Field-Coupled
Nanocomputing: Paradigms, Progress, and Perspectives (Lecture Notes in
Computer Science / Theoretical Computer Science and General Issues)
Paperback
– June 30, 2014
Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science / Theoretical Computer Science and General Issues (Book 8280)
Paperback: 393 pages
Publisher: Springer; 2014 edition (June 30, 2014)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 366243721X
ISBN-13: 978-3662437216
Field-coupled nanocomputing (FCN) paradigms offer fundamentally new
approaches to digital information processing that do not utilize
transistors or require charge transport. Information transfer and
computation are achieved in FCN via local field interactions between
nanoscale building blocks that are organized in patterned arrays.
Several FCN paradigms are currently under active investigation,
including quantum-dot cellular automata (QCA), molecular quantum
cellular automata (MQCA), nanomagnetic logic (NML), and atomic quantum
cellular automata (AQCA). Each of these paradigms has a number of unique
features that make it attractive as a candidate for post-CMOS
nanocomputing, and each faces critical challenges to realization.This
State-of-the-Art-Survey provides a snapshot of the current developments
and novel research directions in the area of FCN. The book is divided
into five sections. The first part, Field-Coupled Nanocomputing
Paradigms, provides valuable background information and perspectives on
the QDCA, MQCA, NML, and AQCA paradigms and their evolution. The second
section, Circuits and Architectures, addresses a wide variety of current
research on FCN clocking strategies, logic synthesis, circuit design
and test, logic-in-memory, hardware security, and architecture. The
third section, Modeling and Simulation, considers the theoretical
modeling and computer simulation of large FCN circuits, as well as the
use of simulations for gleaning physical insight into elementary FCN
building blocks. The fourth section, Irreversibility and Dissipation,
considers the dissipative consequences of irreversible information loss
in FCN circuits, their quantification, and their connection to circuit
structure. The fifth section, The Road Ahead: Opportunities and
Challenges, includes an edited transcript of the panel discussion that
concluded the 2013 Workshop on Field-Coupled Nanocomputing.
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