This book provides a comprehensive overview of the computational physics for nanoscience and nanotechnology. Based on MATLAB and the C++ distributed computing paradigm, the book gives instructive explanations of the underlying physics for mesoscopic systems with many listed programs that readily compute physical properties into nanoscales. Many generated graphical pictures demonstrate not only the principles of physics, but also the methodology of computing.
Pi., Ravikumar, C.P.: Parallel Methods for VLSI Layout Design. Greenwood Publishing Group, Boston (1995) Kirkpatrick, S., Gelatt, C.D., Vecchi, M.P.: Optimization by simulated annealing. Science 4598(220), 671–680 (1983) Cerny, ...
What new ways will then be available to develop even more powerful and up-to-date systems? This book introduces the principles of quantic computing, the use of nano-tubes in molecular transistors and ADN computing.
[10] J. Chen, J. Mundya, Y. Bai, S.-M. C. Chan, P. Petrica, and R. I. Bahar, A probabilistic approach to nano-computing, Proceedings of the Second Workshop on Non-Silicon Computing (San Diego, CA), June 2003, http://www-2.cs ...
... in Ned Seeman's lab that it is possible to “initialize” a clocked stored program DNA machine. We end the book with a discussion of the design features of a programming language for clocked DNA programming. There is a lot left to do.
This book will help scientists, researchers and professionals in related disciplines to understand the fundamentals of this upcoming domain.
Once the instructions were stored in the machine, the entire computation could run at the speed of the machine. This book shows how to do the same thing for DNA computing.
Nanocomputing
This book provides a composite solution for optimal logic designs for Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata based circuits.
This book discusses the main tasks of Design Automation for Field-coupled Nanocomputing (FCN) technologies, in order to enable large-scale composition of elementary building blocks, that obtain correct systems from given function ...
Lundin Palmerius K.E. (2013). A case-based study of students' visuohaptic experiences of electric fields around molecules: shaping the development of virtual nanoscience learning environments. Education Research International.