413 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
MADX: Memristors-As-Drivers for Crossbar logic
Memristors have the potential to not only replace conventional memory, but also to open up new design possibilities because they store 1s and 0s as resistances rather than voltages. A memristor architecture that has attracted interest for its versatility and ease of integration with existing CMOS technologies is the crossbar array. In this paper, I modify the MAD scheme to create the MADX scheme for performing basic logic operations within a crossbar array. Then, I compare this scheme against two of the most well-known schemes, MAGIC and IMPLY. In the case study of a full-adder, both a one-bit and an 8-bit version, the MADX scheme achieves lower latency and substantially lower area requirements than both MAGIC and IMPLY. This is because it is more flexible about storing output values than either, does not destroy input values unlike IMPLY, and has more basic operations. In particular, it has XOR, which neither IMPLY nor MAGIC have and is useful for additionPlan II Honors Progra
Computers from plants we never made. Speculations
We discuss possible designs and prototypes of computing systems that could be
based on morphological development of roots, interaction of roots, and analog
electrical computation with plants, and plant-derived electronic components. In
morphological plant processors data are represented by initial configuration of
roots and configurations of sources of attractants and repellents; results of
computation are represented by topology of the roots' network. Computation is
implemented by the roots following gradients of attractants and repellents, as
well as interacting with each other. Problems solvable by plant roots, in
principle, include shortest-path, minimum spanning tree, Voronoi diagram,
-shapes, convex subdivision of concave polygons. Electrical properties
of plants can be modified by loading the plants with functional nanoparticles
or coating parts of plants of conductive polymers. Thus, we are in position to
make living variable resistors, capacitors, operational amplifiers,
multipliers, potentiometers and fixed-function generators. The electrically
modified plants can implement summation, integration with respect to time,
inversion, multiplication, exponentiation, logarithm, division. Mathematical
and engineering problems to be solved can be represented in plant root networks
of resistive or reaction elements. Developments in plant-based computing
architectures will trigger emergence of a unique community of biologists,
electronic engineering and computer scientists working together to produce
living electronic devices which future green computers will be made of.Comment: The chapter will be published in "Inspired by Nature. Computing
inspired by physics, chemistry and biology. Essays presented to Julian Miller
on the occasion of his 60th birthday", Editors: Susan Stepney and Andrew
Adamatzky (Springer, 2017
- …