the design of unit device by optimizing GEMM calculation accuracy via reinforcement learning, including deep Q-learning neural network, Bayesian optimization, and their cascaded approach, which show a clear correlation between system performance metrics and physical device specifications. Furthermore, we employ physics-aware training approaches to deploy optimized hardware to the tasks of image classification, materials discovery, and a closed-loop design of optical ML accelerators. The demonstrated framework offers insights into the co-design of optoelectronic devices and systems with reduced human-supervision and domain-knowledge barriers.