Asynchronous Reversible Computing Unveiled Using Ballistic Shift Registers
Kevin D. Osborn, Waltraut Wustmann

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel asynchronous reversible shift register using ballistic flux quantum logic, demonstrating low-energy operation and new reversible gate designs with potential for energy-efficient superconducting computing.
Contribution
It presents the first asynchronous reversible 2-input gate based on ballistic flux quantum logic, with a storage loop enabling asynchronous operation and a collective coordinate model for dynamics analysis.
Findings
Demonstrates a practical, energy-efficient ballistic shift register (BSR) with asynchronous operation.
Introduces the first asynchronous reversible 2-input gate in superconducting flux quantum logic.
Provides a collective coordinate model to analyze the gate dynamics.
Abstract
Reversible logic can provide lower switching energy costs relative to all irreversible logic, including those developed by industry in semiconductor circuits, however, more research is needed to understand what is possible. Superconducting logic, an exemplary platform for both irreversible and reversible logic, uses flux quanta to represent bits, and the reversible implementation may switch state with low energy dissipation relative to the energy of a flux quantum. Here we simulate reversible shift register gates that are ballistic: their operation is powered by the input bits alone. A storage loop is added relative to previous gates as a key innovation, which bestows an asynchronous property to the gate such that input bits can arrive at different times as long as their order is clearly preserved. The shift register represents bit states by flux polarity, both in the stored bit as well…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFerroelectric and Negative Capacitance Devices · Advanced Memory and Neural Computing · Parallel Computing and Optimization Techniques
