Sub-nanosecond signal propagation in anisotropy engineered nanomagnetic logic chains
Zheng Gu, Mark E. Nowakowski, David B. Carlton, Ralph Storz, Mi-Young, Im, Jeongmin Hong, Weilun Chao, Brian Lambson, Patrick Bennett, Mohmmad T., Alam, Matthew A. Marcus, Andrew Doran, Anthony Young, Andreas Scholl, Peter, Fischer, and Jeffrey Bokor

TL;DR
This study demonstrates sub-nanosecond signal propagation in nanomagnetic logic chains using advanced imaging techniques, revealing intrinsic switching times and error mechanisms at high operation speeds, which are crucial for optimizing nanomagnetic computing architectures.
Contribution
The paper provides the first direct high-speed imaging and analysis of nanomagnetic logic signal propagation at sub-nanosecond timescales, combining experimental and simulation insights.
Findings
Intrinsic switching time of 100 ps per magnet
Revealed error nucleation during high-speed operation
Identified key parameters for optimizing performance
Abstract
Energy efficient nanomagnetic logic (NML) computing architectures propagate and process binary information by relying on dipolar field coupling to reorient closely-spaced nanoscale magnets. Signal propagation in nanomagnet chains of various sizes, shapes, and magnetic orientations has been previously characterized by static magnetic imaging experiments with low-speed adiabatic operation; however the mechanisms which determine the final state and their reproducibility over millions of cycles in high-speed operation (sub-ns time scale) have yet to be experimentally investigated. Monitoring NML operation at its ultimate intrinsic speed reveals features undetectable by conventional static imaging including individual nanomagnetic switching events and systematic error nucleation during signal propagation. Here, we present a new study of NML operation in a high speed regime at fast repetition…
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