Area-Delay-Energy Tradeoffs of Strain-Mediated Multiferroic Devices
Kuntal Roy

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the trade-offs between area, delay, and energy in strain-mediated multiferroic devices, showing how scaling affects performance and energy efficiency through stochastic modeling.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of area-delay-energy trade-offs in multiferroic devices, highlighting the effects of lateral scaling and nanomagnet thickness on device performance.
Findings
Scaling down lateral area increases switching delay.
Reducing lateral area decreases energy dissipation.
Increasing nanomagnet thickness helps maintain single-domain behavior.
Abstract
Multiferroic devices hold profound promise for ultra-low energy computing in beyond Moore's law era. The magnetization of a magnetostrictive shape-anisotropic single-domain nanomagnet strain-coupled with a piezoelectric layer in a multiferroic composite structure can be switched between its two stable states (separated by an energy barrier) with a tiny amount of voltage via converse magnetoelectric effect. With appropriate choice of materials, the magnetization can be switched with a few tens of millivolts of voltages in sub-nanosecond switching delay while spending a miniscule amount of energy of ~1 attojoule at room-temperature. Here, we analyze the area-delay-energy trade-offs of these multiferroic devices by solving stochastic Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation in the presence of room-temperature thermal fluctuations. We particularly put attention on scaling down the lateral area of…
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