Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is typically thought of as a possible technology for quantum computation. Here we instead outline how commercially available NMR spectrometers could be used to perform non-quantum computation: from addressable 3D memory, to a programmable 3D reaction-diffusion computer.
full paper : PDF 1214K
@inproceedings(SS-UC07,
author = "Matthias Bechmann and John A. Clark and Angelika Sebald and Susan Stepney",
title = "Unentangling nuclear magnetic resonance computing",
pages = "1--18",
crossref = "UC07"
)
@proceedings(UC07,
title = "Unconventional Computing 2007, Bristol, UK, July 2007",
booktitle = "Unconventional Computing 2007, Bristol, UK, July 2007",
editors = "A. Adamatzky and L. Bull and B. De Lacy Costello
and Susan Stepney and C. Teuscher",
publisher = "Luniver Press",
year = 2007
)