Abstract

Molecular quantum-dot cellular automata (QCA) is a low-power computing paradigm that may offer ultra-high device densities and THz-speed switching at room temperature. A single mixed-valence (MV) molecule acts as an elementary QCA device known as a cell. Cells coupled locally via the electrostatic field form logic circuits. However, previously-synthesized ionic MV molecular cells are affected by randomly-located, nearby neutralizing counterions that can bias device states or change device characteristics, causing incorrect computational results. This ab initio study explores how non-biasing counterions affect individual molecular cells. Additionally, we model two novel neutral, zwitterionic MV QCA molecules designed to avoid biasing and other undesirable counterionic effects. The location of the neutralizing counterion is controlled by integrating one counterion into each cell at a well-defined, non-biasing location. Each zwitterionic QCA candidate molecule presented here has a fixed, integrated counterion, which neutralizes the mobile charges used to encode the device state.

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