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arxiv 2311.06642 v2 pith:EFDOUWYK submitted 2023-11-11 cond-mat.mes-hall cs.ET

Double-Free-Layer Stochastic Magnetic Tunnel Junctions with Synthetic Antiferromagnets

classification cond-mat.mes-hall cs.ET
keywords magneticapproxstochasticdouble-free-layerfastfluctuationsjunctionsnanomagnets
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Stochastic magnetic tunnel junctions (sMTJ) using low-barrier nanomagnets have shown promise as fast, energy-efficient, and scalable building blocks for probabilistic computing. Despite recent experimental and theoretical progress, sMTJs exhibiting the ideal characteristics necessary for probabilistic bits (p-bit) are still lacking. Ideally, the sMTJs should have (a) voltage bias independence preventing read disturbance (b) uniform randomness in the magnetization angle between the free layers, and (c) fast fluctuations without requiring external magnetic fields while being robust to magnetic field perturbations. Here, we propose a new design satisfying all of these requirements, using double-free-layer sMTJs with synthetic antiferromagnets (SAF). We evaluate the proposed sMTJ design with experimentally benchmarked spin-circuit models accounting for transport physics, coupled with the stochastic Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation for magnetization dynamics. We find that the use of low-barrier SAF layers reduces dipolar coupling, achieving uncorrelated fluctuations at zero-magnetic field surviving up to diameters exceeding ($D\approx 100$ nm) if the nanomagnets can be made thin enough ($\approx 1$-$2$ nm). The double-free-layer structure retains bias-independence and the circular nature of the nanomagnets provides near-uniform randomness with fast fluctuations. Combining our full sMTJ model with advanced transistor models, we estimate the energy to generate a random bit as $\approx$ 3.6 fJ, with fluctuation rates of $\approx$ 3.3 GHz per p-bit. Our results will guide the experimental development of superior stochastic magnetic tunnel junctions for large-scale and energy-efficient probabilistic computation for problems relevant to machine learning and artificial intelligence.

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