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NanoSpinCompute Laboratory
overview
The interdisciplinary NanoSpinCompute research laboratory aims to invent, design, and analyze novel computing paradigms that exploit nanoscale phenomena to achieve greater capabilities than conventional CMOS structures. The primary focus is on exciting spintronic and low-dimensional carbon (carbon nanotubes and graphene) materials. The central theme of the NanoSpinCompute research laboratory is to ensure that individual switching elements can be cascaded to enable complex computing systems.
FACULTY LEAD
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Dr. Joseph Friedman
joseph.friedman@utdallas.edu
Phone: 972-883-2191
Office: ECSN 4.614
800 West Campbell Rd.
Mailstop: EC33
Richardson, TX 75080-3021
BIOGRAPHY
Joseph Friedman is an associate professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in Erik Jonsson School of Engineering & Computer Science, at The University of Texas at Dallas.
RESEARCH INTERESTS
My research objective is to invent, design, and analyze novel logical and neuromorphic computing paradigms that exploit nanoscale phenomena to achieve greater capabilities than conventional CMOS architectures. In sharp contrast to other approaches for beyond-CMOS and spintronic computing, the central theme of my research is to ensure that individual switching elements can be cascaded and integrated in efficient large-scale information processing systems.