The von Neumann architecture faces severe bottlenecks in energy efficiency. Computing-in-Memory (CiM) addresses this by performing computations within memory arrays, yet analog CiM solutions suffer from precision loss and high overhead from analog-to-digital converters and digital-to-analog converters (ADCs/DACs). This paper proposes a novel ADC-free CiM architecture based on Ferroelectric Field-Effect Transistors (FeFETs). Logic circuits (NOR, NAND, XNOR) that store weight vectors within FeFETs were designed. Compared with analog CiM circuits, the FeFETs-CiM circuits proposed in this paper can reduce power consumption by 901.1 times and latency by 272.7 times. Furthermore, the design of 3-bit FeFETs-CiM gates was extended, demonstrating flexible configurability for scalable edge computing applications. Finally, an application specific FeFETs-CiM subtractor for k-nearest neighbor (kNN) distance calculation was designed, which energy consumption is as low as 85.02 fJ/OP and latency is as low as 0.56 ns under 500 MHz operation frequency. The calculation robustness of the FeFETs-CiM kNN distance calculator was ensured by simulating under different process corners and temperatures. The performance improvements owing to the proposed FeFETs-CiM CMOS circuits were evaluated by taking the kNN algorithm as an example, which can ensure the data access reduction by more than 300 times compared to von Neumann architecture.
He et al. (Mon,) studied this question.