Physical limitations on fundamental efficiency of set-based brownian circuits

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Ilke Ercan (TU Delft - Electrical Engineering Education)

Zeynep Duygu Sütgöl (Boğaziçi University)

Faik Ozan Özhan (Boğaziçi University)

Research Group
Electrical Engineering Education
Copyright
© 2021 İlke Ercan, Zeynep Duygu Sütgöl, Faik Ozan Özhan
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3390/e23040406
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 İlke Ercan, Zeynep Duygu Sütgöl, Faik Ozan Özhan
Research Group
Electrical Engineering Education
Issue number
4
Volume number
23
Pages (from-to)
1-16
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Brownian circuits are based on a novel computing approach that exploits quantum fluctuations to increase the efficiency of information processing in nanoelectronic paradigms. This emerging architecture is based on Brownian cellular automata, where signals propagate randomly, driven by local transition rules, and can be made to be computationally universal. The design aims to efficiently and reliably perform primitive logic operations in the presence of noise and fluctuations; therefore, a Single Electron Transistor (SET) device is proposed to be the most appropriate technologybase to realize these circuits, as it supports the representation of signals that are token-based and subject to fluctuations due to the underlying tunneling mechanism of electric charge. In this paper, we study the physical limitations on the energy efficiency of the Single-Electron Transistor (SET)-based Brownian circuit elements proposed by Peper et al. using SIMON 2.0 simulations. We also present a novel two-bit sort circuit designed using Brownian circuit primitives, and illustrate how circuit parameters and temperature affect the fundamental energy-efficiency limitations of SET-based realizations. The fundamental lower bounds are obtained using a physical-information-theoretic approach under idealized conditions and are compared against SIMON 2.0 simulations. Our results illustrate the advantages of Brownian circuits and the physical limitations imposed on their SET-realizations.