Electric-field Inputs for Molecular Quantum-dot Cellular Automata Circuits
Enrique P. Blair

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel electric-field based input method for molecular QCA circuits, enabling bit transduction from larger devices without specialized cells or nanoelectrodes, demonstrated through simulation.
Contribution
The paper proposes a new electric-field input approach for molecular QCA that simplifies bit transduction and avoids complex nanoelectrode requirements, advancing molecular computing technology.
Findings
Simulation results demonstrate effective electric-field input in two-dot QCA circuits.
The approach does not require fixed-state QCA cells or single-electron nanoelectrodes.
Potential to address key challenges in molecular QCA realization.
Abstract
Quantum-dot cellular automata (QCA) is a low-power, non-von-Neumann, general-purpose paradigm for classical computing using transistor-free logic. An elementary QCA device called a "cell" is made from a system of coupled quantum dots with a few mobile charges. The cell's charge configuration encodes a bit, and quantum charge tunneling within a cell enables device switching. Arrays of cells networked locally via the electrostatic field form QCA circuits, which mix logic, memory and interconnect. A molecular QCA implementation promises ultra-high device densities, high switching speeds, and room-temperature operation. We propose a novel approach to the technical challenge of transducing bits from larger conventional devices to nanoscale QCA molecules. This signal transduction begins with lithographically-formed electrodes placed on the device plane. A voltage applied across these…
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