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      NV-Clustering: Normally-Off Computing Using Non-Volatile Datapaths

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          Spin-based logic in semiconductors for reconfigurable large-scale circuits.

          Research in semiconductor spintronics aims to extend the scope of conventional electronics by using the spin degree of freedom of an electron in addition to its charge. Significant scientific advances in this area have been reported, such as the development of diluted ferromagnetic semiconductors, spin injection into semiconductors from ferromagnetic metals and discoveries of new physical phenomena involving electron spin. Yet no viable means of developing spintronics in semiconductors has been presented. Here we report a theoretical design that is a conceptual step forward-spin accumulation is used as the basis of a semiconductor computer circuit. Although the giant magnetoresistance effect in metals has already been commercially exploited, it does not extend to semiconductor/ferromagnet systems, because the effect is too weak for logic operations. We overcome this obstacle by using spin accumulation rather than spin flow. The basic element in our design is a logic gate that consists of a semiconductor structure with multiple magnetic contacts; this serves to perform fast and reprogrammable logic operations in a noisy, room-temperature environment. We then introduce a method to interconnect a large number of these gates to form a 'spin computer'. As the shrinking of conventional complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) transistors reaches its intrinsic limit, greater computational capability will mean an increase in both circuit area and power dissipation. Our spin-based approach may provide wide margins for further scaling and also greater computational capability per gate.
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            Design of a WSN Platform for Long-Term Environmental Monitoring for IoT Applications

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              Magnetic oscillations driven by the spin Hall effect in 3-terminal magnetic tunnel junction devices

              We show that direct current in a tantalum microstrip can induce steady-state magnetic oscillations in an adjacent nanomagnet through spin torque from the spin Hall effect (SHE). The oscillations are detected electrically via a magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ) contacting the nanomagnet. The oscillation frequency can be controlled using the MTJ bias to tune the magnetic anisotropy. In this 3-terminal device the SHE torque and the MTJ bias therefore provide independent controls of the oscillation amplitude and frequency, enabling new approaches for developing tunable spin torque nano-oscillators.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                IEEE Transactions on Computers
                IEEE Trans. Comput.
                Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
                0018-9340
                July 1 2018
                July 1 2018
                : 67
                : 7
                : 949-959
                Article
                10.1109/TC.2018.2795601
                40bfd873-d526-4b95-894b-2678ffe41d66
                © 2018
                History

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