Energy-efficient switching of nanomagnets for computing: Straintronics and other methodologies
Noel D'Souza, Ayan Biswas, Hasnain Ahmad, Mohammad Salehi Fashami, Md, Mamun Al-Rashid, Vimal Sampath, Dhritiman Bhattacharya, Md Ahsanul Abeed,, Jayasimha Atulasimha, Supriyo Bandyopadhyay

TL;DR
This paper reviews the development of energy-efficient, non-volatile nanomagnetic switches using straintronics, highlighting their potential for high-speed, low-energy computing architectures that combine logic and memory functions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of recent advances in straintronics-based nanomagnetic switches and discusses key challenges in the field.
Findings
Switching delay ~1 ns
Energy dissipation of a few to tens of aJ
Potential for energy-efficient, non-volatile computing
Abstract
The need for increasingly powerful computing hardware has spawned many ideas stipulating, primarily, the replacement of traditional transistors with alternate "switches" that dissipate miniscule amounts of energy when they switch and provide additional functionality that are beneficial for information processing. An interesting idea that has emerged recently is the notion of using two-phase (piezoelectric/magnetostrictive) multiferroic nanomagnets with bistable (or multi-stable) magnetization states to encode digital information (bits), and switching the magnetization between these states with small voltages (that strain the nanomagnets) to carry out digital information processing. The switching delay is ~1 ns and the energy dissipated in the switching operation can be few to tens of aJ, which is comparable to, or smaller than, the energy dissipated in switching a modern-day transistor.…
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