Technical Paper Round-Up: June 21

Processing in-memory; flexible microprocessors; graphene nanoribbons; thermal management; BBCube; preventing dendrite penetration; NoC; neuromorphic object localization; Information flow tracking; ultra-low voltage

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New technical papers added to Semiconductor Engineering’s library this week.

Technical Paper Research Organizations
Benchmarking a New Paradigm: An Experimental Analysis of a Real Processing-in-Memory Architecture ETH Zurich
FlexiCores: low footprint, high yield, field reprogrammable flexible microprocessors University of Illinois and PragmatIC Semiconductor
Graphene nanoribbons initiated from molecularly derived seeds University of Wisconsin-Madison with contributions from Argonne National Laboratory
Neuromorphic object localization using resistive memories and ultrasonic transducers CEA, LETI, Université Grenoble Alpes and others
CellIFT: Leveraging Cells for Scalable and Precise Dynamic Information Flow Tracking in Hardware Designs ETH Zurich and Intel
Design and Simulation of Low-Voltage CMOS Circuits Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil
A Review on Transient Thermal Management of Electronic Devices Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
Review of Bumpless Build Cube (BBCube) Using Wafer-on-Wafer (WOW) and Chip-on-Wafer (COW) for Tera-Scale Three-Dimensional Integration (3DI) Tokyo Institute of Technology and others
Xenon Ion Implantation Induced Surface Compressive Stress for Preventing Dendrite Penetration in Solid-State Electrolytes University of Surrey
Deep Reinforcement Learning Enabled Self-Configurable Networks-on-Chip for High-Performance and Energy-Efficient Computing Systems Eastern Illinois University

Semiconductor Engineering is in the process of building this library of research papers. Please send suggestions (via comments section below) for what else you’d like us to incorporate. If you have research papers you are trying to promote, we will review them to see if they are a good fit for our global audience. At a minimum, papers need to be well researched and documented, relevant to the semiconductor ecosystem, and free of marketing bias. There is no cost involved for us posting links to papers.



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