Jun 16, 2026

[paper] 130-nm CMOS tunnel p-bit cell

Ju-Young Yoon, Nuno Caçoilo, Advait Madhavan, Jabez J. McClelland, Shun Kanai, Hideo Ohno, Shunsuke Fukami, and William A. Borders, 
"130-nm CMOS-integrated superparamagnetic tunnel junction-based p-bit," 
in IEEE Electron Device Letters, 
DOI: 10.1109/LED.2026.3696800

Abstract: Probabilistic computers offer promising solutions for computationally hard problems in domains such as combinatorial optimization and machine learning. A key building block in these systems is the probabilistic bit (p-bit), which relies on superparamagnetic tunnel junctions (sMTJs) as its source of randomness. A challenging threshold to cross for scaling sMTJ-based p-bit systems is integration of sMTJs with CMOS technology. In this work, we present experimental results of a p-bit unit cell using sMTJs integrated with 130 nm CMOS technology and demonstrate that the sMTJ’s resistance fluctuations can generate a corresponding fluctuating digital output voltage which is tunable via the input voltage. These findings establish the feasibility of CMOS-compatible, sMTJ-based probabilistic circuits and mark a key step toward scalable hardware for real-world probabilistic computing applications. 


FIG: (a) Circuit diagram of the spintronic p-bit; b) Schematic cross-sectional structure of the spintronic p-bit. Transistors and lower interconnect layers were fabricated at SkyWater, followed by fabrication of the spintronic devices at Uni. Tohoku. (c,d) Cross-sectional and plan-view electron microscope images of the spintronic device designed to exhibit stochastic fluctuations.

Acknowledgements: This work was made possible by the NIST-led Nanotechnology Xccelerator program that distributes open-source circuit designs for integration of novel technologies on CMOS.

RevEDA v0.9.0 Has Arrived

ChipFoundry September Shuttle


Jun 14, 2026

[SwissChips] Annual Event 2026



On 4 June 2026, the SwissChips community gathered for this year’s Annual Event at the SwissTech Convention Center in Lausanne, EPFL. With over 270 attendees, more than 50 posters, and 14 talks, the day was packed with updates, talks, and networking. We heard from across the SwissChips work packages, welcomed contributions from the wider ecosystem, and had the pleasure of having a keynote by Prof. Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli from the University of California, Berkeley. The first half of the keynote from the event is available Download here (PDF, 5.8 MB)


SwissChips program included a keynote by Prof. Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli from the University of California, Berkeley. The first half of the keynote from the event is available  Download here (PDF, 5.8 MB)
Following are the SwissChips presentation highlights showcasing Swiss’ growing engagement and support of the IHP OpenPDK Initiative. It's a fast‑rising, community‑driven effort that is opening real pathways for education, research, and innovation in microelectronics.

Guest Speaker: Thanushan Kugathasan, University of Geneva, presented Pixel Chips for Radiation and Optical Sensing with Tape-out completed in December 2025 and the wafer fabrication at IHP Microelectronics using 130 nm SiGe BiCMOS process.

Pixel Chips for Radiation and Optical Sensing werw implemented using IHP 130 nm BiCMOS technology through Europractice R&D collaboration for process optimization and SiGe HBTs integration within a CMOS platform.

Arianna Rubino, ETHZ, has presented the EZ130V1 open-source standard-cell library, it's available as the improved open library SG13G2 for IHP130 process:
• EZ130V1 has 213 cells - ~3x than SG13G2
• 8-track height - 11% lower height than SG13G2
Some of the standard cells created during VLSI 5 EZ130V1 otimization are eg: 
• AND3X2
• XNOR3X2
• HAX2
Croc SoC-based designs realized through a joined VLSI 2 and VLSI 5 effort are:
• KOOPA EZ130v0 library 39 cells
• SKOLL EZ130v1 library213 cells

Jun 10, 2026

[FSiC2026] Open EDA · Open Silicon · Sovereign by Design

FSiC2026
Free Silicon Conference 2026
Open EDA · Open Silicon · Sovereign by Design


What is FSiC? The annual gathering of the free and open-source silicon community building open EDA tools, open PDKs, and free hardware. Three days of talks and tutorials about designing chips with software you can read, share, and modify.

Who should come? Chip designers, EDA developers, researchers, students, and anyone curious about building silicon without proprietary lock-in. All experience levels welcome.

When? 6–8 July 2026

Where? University of Ljubljana, 
Faculty of Electrical Engineering
Tržaška cesta 25
SI-1000 Ljubljana

Registration closes 22 June: https://pretix.eu/FSiC/2026/

FSiC2026 Program: https://wiki.f-si.org/index.php/FSiC2026