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Nanomagnetic logic is an energy efficient computing architecture that relies on the dipole field coupling of neighboring magnets to transmit and process binary information. In this architecture, nanomagnet chains act as local interconnects. To assess the merits of this technology, the speed and reliability of magnetic signal transmission along these chains must be experimentally determined. In this work, time-resolved pump-probe x-ray photo-emission electron microscopy is used to observe magnetic signal transmission along a chain of nanomagnets. We resolve successive error-free switching events in a single nanomagnet chain at speeds on the order of 100 ps per nanomagnet, consistent with predictions based on micromagnetic modeling. Errors which disrupt transmission are also observed. We discuss the nature of these errors, and approaches for achieving reliable operation.
The idea of nanomagnetic Boolean logic was advanced more than two decades ago. It envisaged the use of nanomagnets with two stable magnetization orientations as the primitive binary switch for implementing logic gates and ultimately combinational/seq
Energy efficient nanomagnetic logic (NML) computing architectures propagate and process binary information by relying on dipolar field coupling to reorient closely-spaced nanoscale magnets. Signal propagation in nanomagnet chains of various sizes, sh
We present a design for a switchable nanomagnetic atom mirror formed by an array of 180{deg} domain walls confined within Ni80Fe20 planar nanowires. A simple analytical model is developed which allows the magnetic field produced by the domain wall ar
Strongly-interacting nanomagnetic arrays are crucial across an ever-growing suite of technologies. Spanning neuromorphic computing, control over superconducting vortices and reconfigurable magnonics, the utility and appeal of these arrays lies in the
In 1961, R. Landauer proposed the principle that logical irreversibility is associated with physical irreversibility and further theorized that the erasure of information is fundamentally a dissipative process. Landauer posited that a fundamental ene