Cascadable direct current driven skyrmion logic inverter gate

Arash Mousavi Cheghabouri, Ferhat Katmis, and Mehmet C. Onbasli
Phys. Rev. B 105, 054411 – Published 11 February 2022
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Abstract

Nanoscale skyrmions enable ultralow-power nonvolatile logic gate designs due to their current-driven motion and topological protection. A key building block in skyrmion-based digital spintronics is the logic inverter (not) gate. Despite recent computational and practical demonstrations, a skyrmion-based low-power, wideband, and cascadable inverter gate is still a long way off. For skyrmion-based logic circuits, a systematic design and analysis of an inverter gate is essential. Here we present a skyrmion logic inverter design and analyze its full operation using micromagnetic modeling. Because of the substrate thermal conductivity, our investigations reveal that the all-metallic inverter gate can function with direct current drive, wide bandwidth, submicron footprint, no or low external magnetic field, cascadability, and with room-temperature thermal stability despite Joule heating. Using magnetic insulators for eliminating Joule heating and lowering the exchange stiffness, magnetic moment and other factors might further assist in reducing power consumption by more than four orders of magnitude.

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  • Received 10 November 2020
  • Revised 18 November 2021
  • Accepted 31 January 2022
  • Corrected 4 April 2022

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.105.054411

©2022 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Corrections

4 April 2022

Correction: An operator in Eq. (3) was removed during the proof production cycle and has been restored. Two values in the right column of Table I were incorrect and have been fixed.

Authors & Affiliations

Arash Mousavi Cheghabouri1, Ferhat Katmis2, and Mehmet C. Onbasli1,*

  • 1Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Koç University, Sarıyer, Istanbul 34450, Turkey
  • 2Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA

  • *Corresponding author: monbasli@ku.edu.tr

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Issue

Vol. 105, Iss. 5 — 1 February 2022

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