Spintronic nano-devices for bio-inspired computing
Julie Grollier, Damien Querlioz, Mark D. Stiles

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of spintronic nano-devices, especially magnetic tunnel junctions, for creating ultra-dense, adaptable, bio-inspired computing hardware capable of complex dynamics and integrated memory.
Contribution
It reviews recent advances and proposes how spintronics can be integrated with CMOS technology for bio-inspired computing applications.
Findings
Spintronic devices enable tunable, complex dynamics like synchronization and chaos.
Magnetic tunnel junctions provide non-volatile, embedded memory for bio-inspired hardware.
Large networks of spintronic devices can exhibit critical phenomena and metastable states.
Abstract
Bio-inspired hardware holds the promise of low-energy, intelligent and highly adaptable computing systems. Applications span from automatic classification for big data management, through unmanned vehicle control, to control for bio-medical prosthesis. However, one of the major challenges of fabricating bio-inspired hardware is building ultra-high density networks out of complex processing units interlinked by tunable connections. Nanometer-scale devices exploiting spin electronics (or spintronics) can be a key technology in this context. In particular, magnetic tunnel junctions are well suited for this purpose because of their multiple tunable functionalities. One such functionality, non-volatile memory, can provide massive embedded memory in unconventional circuits, thus escaping the von-Neumann bottleneck arising when memory and processors are located separately. Other features of…
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