Magnetization Dynamics, Bennett Clocking and Associated Energy Dissipation in Multiferroic Logic
Mohammad Salehi Fashami, Kuntal Roy, Jayasimha Atulasimha, Supriyo, Bandyopadhyay

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the magnetization dynamics and energy dissipation in multiferroic logic, demonstrating its potential for energy-efficient and reasonably fast switching compared to spin transfer torque methods.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of Bennett clocking in multiferroic logic, showing its advantages in energy efficiency and switching speed over traditional spin transfer torque techniques.
Findings
Switching delay of ~3 ns (0.33 GHz) achievable with proper design.
Energy dissipation of ~48,000 kT per bit flip at room temperature.
Spin transfer torque dissipation is much higher (~6 x 10^6 kT) for similar delay.
Abstract
It has been recently shown that multiferroic logic - where logic bits are encoded in the magnetization orientation of a nanoscale magnetostrictive layer elastically coupled to a piezoelectric layer - can be Bennett clocked with small electrostatic potentials of few tens of mV applied to the piezoelectric layer. The potential generates stress in the magnetostrictive layer and rotates its magnetization by a large angle to carry out Bennett clocking. This method of clocking is far more energy-efficient than using spin transfer torque. In order to assess if such a clocking scheme can be also reasonably fast, we have studied the magnetization dynamics of a multiferroic logic array with nearest neighbor dipole coupling using the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert (LLG) equation. We find that switching delays of ~ 3 ns (clock rates of 0.33 GHz) can be achieved with proper design provided we clock…
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