1,336 research outputs found

    Evolution in Nanomaterio:The NASCENCE Project

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    Training Single Walled Carbon Nanotube based Materials to perform computation

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    This thesis illustrates the use of Single Walled Carbon Nanotube based materials for the solution of various computational problems by using the process of computer controlled evolution. The study aims to explore and identify three dimensions of a form of unconventional computing called, `Evolution-in-materio'. First, it focuses on identifying suitable materials for computation. Second, it explores suitable methods, i.e. optimisation and evolutionary algorithms to train these materials to perform computation. And third, it aims to identify suitable computational problems to test with these materials. Different carbon based materials, mainly single walled carbon nano-tubes with their varying concentrations in polymers have been studied to be trained for different computational problems using the principal of `evolution-in-materio'. The conductive property of the materials is used to train these materials to perform some meaningful computation. The training process is formulated as an optimisation problem with hardware in loop. It involves the application of an external stimuli (voltages) on the material which brings changes in its electrical properties. In order to train the material for a specific computational problem, a large number of configuration signals need to be tested to find the one that transforms the incident signal in such a way that a meaningful computation can be extracted from the material. An evolutionary algorithm is used to identify this configuration data and using a hardware platform, this data is transformed into incident signals. Depending on the computational problem, the specific voltages signals when applied at specific points on to the material, as identified by an evolutionary algorithm, can make the material behave as a Logic gate, a tone discriminator or a data classifier. The problem is implemented on two types of hardware platforms, one a more simple implementation using mbed ( a micro- controller) and other is a purpose-built platform for `Evolution-in-materio" called Mecobo. The results of this study showed that the single walled carbon nanotube composites can be trained to perform simple computational tasks (such as tone discriminator, AND, OR logic gates and a Half adder circuit), as well as complex computational problems such as Full Adder circuit and various binary and multiple class machine learning problems. The study has also identified the suitability of using evolutionary algorithms such as Particle Swarm Optimisation algorithm (PSO) and Differential evolution for finding solutions of complex computational problems such as complex logic gates and various machine learning classification problems. The implementation of classification problem with the carbon nanotube based materials also identified the role of a classifier. It has been found that K-nearest neighbour method and its variant kNN ball tree algorithm are more suitable to train carbon nanotube based materials for different classification problems. The study of varying concentrations of single walled carbon nanotubes in fixed polymer ratio for the solution of different computational problems provided an indication of the link between single walled carbon nanotubes concentration and ability to solve computational problem. The materials used in this study showed stability in the results for all the considered computational problems. These material systems can compliment the current electronic technology and can be used to create a new type of low energy and low cost electronic devices. This offers a promising new direction for evolutionary computation

    Artificial intelligence in nanotechnology

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    This is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in Nanotechnology. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A definitive version was subsequently published in Nanotechnology 24.45 (2013): 452002During the last decade there has been an increasing use of artificial intelligence tools in nanotechnology research. In this paper we review some of these efforts in the context of interpreting scanning probe microscopy, the study of biological nanosystems, the classification of material properties at the nanoscale, theoretical approaches and simulations in nanoscience, and generally in the design of nanodevices. Current trends and future perspectives in the development of nanocomputing hardware that can boost artificial intelligence based applications are also discussed. Convergence between artificial intelligence and nanotechnology can shape the path for many technological developments in the field of information sciences that will rely on new computer architectures and data representations, hybrid technologies that use biological entities and nanotechnological devices, bioengineering, neuroscience and a large variety of related disciplines

    Harnessing Evolution in-Materio as an Unconventional Computing Resource

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    This thesis illustrates the use and development of physical conductive analogue systems for unconventional computing using the Evolution in-Materio (EiM) paradigm. EiM uses an Evolutionary Algorithm to configure and exploit a physical material (or medium) for computation. While EiM processors show promise, fundamental questions and scaling issues remain. Additionally, their development is hindered by slow manufacturing and physical experimentation. This work addressed these issues by implementing simulated models to speed up research efforts, followed by investigations of physically implemented novel in-materio devices. Initial work leveraged simulated conductive networks as single substrate ‘monolithic’ EiM processors, performing classification by formulating the system as an optimisation problem, solved using Differential Evolution. Different material properties and algorithm parameters were isolated and investigated; which explained the capabilities of configurable parameters and showed ideal nanomaterial choice depended upon problem complexity. Subsequently, drawing from concepts in the wider Machine Learning field, several enhancements to monolithic EiM processors were proposed and investigated. These ensured more efficient use of training data, better classification decision boundary placement, an independently optimised readout layer, and a smoother search space. Finally, scalability and performance issues were addressed by constructing in-Materio Neural Networks (iM-NNs), where several EiM processors were stacked in parallel and operated as physical realisations of Hidden Layer neurons. Greater flexibility in system implementation was achieved by re-using a single physical substrate recursively as several virtual neurons, but this sacrificed faster parallelised execution. These novel iM-NNs were first implemented using Simulated in-Materio neurons, and trained for classification as Extreme Learning Machines, which were found to outperform artificial networks of a similar size. Physical iM-NN were then implemented using a Raspberry Pi, custom Hardware Interface and Lambda Diode based Physical in-Materio neurons, which were trained successfully with neuroevolution. A more complex AutoEncoder structure was then proposed and implemented physically to perform dimensionality reduction on a handwritten digits dataset, outperforming both Principal Component Analysis and artificial AutoEncoders. This work presents an approach to exploit systems with interesting physical dynamics, and leverage them as a computational resource. Such systems could become low power, high speed, unconventional computing assets in the future

    VLSI Design

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    This book provides some recent advances in design nanometer VLSI chips. The selected topics try to present some open problems and challenges with important topics ranging from design tools, new post-silicon devices, GPU-based parallel computing, emerging 3D integration, and antenna design. The book consists of two parts, with chapters such as: VLSI design for multi-sensor smart systems on a chip, Three-dimensional integrated circuits design for thousand-core processors, Parallel symbolic analysis of large analog circuits on GPU platforms, Algorithms for CAD tools VLSI design, A multilevel memetic algorithm for large SAT-encoded problems, etc

    Semi-analytical model for carbon nanotube and graphene nanoribbon transistors

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    Carbon nanotubes and graphene provide high carrier mobility for ballistic transport, high carrier velocity for fast switching, and excellent mechanical and thermal conductivity. As a result, they are widely considered as next generation candidate materials for nanoelectronics. In this thesis, I first propose a physics-based semi-analytical model for Schottky-barrier (SB) carbon nanotube (CNT) and graphene nanoribbon (GNR) transistors. The model reduces the computational complexity in the two critical but time-consuming steps, namely the calculation of the tunneling probability and the self-consistent evaluation of the surface potential in the transistor channel. Since SB-type CNT and GNR transistors exhibit ambipolar conduction that is not preferable in digital applications, I further propose a semi-analytical model for the double-gate transistor structure that is able to control the ambipolar conduction in-field. Future directions, including the modeling of new CNT and GNR devices and novel circuits based on the in-field controllability of ambipolar conduction, will also be described
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