81 research outputs found

    New efficient designs of reversible logic gates and circuits in the QCA technology

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    Quantum-dot cellular automata (QCA) is a developing nanotechnology, which seems to be a good candidate to replace the conventional complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology. The QCA has the advantages of very low power dissipation, faster switching speed, and extremely low circuit area, which can be used in designing nanoscale reversible circuits. In this paper, the new efficient QCA implementations of the basic reversible Gates such as: CNOT, Toffoli, Feynman, Double Feynman, Fredkin, Peres, MCL, and R Gates are presented based on the straight interactions between the QCA cells. Also, the designs of 4-Bit reversible parity checker and 3-bit reversible binary to Grey converter are introduced using these optimized reversible Gates. The proposed layouts are designed and simulated using QCADesigner software. In comparison with previous QCA designs, the proposed layouts are implemented with the minimum area, minimum number of cells, and minimum delay without any wire-crossing techniques. Also, in comparison with the CMOS technology, the proposed layouts are more efficient in terms of the area and power. Therefore, our designs can be used to realize quantum computation in ultralow power computer communication

    A Novel Design and Implementation of 8-3 Encoder Using Quantum-dot Cellular Automata (QCA) Technology

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    In recent years Quantum-dot Cellular Automata (QCA) has been considered one of the emerging nano-technology for future generation digital circuits and systems. QCA technology is a promising alternative to Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) technology. Thus, QCA offers a novel electronics paradigm for information processing and communication system. It has attractive features such as faster speed, higher scale integration, higher switching frequency, smaller size and low power consumption compared to the transistor based technology. It is projected as a promising nanotechnology for future Integrated Circuits (ICs). A quantum dot cellular automaton complex gate is composed from simple 3-input majority gate. In this paper, a 8-3 encoder circuit is proposed based on QCA logic gates: the 4-input Majority Voter (MV) OR gate. This 7-input gate can be configured into many useful gate structures such as a 4-input AND gate, a 4-input OR gate, 2-input AND and 2-input OR gates, 2-input complex gates, multi-input complex gates. The proposed circuit has a promising future in the area of nano-computing information processing system and can be stimulated with higher digital applications in QCA

    A Novel Design and Implementation of New Double Feynman and Six-correction logic (DFSCL) gates in Quantum-dot Cellular Automata (QCA)

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    In recent years, quantum cellular automata (QCA) have been used widely to digital circuits and systems. QCA technology is a promising alternative to CMOS technology. It is attractive due to its fast speed, small area and low power consumption. The QCA offers a novel electronics paradigm for information processing and communication. It has the potential for attractive features such as faster speed, higher scale integration, higher switching frequency, smaller size and low power consumption than transistor based technology. In this paper, Double Feynman and Six-correction logic gate (DFSCL) is proposed based on QCA logic gates: MV gate and Inverter gate. The proposed circuit is a promising future in constructing of nano-scale low power consumption information processing system and can stimulate higher digital applications in QCA

    The use of reversible logic gates in the design of residue number systems

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    Reversible computing is an emerging technique to achieve ultra-low-power circuits. Reversible arithmetic circuits allow for achieving energy-efficient high-performance computational systems. Residue number systems (RNS) provide parallel and fault-tolerant additions and multiplications without carry propagation between residue digits. The parallelism and fault-tolerance features of RNS can be leveraged to achieve high-performance reversible computing. This paper proposed RNS full reversible circuits, including forward converters, modular adders and multipliers, and reverse converters used for a class of RNS moduli sets with the composite form {2k, 2p-1}. Modulo 2n-1, 2n, and 2n+1 adders and multipliers were designed using reversible gates. Besides, reversible forward and reverse converters for the 3-moduli set {2n-1, 2n+k, 2n+1} have been designed. The proposed RNS-based reversible computing approach has been applied for consecutive multiplications with an improvement of above 15% in quantum cost after the twelfth iteration, and above 27% in quantum depth after the ninth iteration. The findings show that the use of the proposed RNS-based reversible computing in convolution results in a significant improvement in quantum depth in comparison to conventional methods based on weighted binary adders and multipliers

    Optimized design and performance analysis of novel comparator and full adder in nanoscale

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    Abstract: In a vastly rapid progress of very large scale integration (VLSI) archetype, it is the requirement of moment to attain a consistent model with swifter functioning speed and low power utilization. Quantum-dot Cellular Automata (QCA) is an inimitable transistorless computation approach that is based on semiconductor substantial and a substitute for customary CMOS and VLSI archetype at nanoscale point which comprises a better switching frequency, enhanced scale integration and small extent. In the design of digital logic, a comparator is the essential forming component which implements the resemblance of two numbers and a binary full adder is a major entity in digital logic systems. This paper deals with an expanded layout of reversible 1-bit comparator and proficient full adder without wire-crossing in QCA. The proposed layouts are significantly declined in terms of area and cell complexity, assessed to other layouts and clock cycle is retained at least. Quantum costs of the proposed circuits are estimated and compared, that shows the proposed QCA layouts have lesser quantum cost equated to regular designs and the energy depletion by the circuits endorses the view of QCA nano-circuit attending as a substitute level for the completion of reversible computing. Under thermal unpredictability, the constancy of the proposed designs is evaluated which show the operating efficacy of the designs. The simulation outcomes in QCADesigner tool approve that the presented designs performs properly and can be operated as an extreme performing design in QCA technology

    Emerging Design Methodology And Its Implementation Through Rns And Qca

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    Digital logic technology has been changing dramatically from integrated circuits, to a Very Large Scale Integrated circuits (VLSI) and to a nanotechnology logic circuits. Research focused on increasing the speed and reducing the size of the circuit design. Residue Number System (RNS) architecture has ability to support high speed concurrent arithmetic applications. To reduce the size, Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata (QCA) has become one of the new nanotechnology research field and has received a lot of attention within the engineering community due to its small size and ultralow power. In the last decade, residue number system has received increased attention due to its ability to support high speed concurrent arithmetic applications such as Fast Fourier Transform (FFT), image processing and digital filters utilizing the efficiencies of RNS arithmetic in addition and multiplication. In spite of its effectiveness, RNS has remained more an academic challenge and has very little impact in practical applications due to the complexity involved in the conversion process, magnitude comparison, overflow detection, sign detection, parity detection, scaling and division. The advancements in very large scale integration technology and demand for parallelism computation have enabled researchers to consider RNS as an alternative approach to high speed concurrent arithmetic. Novel parallel - prefix structure binary to residue number system conversion method and RNS novel scaling method are presented in this thesis. Quantum-dot cellular automata has become one of the new nanotechnology research field and has received a lot of attention within engineering community due to its extremely small feature size and ultralow power consumption compared to COMS technology. Novel methodology for generating QCA Boolean circuits from multi-output Boolean circuits is presented. Our methodology takes as its input a Boolean circuit, generates simplified XOR-AND equivalent circuit and output an equivalent majority gate circuits. During the past decade, quantum-dot cellular automata showed the ability to implement both combinational and sequential logic devices. Unlike conventional Boolean AND-OR-NOT based circuits, the fundamental logical device in QCA Boolean networks is majority gate. With combining these QCA gates with NOT gates any combinational or sequential logical device can be constructed from QCA cells. We present an implementation of generalized pipeline cellular array using quantum-dot cellular automata cells. The proposed QCA pipeline array can perform all basic operations such as multiplication, division, squaring and square rooting. The different mode of operations are controlled by a single control line

    Computational methods and tools for protein phosphorylation analysis

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    Signaling pathways represent a central regulatory mechanism of biological systems where a key event in their correct functioning is the reversible phosphorylation of proteins. Protein phosphorylation affects at least one-third of all proteins and is the most widely studied posttranslational modification. Phosphorylation analysis is still perceived, in general, as difficult or cumbersome and not readily attempted by many, despite the high value of such information. Specifically, determining the exact location of a phosphorylation site is currently considered a major hurdle, thus reliable approaches are necessary for the detection and localization of protein phosphorylation. The goal of this PhD thesis was to develop computation methods and tools for mass spectrometry-based protein phosphorylation analysis, particularly validation of phosphorylation sites. In the first two studies, we developed methods for improved identification of phosphorylation sites in MALDI-MS. In the first study it was achieved through the automatic combination of spectra from multiple matrices, while in the second study, an optimized protocol for sample loading and washing conditions was suggested. In the third study, we proposed and evaluated the hypothesis that in ESI-MS, tandem CID and HCD spectra of phosphopeptides can be accurately predicted and used in spectral library searching. This novel strategy for phosphosite validation and identification offered accuracy that outperformed the other currently existing popular methods and proved applicable to complex biological samples. And finally, we significantly improved the performance of our command-line prototype tool, added graphical user interface, and options for customizable simulation parameters and filtering of selected spectra, peptides or proteins. The new software, SimPhospho, is open-source and can be easily integrated in a phosphoproteomics data analysis workflow. Together, these bioinformatics methods and tools enable confident phosphosite assignment and improve reliable phosphoproteome identification and reportin

    QUANTUM COMPUTING AND HPC TECHNIQUES FOR SOLVING MICRORHEOLOGY AND DIMENSIONALITY REDUCTION PROBLEMS

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    Tesis doctoral en período de exposición públicaDoctorado en Informática (RD99/11)(8908

    Design Of Dna Strand Displacement Based Circuits

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    DNA is the basic building block of any living organism. DNA is considered a popular candidate for future biological devices and circuits for solving genetic disorders and several other medical problems. With this objective in mind, this research aims at developing novel approaches for the design of DNA based circuits. There are many recent developments in the medical field such as the development of biological nanorobots, SMART drugs, and CRISPR-Cas9 technologies. There is a strong need for circuits that can work with these technologies and devices. DNA is considered a suitable candidate for designing such circuits because of the programmability of the DNA strands, small size, lightweight, known thermodynamics, higher parallelism, and exponentially reducing the cost of synthesizing techniques. The DNA strand displacement operation is useful in developing circuits with DNA strands. The circuit can be either a digital circuit, in which the logic high and logic low states of the DNA strand concentrations are considered as the signal, or it can be an analog circuit in which the concentration of the DNA strands itself will act as the signal. We developed novel approaches in this research for the design of digital, as well as analog circuits keeping in view of the number of DNA strands required for the circuit design. Towards this goal in the digital domain, we developed spatially localized DNA majority logic gates and an inverter logic gate that can be used with the existing seesaw based logic gates. The majority logic gates proposed in this research can considerably reduce the number of strands required in the design. The introduction of the logic inverter operation can translate the dual rail circuit architecture into a monorail architecture for the seesaw based logic circuits. It can also reduce the number of unique strands required for the design into approximately half. The reduction in the number of unique strands will consequently reduce the leakage reactions, circuit complexity, and cost associated with the DNA circuits. The real world biological inputs are analog in nature. If we can use those analog signals directly in the circuits, it can considerably reduce the resources required. Even though analog circuits are highly prone to noise, they are a perfect candidate for performing computations in the resource-limited environments, such as inside the cell. In the analog domain, we are developing a novel fuzzy inference engine using analog circuits such as the minimum gate, maximum gate, and fan-out gates. All the circuits discussed in this research were designed and tested in the Visual DSD software. The biological inputs are inherently fuzzy in nature, hence a fuzzy based system can play a vital role in future decision-making circuits. We hope that our research will be the first step towards realizing these larger goals. The ultimate aim of our research is to develop novel approaches for the design of circuits which can be used with the future biological devices to tackle many medical problems such as genetic disorders

    Towards a table top quantum computer

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    Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 1999.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 135-139).In the early 1990s, quantum computing proved to be an enticing theoretical possibility but a extremely difficult experimental challenge. Two advances have made experimental quantum computing demonstrable: Quantum error correction; and bulk, thermal quantum computing using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Simple algorithms have been implemented on large, commercial NMR spectrometers that are expensive and cumbersome. The goal of this project is to construct a table-top quantum computer that can match and eventually exceed the performance of commercial machines. This computer should be an inexpensive, easy-to-use machine that can be considered more a computer than its "supercomputer" counterparts. For this thesis, the goal is to develop a low-cost, table-top quantum computer capable of implementing simple quantum algorithms demonstrated thus far in the community, but is also amenable to the many scaling issues of practical quantum computing. Understanding these scaling issues requires developing a theoretical understanding of the signal enhancement techniques and fundamental noise sources of this powerful but delicate system. Complementary to quantum computing, this high performance but low cost NMR machine will be useful for a number of medical, low cost sensing and tagging applications due the unique properties of NMR: the ability to sense and manipulate the information content of materials on macroscopic and microscopic scales.Yael G. Maguire.S.M
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