Probabilistic computing has emerged as a viable approach
to solve
hard optimization problems. Devices with inherent stochasticity can
greatly simplify their implementation in electronic hardware. Here,
we demonstrate intrinsic stochastic resistance switching controlled
via electric fields in perovskite nickelates doped with hydrogen.
The ability of hydrogen ions to reside in various metastable configurations
in the lattice leads to a distribution of transport gaps. With experimentally
characterized p-bits, a shared-synapse p-bit architecture demonstrates
highly parallelized and energy-efficient solutions to optimization
problems such as integer factorization and Boolean satisfiability.
The results introduce perovskite nickelates as scalable potential
candidates for probabilistic computing and showcase the potential
of light-element dopants in next-generation correlated semiconductors.
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