Решил написать о современных технологиях памяти. Желание появилось сразу после того, как я понял, что ни черта не разбираюсь в том, какая память какая и когда ее нужно ставить и куда вообще.
Начнем без особых вступлений, ибо памятей много, а времени мало.
Итак, наиболее часто память с произвольным доступом(более известна как RAM) представляется в виде матрицы.
Тут все просто. Если мы хотим прочитать или записать что-то по определенному адресу, то мы передаем этот самый адрес, шевелим нужными пинами и на выходе получаем данные (ну или подаем данные, если вы больше предпочитаете записывать). В память как правило встроены декодеры адреса, которые по заданному адресу выбирают определенную колонку или столбец (об этом будет дальше).
Для начала перечислим основные параметры памяти, на которые ориентируются производители.
Во-первых, память должна предоставлять быстрый доступ к определенным своим битам.
Во-вторых, память должна достаточно быстро отвечать процессору (параметр, называемый latency).
В-третьих, память должна быть дешевой (ага, конечно).
В-четвертых, память должна потреблять мало энергии.
В-пятых, память должна быть предназначена для работы на определенном уровне в иерархии. Здесь имеется в виду тот факт, что, чем ближе к процессору находится память (не физически, хотя и это тоже), тем быстрее она должна работать.
Забегая вперед, рассмотрим архитектуру типичного компьютера с точки зрения памяти.
Как правило, NOR-память содержит команды инициализации процессора. На это есть свои причины, которые мы рассмотрим позже. Обычно мы работаем с жестким диском. Процессор не может напрямую с ним работать, ему нужна некоторая помощь. В памяти NOR хранится управляющая процессором программа, которая, говорит ему, что делать дальше. Память NOR энергонезависима и довольно быстра (среди энергонезависимых), поэтому программу инициализации процессора лучше всего хранить в NOR-памяти. Однако в качестве буфера она использоваться вряд ли может. Самая главная причина заключается в том, что отношение стоимости памяти к ее размеру крайне велико. Да и скорость ее не так велика по сравнению с DRAM.
Можно заметить маленький зеленый квадратик на жестком диске. Тут тоже все просто. Жесткий диск — тоже устройство и имеет право иметь собственный контроллер, который тоже надо инициализировать.
С видеоадаптером ситуация аналогична. Можно отметить, что иногда у него DRAM не совсем собственная, а разделена с DRAM CPU.
Еще один тип памяти не отмечен на схеме. Этот тип EEPROM. Это крайне медленная дешевая энергонезависимая память, предназначенная специально для хранения серийников и прочего хлама.
А теперь небольшое дополнение к схеме, которое позволит системе работать быстрее.
Это дополнение — так называемый дисковый кэш. Он позволяет значительно ускорить доступ к информации на жестком диске (а заодно и выполнить пятое условие для памяти — это тот, что про иерархию памяти в системах).
На самом деле NAND память не общается напрямую с DRAM, и жесткий диск не пишет напрямую в NAND. Все это кроется за довольно сложными схемами. Но с точки зрения потоков информации нам этого вполне достаточно.
Теперь рассмотрим, как дела обстоят с серверами.
Здесь добавляется кэш процессора. Он необходима для очень быстрого доступа к данным. Мы знаем, что у процессора уже имеются собственные кэши (L1 и L2). Они по своей сути тоже являются SRAM-памятью.
Теперь посмотрим, что внутри плееров и камер.
В ROM хранится прошивка, которую можно менять (поэтому она не совсем ROM и может быть NOR). SRAM здесь нужна в качестве площадки для «памятезатратных» операций процессора. Таковыми являются кодирование видео и звука или изображений. Основным элементом является NAND память. Она выбрана из-за того что она энергонезависимая, быстрая для целей устройства и относительно недорогая.
Ну а теперь подробно про каждый тип.
Начнем с SRAM.
Каждый бит памяти является триггером и состоит из четырех транзисторов (в случае активной подтяжки линий) или из двух транзисторов и двух резисторов (в случае пассивной подтяжки линий). Как мы помним, память выстроена в линии. В случае SRAM это тоже так, и для каждой линии необходимо еще два транзистора. Для вывода информации SRAM использует дифференциальные линии. А как известно, дифференциальные линии крайне устойчивы к помехам. И как следствие, SRAM крайне быстра.
Нижняя пара транзисторов образует триггер с перекрестными обратными связями (cross-coupled flip-flop). Верхние транзисторы выполняют роль активной подтяжки. Транзисторы по бокам выставляют на прямой и инвертированной линии битов значения, хранящиеся в триггере при подаче сигнала на линию слов.
Для чтения подаем на Word line единицу и смотрим, что на bit line. Для записи зануляем необходимую bit line и подаем на word line единицу. Но это неинтересно.
Сильными сторонами этого типа памяти являются ее высокая скорость (благодаря применению дифференциальных линий и самой методики хранения) и низкое потребление в режиме неактивности (энергия потребляется только для изменения состояния триггера).
А вот слабыми сторонами является крайняя дороговизна памяти (6 или 4 транзистора на один бит — это много).
Перейдем к DRAM.
Здесь каждый бит представлен конденсатором и транзистором. Это значительно сокращает стоимость памяти по сравнению с SRAM.
Как следствие наличия токов утечки кондесатора, DRAM память необходимо периодически обновлять (подзаряжать). Сама подзарядка является сложным процессом. Необходимо выбрать время сканирования битов и вкачивать заряд только туда, где была (или остается) единица. На самом деле схема оказывается еще сложнее, и как она устроена точно знают только производители памяти. Да и неважно это, как внутри происходит поддержание состояний битов, а важно следствие из этого факта. А следствие такое: на все это расходуется энергия, причем довольно большая.
Чтение и запись производится открытием и закрытием транзистора. Чтобы записать значение, нужно закрыть транзистор, и выставить потенциал на линии битов. Сопротивление сток-исток стремится к бесконечности, и конденсатор зарядится (разрядится). Для чтения нужно открыть транзистор и посмотреть, что на линии битов. После чтения необходимо провести принудительную процедуру обновления состояния бита (мы же не просто так получаем инфу о состоянии бита, а путем слития с конденсатора заряда). Эта процедура опять добавляет расход энергии.
Преимуществами DRAM являются ее дешевизна и скорость (здесь не сравниваем с SRAM).
Недостатками будут ее энергозависимость, необходимость обновления и высокое энергопотребление.
А теперь перейдем к энергонезависмым типам.
Самой первой разработанной и применяемой энергонезависимой памятью являлась mask ROM. Каждый бит в ней состоял только из транзистора.
Она очень похожа на DRAM, только в ней нет конденсатора. Mask ROM программируется преимущественно на фабрике и больше не может быть изменена. Само программирование производится путем металлизации одного из контактактов транзистора. Скажем, убираем у транзистора затвор (пережигается «проволочка» на схеме). И в результате на линии битов мы не сможем наблюдать 0.
Стоит еще раз отметить, что такая память изготавливается на фабриках. Это значит, что ее производство будет происходить только в крупных сериях, при которых окупятся затраты на изготовление масок и прочую подготовку микросхем к производству.
Преимуществами Mask ROM являются ее энергонезависимость, произвольный доступ, и дешевизна (при больших партиях).
Недостатками являются ее одноразовость и возможность программирования только на фабрике.
Однако люди хотят сохранять свои изображения, музыку в память, стирать все это и чувствовать себя абсолютно независимыми. На помощь пришло изобретение, называемое «плавающий затвор», разработанное в BellLabs задолго до того, как люди стали думать о необходимости энергонезависимой памяти.
Эх! Какая же это классная компания, где было разработано почти все, что мы сейчас знаем, где трудилось множество Нобелевских лауреатов… И почему она распалась, а остались теперь только патентные говнари… Ну да ладно…
Посмотрим, что это за зверь, плавающий затвор.
В таком типе памяти каждый бит представлен транзистором, который сохраняет заряд при отключении питания.
На картинке желтым показаны слои оксида, голубым — полупроводник и зеленым — подложка (тоже полупроводник, но не такой важный).
Электроны движутся от истока к затвору по каналу (в упрощенной форме). Сам плавающий затвор скрывается между слоями оксида. Нижний слой оксида называется слоем туннелирования, а верхний слой — слоем изоляции затвора. Я мог напутать с терминами, но так как я основываюсь на английской литературе, то перевожу так, как написано там. В отечественных источниках я не встречал четкого выделения названий этих слоев.
Рассмотрим первый эффект ,который применяется в плавающем затворе — инжекция горячих электронов.
Пусть по каналу течет большой ток, а на затвор наведен положительный потенциал. Тогда электроны с высокой кинетической энергией будут способны преодолеть барьер и осесть в плавающем затворе. Так происходит запись памяти.
Теперь рассмотрим эффект Фаулера-Нордхейма. Это по сути туннелирование электронов за счет изменения потенциала между затвором и истоком.
В результате в области истока образуется канал туннелирования, по которому заряд стекает с плавающего затвора.
Считается, что туннельный эффект Фаулера-Нордхейма крайне медленный процесс по сравнению с инжекцией горячих электронов. Но с помощью него мы можем как записывать, так и стирать память (просто поменяем плюс с минусом на затворе и истоке).
Есть у плавающего затвора серьезный недостаток.
Дело в том, что оксид это структура, в которой наличествует множество дефектов кристаллической решетки. Эти дефекты называются ловушками. в этих ловушках могут оседать электроны, так и не туннелировавшись в плавающий затвор. Все эти электроны могут проявляться как ложный накопившийся заряд. И теперь становится понятно, почему количество циклов перезаписи ограничено. Все потому что электроны в ловушках все копятся и копятся с каждым циклом.
В большинстве случаев ограниченное количество циклов не является проблемой. Их хоть конечное число, но их много. Для SLC NAND их порядка 500 000, а для MLC NAND их десятки тысяч.
Теперь перейдем к конкретным типам памяти.
EEPROM.
Ячейка EEPROM состоит из двух транзисторов: один с плавающим затвором и еще транзистор для снятия данных. Стирание данных производится непосредственно подачей потенциала на затвор транзистора памяти, а чтение — на транзистор снятия данных.
EEPROM очень медленная память, потому что использует механизм туннелирования.
Особенностью Flash памяти является использование одного транзистора для стирания группы битов. Эта идея является неким компромисом между стоимостью памяти и удобством ее использования.
Начнем обзор Flash памяти с NOR.
NOR-память организована как двумерный массив. Доступ к ячейке может производиться индивидуально и быстро. Чтение производится включением потенциала на линии затворов и чтением тока стока.
Преимуществами NOR являются быстрый произвольный доступ в любой момент времени к любой ячейке. Сама ячейка состоит из одного транзистора, что удешевляет память.
Недостатками являются медленные записи.
В NAND Flash нашли способ еще уменьшить размер чипа. Для этого сократили количество линий истоков. Чип памяти уже не имел свойства произвольного доступа к каждой ячейке, но зато значительно сокращался в размере. На изображении представлена одна строка в NAND-памяти.
Помимо потери произвольного доступа появилась еще одна проблема. Дело в том, что чем меньше количество линий в чипе, тем они длиннее, а чем они длиннее, тем больше шумов. Так что в NAND велика вероятность словить ошибку чтения. Чтобы устранить этот недостаток применяется помехоустойчивое кодирование информации. После блока памяти оставляется несколько бит для ECC — error correction code. Он является неким хэшем от данных, записанных в блоке. Для имплементации этой защиты требуется довольно сложная логика, которая будет контролировать потоки данных.
Итак, после того как были описаны все распространенные типы памяти, самое время свести их в итоговую таблицу.
Начнем с оперативных энергозависимых. Заголовки в таблице я не переводил, потому что русский перевод не влез бы и звучал бы он дебильно (но все же перевод вот: минимальный размер данных на запись, минимальный размер данных на чтение, скорость записи, скорость чтения, энергопотребление в активной фазе, энергопотребление в режиме ожидания, цена за мегабайт, приложения).
Smallest Write | Smallest Read | Write Speed | Read Speed | Active Power | Sleep Power | Price | Applications | |
SRAM | Байт | Байт | Очень быстро | Очень быстро | Высокое | Очень низкое | Очень высокая | Мало быстрой памяти |
DRAM | Байт | Страница | Быстро | Быстро | Среднее | Высокое | Низкая | Основное ОЗУ |
А теперь такая же таблица для энергозависимой памяти.
«FlashROM» redirects here. For programming utility, see Flashrom (utility).
For the neuropsychological concept related to human memory, see Flashbulb memory.
Flash memory is an electronic non-volatile computer memory storage medium that can be electrically erased and reprogrammed. The two main types of flash memory, NOR flash and NAND flash, are named for the NOR and NAND logic gates. Both use the same cell design, consisting of floating gate MOSFETs. They differ at the circuit level depending on whether the state of the bit line or word lines is pulled high or low: in NAND flash, the relationship between the bit line and the word lines resembles a NAND gate; in NOR flash, it resembles a NOR gate.
Flash memory, a type of floating-gate memory, was invented at Toshiba in 1980 and is based on EEPROM technology. Toshiba began marketing flash memory in 1987.[1] had to be erased completely before they could be rewritten. NAND flash memory, however, may be erased, written, and read in blocks (or pages), which generally are much smaller than the entire device. NOR flash memory allows a single machine word to be written – to an erased location – or read independently. A flash memory device typically consists of one or more flash memory chips (each holding many flash memory cells), along with a separate flash memory controller chip.
The NAND type is found mainly in memory cards, USB flash drives, solid-state drives (those produced since 2009), feature phones, smartphones, and similar products, for general storage and transfer of data. NAND or NOR flash memory is also often used to store configuration data in digital products, a task previously made possible by EEPROM or battery-powered static RAM. A key disadvantage of flash memory is that it can endure only a relatively small number of write cycles in a specific block.[2]
Flash memory[3] is used in computers, PDAs, digital audio players, digital cameras, mobile phones, synthesizers, video games, scientific instrumentation, industrial robotics, and medical electronics. Flash memory has fast read access time, but it is not as fast as static RAM or ROM. In portable devices, it is preferred to use flash memory because of its mechanical shock resistance since mechanical drives are more prone to mechanical damage.[4]
Because erase cycles are slow, the large block sizes used in flash memory erasing give it a significant speed advantage over non-flash EEPROM when writing large amounts of data. As of 2019, flash memory costs much less[by how much?] than byte-programmable EEPROM and had become the dominant memory type wherever a system required a significant amount of non-volatile solid-state storage. EEPROMs, however, are still used in applications that require only small amounts of storage, as in serial presence detect.[5][6]
Flash memory packages can use die stacking with through-silicon vias and several dozen layers of 3D TLC NAND cells (per die) simultaneously to achieve capacities of up to 1 tebibyte per package using 16 stacked dies and an integrated flash controller as a separate die inside the package.[7][8][9][10]
HistoryEdit
BackgroundEdit
The origins of flash memory can be traced back to the development of the floating-gate MOSFET (FGMOS), also known as the floating-gate transistor.[11][12] The original MOSFET (metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistor), also known as the MOS transistor, was invented by Egyptian engineer Mohamed M. Atalla and Korean engineer Dawon Kahng at Bell Labs in 1959.[13] Kahng went on to develop a variation, the floating-gate MOSFET, with Chinese engineer Simon Min Sze at Bell Labs in 1967.[14] They proposed that it could be used as floating-gate memory cells for storing a form of programmable read-only memory (PROM) that is both non-volatile and re-programmable.[14]
Early types of floating-gate memory included EPROM (erasable PROM) and EEPROM (electrically erasable PROM) in the 1970s.[14] However, early floating-gate memory required engineers to build a memory cell for each bit of data, which proved to be cumbersome,[15] slow,[16] and expensive, restricting floating-gate memory to niche applications in the 1970s, such as military equipment and the earliest experimental mobile phones.[11]
Invention and commercializationEdit
Fujio Masuoka, while working for Toshiba, proposed a new type of floating-gate memory that allowed entire sections of memory to be erased quickly and easily, by applying a voltage to a single wire connected to a group of cells.[11] This led to Masuoka’s invention of flash memory at Toshiba in 1980.[15][17][18] According to Toshiba, the name «flash» was suggested by Masuoka’s colleague, Shōji Ariizumi, because the erasure process of the memory contents reminded him of the flash of a camera.[19] Masuoka and colleagues presented the invention of NOR flash in 1984,[20][21] and then NAND flash at the IEEE 1987 International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM) held in San Francisco.[22]
Toshiba commercially launched NAND flash memory in 1987.[1][14] Intel Corporation introduced the first commercial NOR type flash chip in 1988.[23] NOR-based flash has long erase and write times, but provides full address and data buses, allowing random access to any memory location. This makes it a suitable replacement for older read-only memory (ROM) chips, which are used to store program code that rarely needs to be updated, such as a computer’s BIOS or the firmware of set-top boxes. Its endurance may be from as little as 100 erase cycles for an on-chip flash memory,[24] to a more typical 10,000 or 100,000 erase cycles, up to 1,000,000 erase cycles.[25] NOR-based flash was the basis of early flash-based removable media; CompactFlash was originally based on it, though later cards moved to less expensive NAND flash.
NAND flash has reduced erase and write times, and requires less chip area per cell, thus allowing greater storage density and lower cost per bit than NOR flash. However, the I/O interface of NAND flash does not provide a random-access external address bus. Rather, data must be read on a block-wise basis, with typical block sizes of hundreds to thousands of bits. This makes NAND flash unsuitable as a drop-in replacement for program ROM, since most microprocessors and microcontrollers require byte-level random access. In this regard, NAND flash is similar to other secondary data storage devices, such as hard disks and optical media, and is thus highly suitable for use in mass-storage devices, such as memory cards and solid-state drives (SSD). Flash memory cards and SSDs store data using multiple NAND flash memory chips.
The first NAND-based removable memory card format was SmartMedia, released in 1995. Many others followed, including MultiMediaCard, Secure Digital, Memory Stick, and xD-Picture Card.
Later developmentsEdit
A new generation of memory card formats, including RS-MMC, miniSD and microSD, feature extremely small form factors. For example, the microSD card has an area of just over 1.5 cm2, with a thickness of less than 1 mm.
NAND flash has achieved significant levels of memory density as a result of several major technologies that were commercialized during the late 2000s to early 2010s.[26]
Multi-level cell (MLC) technology stores more than one bit in each memory cell. NEC demonstrated multi-level cell (MLC) technology in 1998, with an 80 Mb flash memory chip storing 2 bits per cell.[27] STMicroelectronics also demonstrated MLC in 2000, with a 64 MB NOR flash memory chip.[28] In 2009, Toshiba and SanDisk introduced NAND flash chips with QLC technology storing 4 bits per cell and holding a capacity of 64 Gbit.[29][30] Samsung Electronics introduced triple-level cell (TLC) technology storing 3-bits per cell, and began mass-producing NAND chips with TLC technology in 2010.[31]
Charge trap flashEdit
Charge trap flash (CTF) technology replaces the polysilicon floating gate, which is sandwiched between a blocking gate oxide above and a tunneling oxide below it, with an electrically insulating silicon nitride layer; the silicon nitride layer traps electrons. In theory, CTF is less prone to electron leakage, providing improved data retention.[32][33][34][35][36][37]
Because CTF replaces the polysilicon with an electrically insulating nitride, it allows for smaller cells and higher endurance (lower degradation or wear). However, electrons can become trapped and accumulate in the nitride, leading to degradation. Leakage is exacerbated at high temperatures since electrons become more excitated with increasing temperatures. CTF technology however still uses a tunneling oxide and blocking layer which are the weak points of the technology, since they can still be damaged in the usual ways (the tunnel oxide can be degraded due to extremely high electric fields and the blocking layer due to Anode Hot Hole Injection (AHHI).[38][39]
Degradation or wear of the oxides is the reason why flash memory has limited endurance, and data retention goes down (the potential for data loss increases) with increasing degradation, since the oxides lose their electrically insulating characteristics as they degrade. The oxides must insulate against electrons to prevent them from leaking which would cause data loss.
In 1991, NEC researchers including N. Kodama, K. Oyama and Hiroki Shirai described a type of flash memory with a charge trap method.[40] In 1998, Boaz Eitan of Saifun Semiconductors (later acquired by Spansion) patented a flash memory technology named NROM that took advantage of a charge trapping layer to replace the conventional floating gate used in conventional flash memory designs.[41] In 2000, an Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) research team led by Richard M. Fastow, Egyptian engineer Khaled Z. Ahmed and Jordanian engineer Sameer Haddad (who later joined Spansion) demonstrated a charge-trapping mechanism for NOR flash memory cells.[42] CTF was later commercialized by AMD and Fujitsu in 2002.[43] 3D V-NAND (vertical NAND) technology stacks NAND flash memory cells vertically within a chip using 3D charge trap flash (CTP) technology. 3D V-NAND technology was first announced by Toshiba in 2007,[44] and the first device, with 24 layers, was first commercialized by Samsung Electronics in 2013.[45][46]
3D integrated circuit technologyEdit
3D integrated circuit (3D IC) technology stacks integrated circuit (IC) chips vertically into a single 3D IC chip package.[26] Toshiba introduced 3D IC technology to NAND flash memory in April 2007, when they debuted a 16 GB eMMC compliant (product number THGAM0G7D8DBAI6, often abbreviated THGAM on consumer websites) embedded NAND flash memory chip, which was manufactured with eight stacked 2 GB NAND flash chips.[47] In September 2007, Hynix Semiconductor (now SK Hynix) introduced 24-layer 3D IC technology, with a 16 GB flash memory chip that was manufactured with 24 stacked NAND flash chips using a wafer bonding process.[48] Toshiba also used an eight-layer 3D IC for their 32 GB THGBM flash chip in 2008.[49] In 2010, Toshiba used a 16-layer 3D IC for their 128 GB THGBM2 flash chip, which was manufactured with 16 stacked 8 GB chips.[50] In the 2010s, 3D ICs came into widespread commercial use for NAND flash memory in mobile devices.[26]
As of August 2017, microSD cards with a capacity up to 400 GB (400 billion bytes) are available.[51][52] The same year, Samsung combined 3D IC chip stacking with its 3D V-NAND and TLC technologies to manufacture its 512 GB KLUFG8R1EM flash memory chip with eight stacked 64-layer V-NAND chips.[53] In 2019, Samsung produced a 1024 GB flash chip, with eight stacked 96-layer V-NAND chips and with QLC technology.[54][55]
Principles of operationEdit
Flash memory stores information in an array of memory cells made from floating-gate transistors. In single-level cell (SLC) devices, each cell stores only one bit of information. Multi-level cell (MLC) devices, including triple-level cell (TLC) devices, can store more than one bit per cell.
The floating gate may be conductive (typically polysilicon in most kinds of flash memory) or non-conductive (as in SONOS flash memory).[56]
Floating-gate MOSFETEdit
In flash memory, each memory cell resembles a standard metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET) except that the transistor has two gates instead of one. The cells can be seen as an electrical switch in which current flows between two terminals (source and drain) and is controlled by a floating gate (FG) and a control gate (CG). The CG is similar to the gate in other MOS transistors, but below this, there is the FG insulated all around by an oxide layer. The FG is interposed between the CG and the MOSFET channel. Because the FG is electrically isolated by its insulating layer, electrons placed on it are trapped. When the FG is charged with electrons, this charge screens the electric field from the CG, thus, increasing the threshold voltage (VT) of the cell. This means that the VT of the cell can be changed between the uncharged FG threshold voltage (VT1) and the higher charged FG threshold voltage (VT2) by changing the FG charge. In order to read a value from the cell, an intermediate voltage (VI) between VT1 and VT2 is applied to the CG. If the channel conducts at VI, the FG must be uncharged (if it were charged, there would not be conduction because VI is less than VT2). If the channel does not conduct at the VI, it indicates that the FG is charged. The binary value of the cell is sensed by determining whether there is current flowing through the transistor when VI is asserted on the CG. In a multi-level cell device, which stores more than one bit per cell, the amount of current flow is sensed (rather than simply its presence or absence), in order to determine more precisely the level of charge on the FG.
Floating gate MOSFETs are so named because there is an electrically insulating tunnel oxide layer between the floating gate and the silicon, so the gate «floats» above the silicon. The oxide keeps the electrons confined to the floating gate. Degradation or wear (and the limited endurance of floating gate Flash memory) occurs due to the extremely high electric field (10 million volts per centimeter) experienced by the oxide. Such high voltage densities can break atomic bonds over time in the relatively thin oxide, gradually degrading its electrically insulating properties and allowing electrons to be trapped in and pass through freely (leak) from the floating gate into the oxide, increasing the likelihood of data loss since the electrons (the quantity of which is used to represent different charge levels, each assigned to a different combination of bits in MLC Flash) are normally in the floating gate. This is why data retention goes down and the risk of data loss increases with increasing degradation.[57][58][36][59][60]The silicon oxide in a cell degrades with every erase operation. The degradation increases the amount of negative charge in the cell over time due to trapped electrons in the oxide and negates some of the control gate voltage, this over time also makes erasing the cell slower, so to maintain the performance and reliability of the NAND chip, the cell must be retired from use. Endurance also decreases with the number of bits in a cell. With more bits in a cell, the number of possible states (each represented by a different voltage level) in a cell increases and is more sensitive to the voltages used for programming. Voltages may be adjusted to compensate for degradation of the silicon oxide, and as the number of bits increases, the number of possible states also increases and thus the cell is less tolerant of adjustments to programming voltages, because there is less space between the voltage levels that define each state in a cell.[61]
Fowler–Nordheim tunnelingEdit
The process of moving electrons from the control gate and into the floating gate is called Fowler–Nordheim tunneling, and it fundamentally changes the characteristics of the cell by increasing the MOSFET’s threshold voltage. This, in turn, changes the drain-source current that flows through the transistor for a given gate voltage, which is ultimately used to encode a binary value. The Fowler-Nordheim tunneling effect is reversible, so electrons can be added to or removed from the floating gate, processes traditionally known as writing and erasing.[62]
Internal charge pumpsEdit
Despite the need for relatively high programming and erasing voltages, virtually all flash chips today require only a single supply voltage and produce the high voltages that are required using on-chip charge pumps.
Over half the energy used by a 1.8 V NAND flash chip is lost in the charge pump itself. Since boost converters are inherently more efficient than charge pumps, researchers developing low-power SSDs have proposed returning to the dual Vcc/Vpp supply voltages used on all early flash chips, driving the high Vpp voltage for all flash chips in an SSD with a single shared external boost converter.[63][64][65][66][67][68][69][70]
In spacecraft and other high-radiation environments, the on-chip charge pump is the first part of the flash chip to fail, although flash memories will continue to work – in read-only mode – at much higher radiation levels.[71]
NOR flashEdit
NOR flash memory wiring and structure on silicon
In NOR flash, each cell has one end connected directly to ground, and the other end connected directly to a bit line. This arrangement is called «NOR flash» because it acts like a NOR gate: when one of the word lines (connected to the cell’s CG) is brought high, the corresponding storage transistor acts to pull the output bit line low. NOR flash continues to be the technology of choice for embedded applications requiring a discrete non-volatile memory device.[citation needed] The low read latencies characteristic of NOR devices allow for both direct code execution and data storage in a single memory product.[72]
ProgrammingEdit
Programming a NOR memory cell (setting it to logical 0), via hot-electron injection
Erasing a NOR memory cell (setting it to logical 1), via quantum tunneling
A single-level NOR flash cell in its default state is logically equivalent to a binary «1» value, because current will flow through the channel under application of an appropriate voltage to the control gate, so that the bitline voltage is pulled down. A NOR flash cell can be programmed, or set to a binary «0» value, by the following procedure:
- an elevated on-voltage (typically >5 V) is applied to the CG
- the channel is now turned on, so electrons can flow from the source to the drain (assuming an NMOS transistor)
- the source-drain current is sufficiently high to cause some high energy electrons to jump through the insulating layer onto the FG, via a process called hot-electron injection.
ErasingEdit
To erase a NOR flash cell (resetting it to the «1» state), a large voltage of the opposite polarity is applied between the CG and source terminal, pulling the electrons off the FG through quantum tunneling. Modern NOR flash memory chips are divided into erase segments (often called blocks or sectors). The erase operation can be performed only on a block-wise basis; all the cells in an erase segment must be erased together. Programming of NOR cells, however, generally can be performed one byte or word at a time.
NAND flash memory wiring and structure on silicon
NAND flashEdit
NAND flash also uses floating-gate transistors, but they are connected in a way that resembles a NAND gate: several transistors are connected in series, and the bit line is pulled low only if all the word lines are pulled high (above the transistors’ VT). These groups are then connected via some additional transistors to a NOR-style bit line array in the same way that single transistors are linked in NOR flash.
Compared to NOR flash, replacing single transistors with serial-linked groups adds an extra level of addressing. Whereas NOR flash might address memory by page then word, NAND flash might address it by page, word and bit. Bit-level addressing suits bit-serial applications (such as hard disk emulation), which access only one bit at a time. Execute-in-place applications, on the other hand, require every bit in a word to be accessed simultaneously. This requires word-level addressing. In any case, both bit and word addressing modes are possible with either NOR or NAND flash.
To read data, first the desired group is selected (in the same way that a single transistor is selected from a NOR array). Next, most of the word lines are pulled up above VT2, while one of them is pulled up to VI. The series group will conduct (and pull the bit line low) if the selected bit has not been programmed.
Despite the additional transistors, the reduction in ground wires and bit lines allows a denser layout and greater storage capacity per chip. (The ground wires and bit lines are actually much wider than the lines in the diagrams.) In addition, NAND flash is typically permitted to contain a certain number of faults (NOR flash, as is used for a BIOS ROM, is expected to be fault-free). Manufacturers try to maximize the amount of usable storage by shrinking the size of the transistors.
NAND Flash cells are read by analysing their response to various voltages.[59]
Writing and erasingEdit
NAND flash uses tunnel injection for writing and tunnel release for erasing. NAND flash memory forms the core of the removable USB storage devices known as USB flash drives, as well as most memory card formats and solid-state drives available today.
The hierarchical structure of NAND flash starts at a cell level which establishes strings, then pages, blocks, planes and ultimately a die. A string is a series of connected NAND cells in which the source of one cell is connected to the drain of the next one. Depending on the NAND technology, a string typically consists of 32 to 128 NAND cells. Strings are organised into pages which are then organised into blocks in which each string is connected to a separate line called a bitline. All cells with the same position in the string are connected through the control gates by a wordline. A plane contains a certain number of blocks that are connected through the same bitline. A flash die consists of one or more planes, and the peripheral circuitry that is needed to perform all the read, write, and erase operations.
The architecture of NAND flash means that data can be read and programmed (written) in pages, typically between 4 KiB and 16 KiB in size, but can only be erased at the level of entire blocks consisting of multiple pages. When a block is erased, all the cells are logically set to 1. Data can only be programmed in one pass to a page in a block that was erased. Any cells that have been set to 0 by programming can only be reset to 1 by erasing the entire block. This means that before new data can be programmed into a page that already contains data, the current contents of the page plus the new data must be copied to a new, erased page. If a suitable erased page is available, the data can be written to it immediately. If no erased page is available, a block must be erased before copying the data to a page in that block. The old page is then marked as invalid and is available for erasing and reuse.[73]
Vertical NANDEdit
3D NAND continues scaling beyond 2D.
Vertical NAND (V-NAND) or 3D NAND memory stacks memory cells vertically and uses a charge trap flash architecture. The vertical layers allow larger areal bit densities without requiring smaller individual cells.[74] It is also sold under the trademark BiCS Flash, which is a trademark of Kioxia Corporation (former Toshiba Memory Corporation). 3D NAND was first announced by Toshiba in 2007.[44] V-NAND was first commercially manufactured by Samsung Electronics in 2013.[45][46][75][76]
StructureEdit
V-NAND uses a charge trap flash geometry (which was commercially introduced in 2002 by AMD and Fujitsu)[43] that stores charge on an embedded silicon nitride film. Such a film is more robust against point defects and can be made thicker to hold larger numbers of electrons. V-NAND wraps a planar charge trap cell into a cylindrical form.[74] As of 2020, 3D NAND Flash memories by Micron and Intel instead use floating gates, however, Micron 128 layer and above 3D NAND memories use a conventional charge trap structure, due to the dissolution of the partnership between Micron and Intel. Charge trap 3D NAND Flash is thinner than floating gate 3D NAND. In floating gate 3D NAND, the memory cells are completely separated from one another, whereas in charge trap 3D NAND, vertical groups of memory cells share the same silicon nitride material.[77]
An individual memory cell is made up of one planar polysilicon layer containing a hole filled by multiple concentric vertical cylinders. The hole’s polysilicon surface acts as the gate electrode. The outermost silicon dioxide cylinder acts as the gate dielectric, enclosing a silicon nitride cylinder that stores charge, in turn enclosing a silicon dioxide cylinder as the tunnel dielectric that surrounds a central rod of conducting polysilicon which acts as the conducting channel.[74]
Memory cells in different vertical layers do not interfere with each other, as the charges cannot move vertically through the silicon nitride storage medium, and the electric fields associated with the gates are closely confined within each layer. The vertical collection is electrically identical to the serial-linked groups in which conventional NAND flash memory is configured.[74]
ConstructionEdit
Growth of a group of V-NAND cells begins with an alternating stack of conducting (doped) polysilicon layers and insulating silicon dioxide layers.[74]
The next step is to form a cylindrical hole through these layers. In practice, a 128 Gibit V-NAND chip with 24 layers of memory cells requires about 2.9 billion such holes. Next, the hole’s inner surface receives multiple coatings, first silicon dioxide, then silicon nitride, then a second layer of silicon dioxide. Finally, the hole is filled with conducting (doped) polysilicon.[74]
PerformanceEdit
As of 2013, V-NAND flash architecture allows read and write operations twice as fast as conventional NAND and can last up to 10 times as long, while consuming 50 percent less power. They offer comparable physical bit density using 10-nm lithography but may be able to increase bit density by up to two orders of magnitude, given V-NAND’s use of up to several hundred layers.[74] As of 2020, V-NAND chips with 160 layers are under development by Samsung.[78]
CostEdit
Minimum bit cost of 3D NAND from non-vertical sidewall. The top opening widens with more layers, counteracting the increase in bit density.
The wafer cost of a 3D NAND is comparable with scaled down (32 nm or less) planar NAND Flash.[79] However, with planar NAND scaling stopping at 16 nm, the cost per bit reduction can continue by 3D NAND starting with 16 layers. However, due to the non-vertical sidewall of the hole etched through the layers; even a slight deviation leads to a minimum bit cost, i.e., minimum equivalent design rule (or maximum density), for a given number of layers; this minimum bit cost layer number decreases for smaller hole diameter.[80]
LimitationsEdit
Block erasureEdit
One limitation of flash memory is that it can be erased only a block at a time. This generally sets all bits in the block to 1. Starting with a freshly erased block, any location within that block can be programmed. However, once a bit has been set to 0, only by erasing the entire block can it be changed back to 1. In other words, flash memory (specifically NOR flash) offers random-access read and programming operations but does not offer arbitrary random-access rewrite or erase operations. A location can, however, be rewritten as long as the new value’s 0 bits are a superset of the over-written values. For example, a nibble value may be erased to 1111, then written as 1110. Successive writes to that nibble can change it to 1010, then 0010, and finally 0000. Essentially, erasure sets all bits to 1, and programming can only clear bits to 0.[81]
Some file systems designed for flash devices make use of this rewrite capability, for example Yaffs1, to represent sector metadata.
Other flash file systems, such as YAFFS2, never make use of this «rewrite» capability—they do a lot of extra work to meet a «write once rule».
Although data structures in flash memory cannot be updated in completely general ways, this allows members to be «removed» by marking them as invalid. This technique may need to be modified for multi-level cell devices, where one memory cell holds more than one bit.
Common flash devices such as USB flash drives and memory cards provide only a block-level interface, or flash translation layer (FTL), which writes to a different cell each time to wear-level the device. This prevents incremental writing within a block; however, it does help the device from being prematurely worn out by intensive write patterns.
Data RetentionEdit
45nm NOR flash memory example of data retention varying with temperatures
Data stored on flash cells is steadily lost due to electron detrapping[definition needed]. The rate of loss increases exponentially as the absolute temperature increases. For example: For a 45 nm NOR Flash, at 1000 hours, the threshold voltage (Vt) loss at 25 deg Celsius is about half that at 90 deg Celsius.[82]
Memory wearEdit
Another limitation is that flash memory has a finite number of program – erase cycles (typically written as P/E cycles). [83][84] Micron Technology and Sun Microsystems announced an SLC NAND flash memory chip rated for 1,000,000 P/E cycles on 17 December 2008.[85] Longer P/E cycles of Industrial SSDs speak for their endurance level and make them more reliable for Industrial usage.
The guaranteed cycle count may apply only to block zero (as is the case with TSOP NAND devices), or to all blocks (as in NOR). This effect is mitigated in some chip firmware or file system drivers by counting the writes and dynamically remapping blocks in order to spread write operations between sectors; this technique is called wear leveling. Another approach is to perform write verification and remapping to spare sectors in case of write failure, a technique called bad block management (BBM). For portable consumer devices, these wear out management techniques typically extend the life of the flash memory beyond the life of the device itself, and some data loss may be acceptable in these applications. For high-reliability data storage, however, it is not advisable to use flash memory that would have to go through a large number of programming cycles. This limitation is meaningless for ‘read-only’ applications such as thin clients and routers, which are programmed only once or at most a few times during their lifetimes.
In December 2012, Taiwanese engineers from Macronix revealed their intention to announce at the 2012 IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting that they had figured out how to improve NAND flash storage read/write cycles from 10,000 to 100 million cycles using a «self-healing» process that used a flash chip with «onboard heaters that could anneal small groups of memory cells.»[86] The built-in thermal annealing was to replace the usual erase cycle with a local high temperature process that not only erased the stored charge, but also repaired the electron-induced stress in the chip, giving write cycles of at least 100 million.[87] The result was to be a chip that could be erased and rewritten over and over, even when it should theoretically break down. As promising as Macronix’s breakthrough might have been for the mobile industry, however, there were no plans for a commercial product featuring this capability to be released any time in the near future.[88]
Read disturbEdit
The method used to read NAND flash memory can cause nearby cells in the same memory block to change over time (become programmed). This is known as read disturb. The threshold number of reads is generally in the hundreds of thousands of reads between intervening erase operations. If reading continually from one cell, that cell will not fail but rather one of the surrounding cells on a subsequent read. To avoid the read disturb problem the flash controller will typically count the total number of reads to a block since the last erase. When the count exceeds a target limit, the affected block is copied over to a new block, erased, then released to the block pool. The original block is as good as new after the erase. If the flash controller does not intervene in time, however, a read disturb error will occur with possible data loss if the errors are too numerous to correct with an error-correcting code.[89][90][91]
X-ray effectsEdit
Most flash ICs come in ball grid array (BGA) packages, and even the ones that do not are often mounted on a PCB next to other BGA packages. After PCB Assembly, boards with BGA packages are often X-rayed to see if the balls are making proper connections to the proper pad, or if the BGA needs rework. These X-rays can erase programmed bits in a flash chip (convert programmed «0» bits into erased «1» bits). Erased bits («1» bits) are not affected by X-rays.[92][93]
Some manufacturers are now making X-ray proof SD[94] and USB[95] memory devices.
Low-level accessEdit
The low-level interface to flash memory chips differs from those of other memory types such as DRAM, ROM, and EEPROM, which support bit-alterability (both zero to one and one to zero) and random access via externally accessible address buses.
NOR memory has an external address bus for reading and programming. For NOR memory, reading and programming are random-access, and unlocking and erasing are block-wise. For NAND memory, reading and programming are page-wise, and unlocking and erasing are block-wise.
NOR memoriesEdit
Reading from NOR flash is similar to reading from random-access memory, provided the address and data bus are mapped correctly. Because of this, most microprocessors can use NOR flash memory as execute in place (XIP) memory, meaning that programs stored in NOR flash can be executed directly from the NOR flash without needing to be copied into RAM first. NOR flash may be programmed in a random-access manner similar to reading. Programming changes bits from a logical one to a zero. Bits that are already zero are left unchanged. Erasure must happen a block at a time, and resets all the bits in the erased block back to one. Typical block sizes are 64, 128, or 256 KiB.
Bad block management is a relatively new feature in NOR chips. In older NOR devices not supporting bad block management, the software or device driver controlling the memory chip must correct for blocks that wear out, or the device will cease to work reliably.
The specific commands used to lock, unlock, program, or erase NOR memories differ for each manufacturer. To avoid needing unique driver software for every device made, special Common Flash Memory Interface (CFI) commands allow the device to identify itself and its critical operating parameters.
Besides its use as random-access ROM, NOR flash can also be used as a storage device, by taking advantage of random-access programming. Some devices offer read-while-write functionality so that code continues to execute even while a program or erase operation is occurring in the background. For sequential data writes, NOR flash chips typically have slow write speeds, compared with NAND flash.
Typical NOR flash does not need an error correcting code.[96]
NAND memoriesEdit
NAND flash architecture was introduced by Toshiba in 1989.[97] These memories are accessed much like block devices, such as hard disks. Each block consists of a number of pages. The pages are typically 512,[98] 2,048 or 4,096 bytes in size. Associated with each page are a few bytes (typically 1/32 of the data size) that can be used for storage of an error correcting code (ECC) checksum.
Typical block sizes include:
- 32 pages of 512+16 bytes each for a block size (effective) of 16 KiB
- 64 pages of 2,048+64 bytes each for a block size of 128 KiB[99]
- 64 pages of 4,096+128 bytes each for a block size of 256 KiB[100]
- 128 pages of 4,096+128 bytes each for a block size of 512 KiB.
While reading and programming is performed on a page basis, erasure can only be performed on a block basis.[101]
NAND devices also require bad block management by the device driver software or by a separate controller chip. Some SD cards, for example, include controller circuitry to perform bad block management and wear leveling. When a logical block is accessed by high-level software, it is mapped to a physical block by the device driver or controller. A number of blocks on the flash chip may be set aside for storing mapping tables to deal with bad blocks, or the system may simply check each block at power-up to create a bad block map in RAM. The overall memory capacity gradually shrinks as more blocks are marked as bad.
NAND relies on ECC to compensate for bits that may spontaneously fail during normal device operation. A typical ECC will correct a one-bit error in each 2048 bits (256 bytes) using 22 bits of ECC, or a one-bit error in each 4096 bits (512 bytes) using 24 bits of ECC.[102] If the ECC cannot correct the error during read, it may still detect the error. When doing erase or program operations, the device can detect blocks that fail to program or erase and mark them bad. The data is then written to a different, good block, and the bad block map is updated.
Hamming codes are the most commonly used ECC for SLC NAND flash. Reed-Solomon codes and BCH codes (Bose-Chaudhuri-Hocquenghem codes) are commonly used ECC for MLC NAND flash. Some MLC NAND flash chips internally generate the appropriate BCH error correction codes.[96]
Most NAND devices are shipped from the factory with some bad blocks. These are typically marked according to a specified bad block marking strategy. By allowing some bad blocks, manufacturers achieve far higher yields than would be possible if all blocks had to be verified to be good. This significantly reduces NAND flash costs and only slightly decreases the storage capacity of the parts.
When executing software from NAND memories, virtual memory strategies are often used: memory contents must first be paged or copied into memory-mapped RAM and executed there (leading to the common combination of NAND + RAM). A memory management unit (MMU) in the system is helpful, but this can also be accomplished with overlays. For this reason, some systems will use a combination of NOR and NAND memories, where a smaller NOR memory is used as software ROM and a larger NAND memory is partitioned with a file system for use as a non-volatile data storage area.
NAND sacrifices the random-access and execute-in-place advantages of NOR. NAND is best suited to systems requiring high capacity data storage. It offers higher densities, larger capacities, and lower cost. It has faster erases, sequential writes, and sequential reads.
StandardizationEdit
A group called the Open NAND Flash Interface Working Group (ONFI) has developed a standardized low-level interface for NAND flash chips. This allows interoperability between conforming NAND devices from different vendors. The ONFI specification version 1.0[103] was released on 28 December 2006. It specifies:
- A standard physical interface (pinout) for NAND flash in TSOP-48, WSOP-48, LGA-52, and BGA-63 packages
- A standard command set for reading, writing, and erasing NAND flash chips
- A mechanism for self-identification (comparable to the serial presence detection feature of SDRAM memory modules)
The ONFI group is supported by major NAND flash manufacturers, including Hynix, Intel, Micron Technology, and Numonyx, as well as by major manufacturers of devices incorporating NAND flash chips.[104]
Two major flash device manufacturers, Toshiba and Samsung, have chosen to use an interface of their own design known as Toggle Mode (and now Toggle). This interface isn’t pin-to-pin compatible with the ONFI specification. The result is that a product designed for one vendor’s devices may not be able to use another vendor’s devices.[105]
A group of vendors, including Intel, Dell, and Microsoft, formed a Non-Volatile Memory Host Controller Interface (NVMHCI) Working Group.[106] The goal of the group is to provide standard software and hardware programming interfaces for nonvolatile memory subsystems, including the «flash cache» device connected to the PCI Express bus.
Distinction between NOR and NAND flashEdit
NOR and NAND flash differ in two important ways:
- The connections of the individual memory cells are different.[citation needed]
- The interface provided for reading and writing the memory is different; NOR allows random access, while NAND allows only page access.[107]
NOR and NAND flash get their names from the structure of the interconnections between memory cells.[citation needed] In NOR flash, cells are connected in parallel to the bit lines, allowing cells to be read and programmed individually. The parallel connection of cells resembles the parallel connection of transistors in a CMOS NOR gate. In NAND flash, cells are connected in series, resembling a CMOS NAND gate. The series connections consume less space than parallel ones, reducing the cost of NAND flash. It does not, by itself, prevent NAND cells from being read and programmed individually.[citation needed]
Each NOR flash cell is larger than a NAND flash cell – 10 F2 vs 4 F2 – even when using exactly the same semiconductor device fabrication and so each transistor, contact, etc. is exactly the same size – because NOR flash cells require a separate metal contact for each cell.[108]
Because of the series connection and removal of wordline contacts, a large grid of NAND flash memory cells will occupy perhaps only 60% of the area of equivalent NOR cells[109] (assuming the same CMOS process resolution, for example, 130 nm, 90 nm, or 65 nm). NAND flash’s designers realized that the area of a NAND chip, and thus the cost, could be further reduced by removing the external address and data bus circuitry. Instead, external devices could communicate with NAND flash via sequential-accessed command and data registers, which would internally retrieve and output the necessary data. This design choice made random-access of NAND flash memory impossible, but the goal of NAND flash was to replace mechanical hard disks, not to replace ROMs.
Attribute | NAND | NOR |
---|---|---|
Main application | File storage | Code execution |
Storage capacity | High | Low |
Cost per bit | Low | |
Active power | Low | |
Standby power | Low | |
Write speed | Fast | |
Read speed | Fast | |
Execute in place (XIP) | No | Yes |
Reliability | High |
Write enduranceEdit
The write endurance of SLC floating-gate NOR flash is typically equal to or greater than that of NAND flash, while MLC NOR and NAND flash have similar endurance capabilities. Examples of endurance cycle ratings listed in datasheets for NAND and NOR flash, as well as in storage devices using flash memory, are provided.[110]
Type of flash memory |
Endurance rating (erases per block) |
Example(s) of flash memory or storage device |
---|---|---|
SLC NAND | 100,000 | Samsung OneNAND KFW4G16Q2M, Toshiba SLC NAND Flash chips,[111][112][113][114][115] Transcend SD500, Fujitsu S26361-F3298 |
MLC NAND | 5,000–10,000 for medium-capacity; 1,000 to 3,000 for high-capacity[116] |
Samsung K9G8G08U0M (Example for medium-capacity applications), Memblaze PBlaze4,[117] ADATA SU900, Mushkin Reactor |
TLC NAND | 1,000 | Samsung SSD 840 |
QLC NAND | unknown | SanDisk X4 NAND flash SD cards[118][119][120][121] |
3D SLC NAND | 100,000 | Samsung Z-NAND[122] |
3D MLC NAND | 6,000–40,000 | Samsung SSD 850 PRO, Samsung SSD 845DC PRO,[123][124] Samsung 860 PRO |
3D TLC NAND | 1,000–3,000 | Samsung SSD 850 EVO, Samsung SSD 845DC EVO, Crucial MX300[125][126][127],Memblaze PBlaze5 900, Memblaze PBlaze5 700, Memblaze PBlaze5 910/916,Memblaze PBlaze5 510/516,[128][129][130][131] ADATA SX 8200 PRO (also being sold under «XPG Gammix» branding, model S11 PRO) |
3D QLC NAND | 100–1,000 | Samsung SSD 860 QVO SATA, Intel SSD 660p, Samsung SSD 980 QVO NVMe, Micron 5210 ION, Samsung SSD BM991 NVMe[132][133][134][135][136][137][138][139] |
3D PLC NAND | unknown | In development by SK Hynix (formerly Intel)[140] and Kioxia (formerly Toshiba Memory).[116] |
SLC (floating- gate) NOR |
100,000–1,000,000 | Numonyx M58BW (Endurance rating of 100,000 erases per block); Spansion S29CD016J (Endurance rating of 1,000,000 erases per block) |
MLC (floating- gate) NOR |
100,000 | Numonyx J3 flash |
However, by applying certain algorithms and design paradigms such as wear leveling and memory over-provisioning, the endurance of a storage system can be tuned to serve specific requirements.[141]
In order to compute the longevity of the NAND flash, one must account for the size of the memory chip, the type of memory (e.g. SLC/MLC/TLC), and use pattern. Industrial NAND are in demand due to their capacity, longer endurance and reliability in sensitive environments.
3D NAND performance may degrade as layers are added.[122]
As the number of bits per cell increases, the performance of NAND flash may degrade, increasing random read times to 100μs for TLC NAND which is 4 times the time required in SLC NAND, and twice the time required in MLC NAND, for random reads.[61]
Flash file systemsEdit
Because of the particular characteristics of flash memory, it is best used with either a controller to perform wear leveling and error correction or specifically designed flash file systems, which spread writes over the media and deal with the long erase times of NOR flash blocks. The basic concept behind flash file systems is the following: when the flash store is to be updated, the file system will write a new copy of the changed data to a fresh block, remap the file pointers, then erase the old block later when it has time.
In practice, flash file systems are used only for memory technology devices (MTDs), which are embedded flash memories that do not have a controller. Removable flash memory cards, SSDs, eMMC/eUFS chips and USB flash drives have built-in controllers to perform wear leveling and error correction so use of a specific flash file system may not add benefit.
CapacityEdit
Multiple chips are often arrayed or die stacked to achieve higher capacities[142] for use in consumer electronic devices such as multimedia players or GPSs. The capacity scaling (increase) of flash chips used to follow Moore’s law because they are manufactured with many of the same integrated circuits techniques and equipment. Since the introduction of 3D NAND, scaling is no longer necessarily associated with Moore’s law since ever smaller transistors (cells) are no longer used.
Consumer flash storage devices typically are advertised with usable sizes expressed as a small integer power of two (2, 4, 8, etc.) and a conventional designation of megabytes (MB) or gigabytes (GB); e.g., 512 MB, 8 GB. This includes SSDs marketed as hard drive replacements, in accordance with traditional hard drives, which use decimal prefixes.[143] Thus, an SSD marked as «64 GB» is at least 64 × 10003 bytes (64 GB). Most users will have slightly less capacity than this available for their files, due to the space taken by file system metadata and because some operating systems report SSD capacity using binary prefixes which are somewhat larger than conventional prefixes .
The flash memory chips inside them are sized in strict binary multiples, but the actual total capacity of the chips is not usable at the drive interface.
It is considerably larger than the advertised capacity in order to allow for distribution of writes (wear leveling), for sparing, for error correction codes, and for other metadata needed by the device’s internal firmware.
In 2005, Toshiba and SanDisk developed a NAND flash chip capable of storing 1 GB of data using multi-level cell (MLC) technology, capable of storing two bits of data per cell. In September 2005, Samsung Electronics announced that it had developed the world’s first 2 GB chip.[144]
In March 2006, Samsung announced flash hard drives with a capacity of 4 GB, essentially the same order of magnitude as smaller laptop hard drives, and in September 2006, Samsung announced an 8 GB chip produced using a 40 nm manufacturing process.[145]
In January 2008, SanDisk announced availability of their 16 GB MicroSDHC and 32 GB SDHC Plus cards.[146][147]
More recent flash drives (as of 2012) have much greater capacities, holding 64, 128, and 256 GB.[148]
A joint development at Intel and Micron will allow the production of 32-layer 3.5 terabyte (TB[clarification needed]) NAND flash sticks and 10 TB standard-sized SSDs. The device includes 5 packages of 16 × 48 GB TLC dies, using a floating gate cell design.[149]
Flash chips continue to be manufactured with capacities under or around 1 MB (e.g. for BIOS-ROMs and embedded applications).
In July 2016, Samsung announced the 4 TB[clarification needed] Samsung 850 EVO which utilizes their 256 Gbit 48-layer TLC 3D V-NAND.[150] In August 2016, Samsung announced a 32 TB 2.5-inch SAS SSD based on their 512 Gbit 64-layer TLC 3D V-NAND. Further, Samsung expects to unveil SSDs with up to 100 TB of storage by 2020.[151]
Transfer ratesEdit
Flash memory devices are typically much faster at reading than writing.[152] Performance also depends on the quality of storage controllers, which become more critical when devices are partially full.[vague][152] Even when the only change to manufacturing is die-shrink, the absence of an appropriate controller can result in degraded speeds.[153]
ApplicationsEdit
Serial flashEdit
Serial Flash: Silicon Storage Tech SST25VF080B
Serial flash is a small, low-power flash memory that provides only serial access to the data — rather than addressing individual bytes, the user reads or writes large contiguous groups of bytes in the address space serially. Serial Peripheral Interface Bus (SPI) is a typical protocol for accessing the device.
When incorporated into an embedded system, serial flash requires fewer wires on the PCB than parallel flash memories, since it transmits and receives data one bit at a time. This may permit a reduction in board space, power consumption, and total system cost.
There are several reasons why a serial device, with fewer external pins than a parallel device, can significantly reduce overall cost:
- Many ASICs are pad-limited, meaning that the size of the die is constrained by the number of wire bond pads, rather than the complexity and number of gates used for the device logic. Eliminating bond pads thus permits a more compact integrated circuit, on a smaller die; this increases the number of dies that may be fabricated on a wafer, and thus reduces the cost per die.
- Reducing the number of external pins also reduces assembly and packaging costs. A serial device may be packaged in a smaller and simpler package than a parallel device.
- Smaller and lower pin-count packages occupy less PCB area.
- Lower pin-count devices simplify PCB routing.
There are two major SPI flash types. The first type is characterized by small pages and one or more internal SRAM page buffers allowing a complete page to be read to the buffer, partially modified, and then written back (for example, the Atmel AT45 DataFlash or the Micron Technology Page Erase NOR Flash). The second type has larger sectors where the smallest sectors typically found in this type of SPI flash are 4 kB, but they can be as large as 64 kB. Since this type of SPI flash lacks an internal SRAM buffer, the complete page must be read out and modified before being written back, making it slow to manage. However, the second type is cheaper than the first and is therefore a good choice when the application is code shadowing.
The two types are not easily exchangeable, since they do not have the same pinout, and the command sets are incompatible.
Most FPGAs are based on SRAM configuration cells and require an external configuration device, often a serial flash chip, to reload the configuration bitstream every power cycle.[154]
Firmware storageEdit
With the increasing speed of modern CPUs, parallel flash devices are often much slower than the memory bus of the computer they are connected to. Conversely, modern SRAM offers access times below 10 ns, while DDR2 SDRAM offers access times below 20 ns. Because of this, it is often desirable to shadow code stored in flash into RAM; that is, the code is copied from flash into RAM before execution, so that the CPU may access it at full speed. Device firmware may be stored in a serial flash chip, and then copied into SDRAM or SRAM when the device is powered-up.[155] Using an external serial flash device rather than on-chip flash removes the need for significant process compromise (a manufacturing process that is good for high-speed logic is generally not good for flash and vice versa). Once it is decided to read the firmware in as one big block it is common to add compression to allow a smaller flash chip to be used. Since 2005, many devices use serial NOR flash to deprecate parallel NOR flash for firmware storage. Typical applications for serial flash include storing firmware for hard drives, Ethernet network interface adapters, DSL modems, etc.
Flash memory as a replacement for hard drivesEdit
One more recent application for flash memory is as a replacement for hard disks. Flash memory does not have the mechanical limitations and latencies of hard drives, so a solid-state drive (SSD) is attractive when considering speed, noise, power consumption, and reliability. Flash drives are gaining traction as mobile device secondary storage devices; they are also used as substitutes for hard drives in high-performance desktop computers and some servers with RAID and SAN architectures.
There remain some aspects of flash-based SSDs that make them unattractive. The cost per gigabyte of flash memory remains significantly higher than that of hard disks.[156] Also flash memory has a finite number of P/E (program/erase) cycles, but this seems to be currently under control since warranties on flash-based SSDs are approaching those of current hard drives.[157] In addition, deleted files on SSDs can remain for an indefinite period of time before being overwritten by fresh data; erasure or shred techniques or software that work well on magnetic hard disk drives have no effect on SSDs, compromising security and forensic examination. However, due to the so-called TRIM command employed by most solid state drives, which marks the logical block addresses occupied by the deleted file as unused to enable garbage collection, data recovery software is not able to restore files deleted from such.
For relational databases or other systems that require ACID transactions, even a modest amount of flash storage can offer vast speedups over arrays of disk drives.[158][159]
In May 2006, Samsung Electronics announced two flash-memory based PCs, the Q1-SSD and Q30-SSD were expected to become available in June 2006, both of which used 32 GB SSDs, and were at least initially available only in South Korea.[160] The Q1-SSD and Q30-SSD launch was delayed and finally was shipped in late August 2006.[161]
The first flash-memory based PC to become available was the Sony Vaio UX90, announced for pre-order on 27 June 2006 and began to be shipped in Japan on 3 July 2006 with a 16Gb flash memory hard drive.[162] In late September 2006 Sony upgraded the flash-memory in the Vaio UX90 to 32Gb.[163]
A solid-state drive was offered as an option with the first MacBook Air introduced in 2008, and from 2010 onwards, all models were shipped with an SSD. Starting in late 2011, as part of Intel’s Ultrabook initiative, an increasing number of ultra-thin laptops are being shipped with SSDs standard.
There are also hybrid techniques such as hybrid drive and ReadyBoost that attempt to combine the advantages of both technologies, using flash as a high-speed non-volatile cache for files on the disk that are often referenced, but rarely modified, such as application and operating system executable files.
Flash memory as RAMEdit
As of 2012, there are attempts to use flash memory as the main computer memory, DRAM.[164]
Archival or long-term storageEdit
Floating-gate transistors in the flash storage device hold charge which represents data. This charge gradually leaks over time, leading to an accumulation of logical errors, also known as «bit rot» or «bit fading».[165]
Data retentionEdit
It is unclear how long data on flash memory will persist under archival conditions (i.e., benign temperature and humidity with infrequent access with or without prophylactic rewrite). Datasheets of Atmel’s flash-based «ATmega» microcontrollers typically promise retention times of 20 years at 85 °C (185 °F) and 100 years at 25 °C (77 °F).[166]
The retention span varies among types and models of flash storage. When supplied with power and idle, the charge of the transistors holding the data is routinely refreshed by the firmware of the flash storage.[165] The ability to retain data varies among flash storage devices due to differences in firmware, data redundancy, and error correction algorithms.[167]
An article from CMU in 2015 states «Today’s flash devices, which do not require flash refresh, have a typical retention age of 1 year at room temperature.» And that retention time decreases exponentially with increasing temperature. The phenomenon can be modeled by the Arrhenius equation.[168][169]
FPGA configurationEdit
Some FPGAs are based on flash configuration cells that are used directly as (programmable) switches to connect internal elements together, using the same kind of floating-gate transistor as the flash data storage cells in data storage devices.[154]
IndustryEdit
One source states that, in 2008, the flash memory industry includes about US$9.1 billion in production and sales. Other sources put the flash memory market at a size of more than US$20 billion in 2006, accounting for more than eight percent of the overall semiconductor market and more than 34 percent of the total semiconductor memory market.[170]
In 2012, the market was estimated at $26.8 billion.[171] It can take up to 10 weeks to produce a flash memory chip.[172]
ManufacturersEdit
The following were the largest NAND flash memory manufacturers, as of the first quarter of 2019.[173]
- Samsung Electronics – 34.9%
- Kioxia – 18.1%
- Western Digital Corporation – 14%
- Micron Technology – 13.5%
- SK Hynix – 10.3%
- Intel – 8.7% Note: SK Hynix acquired Intel’s NAND business at the end of 2021[174]
Samsung remains the largest NAND flash memory manufacturer as of first quarter 2022.[175]
ShipmentsEdit
Year(s) | Discrete flash memory chips | Flash memory data capacity (gigabytes) | Floating-gate MOSFET memory cells (billions) |
---|---|---|---|
1992 | 26,000,000[176] | 3[176] | 24[a] |
1993 | 73,000,000[176] | 17[176] | 139[a] |
1994 | 112,000,000[176] | 25[176] | 203[a] |
1995 | 235,000,000[176] | 38[176] | 300[a] |
1996 | 359,000,000[176] | 140[176] | 1,121[a] |
1997 | 477,200,000+[177] | 317+[177] | 2,533+[a] |
1998 | 762,195,122[178] | 455+[177] | 3,642+[a] |
1999 | 12,800,000,000[179] | 635+[177] | 5,082+[a] |
2000–2004 | 134,217,728,000 (NAND)[180] | 1,073,741,824,000 (NAND)[180] | |
2005–2007 | ? | ||
2008 | 1,226,215,645 (mobile NAND)[181] | ||
2009 | 1,226,215,645+ (mobile NAND) | ||
2010 | 7,280,000,000+[b] | ||
2011 | 8,700,000,000[183] | ||
2012 | 5,151,515,152 (serial)[184] | ||
2013 | ? | ||
2014 | ? | 59,000,000,000[185] | 118,000,000,000+[a] |
2015 | 7,692,307,692 (NAND)[186] | 85,000,000,000[187] | 170,000,000,000+[a] |
2016 | ? | 100,000,000,000[188] | 200,000,000,000+[a] |
2017 | ? | 148,200,000,000[c] | 296,400,000,000+[a] |
2018 | ? | 231,640,000,000[d] | 463,280,000,000+[a] |
2019 | ? | ? | ? |
2020 | ? | ? | ? |
1992–2020 | 45,358,454,134+ memory chips | 758,057,729,630+ gigabytes | 2,321,421,837,044 billion+ cells |
In addition to individual flash memory chips, flash memory is also embedded in microcontroller (MCU) chips and system-on-chip (SoC) devices.[192] Flash memory is embedded in ARM chips,[192] which have sold 150 billion units worldwide as of 2019,[193] and in programmable system-on-chip (PSoC) devices, which have sold 1.1 billion units as of 2012.[194] This adds up to at least 151.1 billion MCU and SoC chips with embedded flash memory, in addition to the 45.4 billion known individual flash chip sales as of 2015, totalling at least 196.5 billion chips containing flash memory.
Flash scalabilityEdit
Due to its relatively simple structure and high demand for higher capacity, NAND flash memory is the most aggressively scaled technology among electronic devices. The heavy competition among the top few manufacturers only adds to the aggressiveness in shrinking the floating-gate MOSFET design rule or process technology node.[90] While the expected shrink timeline is a factor of two every three years per original version of Moore’s law, this has recently been accelerated in the case of NAND flash to a factor of two every two years.
ITRS or company | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ITRS Flash Roadmap 2011[195] | 32 nm | 22 nm | 20 nm | 18 nm | 16 nm | ||||
Updated ITRS Flash Roadmap[196] | 17 nm | 15 nm | 14 nm | ||||||
Samsung[195][196][197] (Samsung 3D NAND)[196] |
35–20 nm[31] | 27 nm | 21 nm (MLC, TLC) |
19–16 nm 19–10 nm (MLC, TLC)[198] |
19–10 nm V-NAND (24L) |
16–10 nm V-NAND (32L) |
16–10 nm | 12–10 nm | 12–10 nm |
Micron, Intel[195][196][197] | 34–25 nm | 25 nm | 20 nm (MLC + HKMG) |
20 nm (TLC) |
16 nm | 16 nm 3D NAND |
16 nm 3D NAND |
12 nm 3D NAND |
12 nm 3D NAND |
Toshiba, WD (SanDisk)[195][196][197] | 43–32 nm 24 nm (Toshiba)[199] |
24 nm | 19 nm (MLC, TLC) |
15 nm | 15 nm 3D NAND |
15 nm 3D NAND |
12 nm 3D NAND |
12 nm 3D NAND |
|
SK Hynix[195][196][197] | 46–35 nm | 26 nm | 20 nm (MLC) | 16 nm | 16 nm | 16 nm | 12 nm | 12 nm |
As the MOSFET feature size of flash memory cells reaches the 15–16 nm minimum limit, further flash density increases will be driven by TLC (3 bits/cell) combined with vertical stacking of NAND memory planes. The decrease in endurance and increase in uncorrectable bit error rates that accompany feature size shrinking can be compensated by improved error correction mechanisms.[200] Even with these advances, it may be impossible to economically scale flash to smaller and smaller dimensions as the number of electron holding capacity reduces. Many promising new technologies (such as FeRAM, MRAM, PMC, PCM, ReRAM, and others) are under investigation and development as possible more scalable replacements for flash.[201]
TimelineEdit
Date of introduction | Chip name | Memory Package Capacity Megabits (Mb), Gigabits (Gb), Terabits (Tb) |
Flash type | Cell type | Layers or Stacks of Layers |
Manufacturer(s) | Process | Area | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | ? | ? | NOR | SLC | 1 | Toshiba | ? | ? | [20] |
1985 | ? | 256 kb | NOR | SLC | 1 | Toshiba | 2,000 nm | ? | [28] |
1987 | ? | ? | NAND | SLC | 1 | Toshiba | ? | ? | [1] |
1989 | ? | 1 Mb | NOR | SLC | 1 | Seeq, Intel | ? | ? | [28] |
4 Mb | NAND | SLC | 1 | Toshiba | 1,000 nm | ||||
1991 | ? | 16 Mb | NOR | SLC | 1 | Mitsubishi | 600 nm | ? | [28] |
1993 | DD28F032SA | 32 Mb | NOR | SLC | 1 | Intel | ? | 280 mm² | [202][203] |
1994 | ? | 64 Mb | NOR | SLC | 1 | NEC | 400 nm | ? | [28] |
1995 | ? | 16 Mb | DINOR | SLC | 1 | Mitsubishi, Hitachi | ? | ? | [28][204] |
NAND | SLC | 1 | Toshiba | ? | ? | [205] | |||
32 Mb | NAND | SLC | 1 | Hitachi, Samsung, Toshiba | ? | ? | [28] | ||
34 Mb | Serial | SLC | 1 | SanDisk | |||||
1996 | ? | 64 Mb | NAND | SLC | 1 | Hitachi, Mitsubishi | 400 nm | ? | [28] |
QLC | 1 | NEC | |||||||
128 Mb | NAND | SLC | 1 | Samsung, Hitachi | ? | ||||
1997 | ? | 32 Mb | NOR | SLC | 1 | Intel, Sharp | 400 nm | ? | [206] |
NAND | SLC | 1 | AMD, Fujitsu | 350 nm | |||||
1999 | ? | 256 Mb | NAND | SLC | 1 | Toshiba | 250 nm | ? | [28] |
MLC | 1 | Hitachi | 1 | ||||||
2000 | ? | 32 Mb | NOR | SLC | 1 | Toshiba | 250 nm | ? | [28] |
64 Mb | NOR | QLC | 1 | STMicroelectronics | 180 nm | ||||
512 Mb | NAND | SLC | 1 | Toshiba | ? | ? | [207] | ||
2001 | ? | 512 Mb | NAND | MLC | 1 | Hitachi | ? | ? | [28] |
1 Gibit | NAND | MLC | 1 | Samsung | |||||
1 | Toshiba, SanDisk | 160 nm | ? | [208] | |||||
2002 | ? | 512 Mb | NROM | MLC | 1 | Saifun | 170 nm | ? | [28] |
2 Gb | NAND | SLC | 1 | Samsung, Toshiba | ? | ? | [209][210] | ||
2003 | ? | 128 Mb | NOR | MLC | 1 | Intel | 130 nm | ? | [28] |
1 Gb | NAND | MLC | 1 | Hitachi | |||||
2004 | ? | 8 Gb | NAND | SLC | 1 | Samsung | 60 nm | ? | [209] |
2005 | ? | 16 Gb | NAND | SLC | 1 | Samsung | 50 nm | ? | [31] |
2006 | ? | 32 Gb | NAND | SLC | 1 | Samsung | 40 nm | ||
Apr-07 | THGAM | 128 Gb | Stacked NAND | SLC | Toshiba | 56 nm | 252 mm² | [47] | |
Sep-07 | ? | 128 Gb | Stacked NAND | SLC | Hynix | ? | ? | [48] | |
2008 | THGBM | 256 Gb | Stacked NAND | SLC | Toshiba | 43 nm | 353 mm² | [49] | |
2009 | ? | 32 Gb | NAND | TLC | Toshiba | 32 nm | 113 mm² | [29] | |
64 Gb | NAND | QLC | Toshiba, SanDisk | 43 nm | ? | [29][30] | |||
2010 | ? | 64 Gb | NAND | SLC | Hynix | 20 nm | ? | [211] | |
TLC | Samsung | 20 nm | ? | [31] | |||||
THGBM2 | 1 Tb | Stacked NAND | QLC | Toshiba | 32 nm | 374 mm² | [50] | ||
2011 | KLMCG8GE4A | 512 Gb | Stacked NAND | MLC | Samsung | ? | 192 mm² | [212] | |
2013 | ? | ? | NAND | SLC | SK Hynix | 16 nm | ? | [211] | |
128 Gb | V-NAND | TLC | Samsung | 10 nm | ? | ||||
2015 | ? | 256 Gb | V-NAND | TLC | Samsung | ? | ? | [198] | |
2017 | eUFS 2.1 | 512 Gb | V-NAND | TLC | 8 of 64 | Samsung | ? | ? | [53] |
768 Gb | V-NAND | QLC | Toshiba | ? | ? | [213] | |||
KLUFG8R1EM | 4 Tb | Stacked V-NAND | TLC | Samsung | ? | 150 mm² | [53] | ||
2018 | ? | 1 Tb | V-NAND | QLC | Samsung | ? | ? | [214] | |
1.33 Tb | V-NAND | QLC | Toshiba | ? | 158 mm² | [215][216] | |||
2019 | ? | 512 Gb | V-NAND | QLC | Samsung | ? | ? | [54][55] | |
1 Tb | V-NAND | TLC | SK Hynix | ? | ? | [217] | |||
eUFS 2.1 | 1 Tb | Stacked V-NAND[218] | QLC | 16 of 64 | Samsung | ? | 150 mm² | [54][55][219] |
See alsoEdit
- eMMC
- Flash memory controller
- List of flash file systems
- List of flash memory controller manufacturers
- microSDXC (up to 2 TB), and the successor format Secure Digital Ultra Capacity (SDUC) supporting cards up to 128 TiB
- Open NAND Flash Interface Working Group
- Read-mostly memory (RMM)
- Universal Flash Storage
- USB flash drive security
- Write amplification
NotesEdit
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Single-level cell (1-bit per cell) up until 2009. Multi-level cell (up to 4-bit or half-byte per cell) commercialised in 2009.[29][30]
- ^ Flash memory chip shipments in 2010:
- NOR – 3.64 billion[182]
- NAND – 3.64 billion+ (est.)
- ^ Flash memory data capacity shipments in 2017:
- NAND non-volatile memory (NVM) – 85 exabytes (est.)[189]
- Solid-state drive (SSD) – 63.2 exabytes[190]
- ^ Flash memory data capacity shipments in 2018 (est.)
- NAND NVM – 140 exabytes[189]
- SSD – 91.64 exabytes[191]
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External linksEdit
- Semiconductor Characterization System has diverse functions
- Understanding and selecting higher performance NAND architectures Archived 31 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- How flash storage works, presentation by David Woodhouse from Intel
- Flash endurance testing
- NAND Flash Data Recovery Cookbook
- Type of Flash Memory by OpenWrt
The previous post in this series (excerpted from the Objective Analysis and Coughlin Associates Emerging Memory report) explained why emerging memories are necessary. Oddly enough, this series will explain bit selectors before defining all of the emerging memory technologies themselves. The reason why is that the bit selector determines how small a bit cell can get, and that is a very significant component of the overall cost of the technology. Cost, of course, is extraordinarily important because no system designer would use a component that would make a system more expensive than it absolutely needs to be!
A number of the Memory Guy’s readers may never have heard of a selector. I’ll explain it here. It’s not complicated.
Every bit cell in a memory chip requires a selector. This device routes the bit cell’s contents onto a bus that eventually makes its way to the chip’s pins, allowing it to be read or written. The bit cell’s technology determines the type of selector that is appropriate: SRAMs use two transistors, DRAMs use one transistor, and flash memories combine a transistor with the bit cell so that the transistor both stores the bit and selects it.
Emerging memory technologies use simpler selectors than are required for today’s leading memory technologies. They can get by with either two-terminal selectors or three-terminal selectors. The circuits for both types of cells, with three-terminal and two-terminal selectors, are shown in the graphic to the left. You can see that there’s not much difference between the two. In both cases the selector controls the current through the cell either by turning it off with a transistor, or by turning it off when the current reverses with a diode (or something similar).
The rationale behind having a selector is illustrated in the following two diagrams.
The first is a very simplistic overhead view of a resistive RAM (ReRAM) array. Each bit cell is represented by a dot at the intersection of a Word Line and a Bit Line. (This drawing has been simplified so that selectors are not shown.) A Word Line provides the current to select which row of bits is to be read or written. The Bit Line either reads the bit on that Word Line or it allows a current applied to the Bit Line to program the bit.
A bit can either be in a high-resistance or in a low-resistance state. I’ll use red for a high-resistance state and green for a low-resistance state because these states either stop the current flow or allow it to pass.
Let’s assume for now that there are no selectors. If one single bit is put into a low-resistance state and its Word Line (blue) is energized (“Activated”) then the current flows from the Word Line to the Bit Line (green) for the green cell. No other Bit Lines will receive current because all of their bit cells are in a high-resistance state (red).
If any other Word Line is activated no current will flow into any Bit Line because all of the other cells are red, meaning that they are in a high-resistance state.
When other bits are in a low-resistance state, though, trouble crops up. This is illustrated in the sketch below:
The Output Current that flows down the bit line also can flow up the Bit Line to another cell in a low-resistance state. This is indicated by a striped arrow. This low-resistance bit can allow current to flow backwards onto another Word Line, and any bit on that Word Line can direct this errant current onto its own Bit Line indicating that another bit on the activated Word Line is in its low-resistance state when it actually is not.
Imagine that this diagram had a 1,024 x 1,024 array of bits and that these bits were randomly programmed to a 50/50 mix of low-resistance and high-resistance states. It is hardly likely that any Word Line could be energized without causing every single Bit Line to output a current!
The selector assures that this scenario will not occur. A diode can be placed in series with the bit cell to prevent reverse currents from flowing onto other Word Lines. In some emerging memory technologies the diode can be constructed right below the bit cell so that it takes up no space at all. (In Crossbar’s design the selector is actually a function of the cell’s bit storage mechanism, which is explained in a free Objective Analysis white paper.)
Most memories cannot use a diode as a selector, though, since current must run both ways through the cell. This will be explained in the next post. Significant research efforts are still being made to develop good bidirectional selectors that can behave like diodes at low voltages and as resistors at higher voltages. In most cases, though, it’s far easier to use a transistor, like the one shown above in the three-terminal selector schematic.
Transistor selectors require a lot of space, though, since both Word Lines and Source Lines must run across the array. This diagram gives a rough idea of how that works:
Since there is a Source Line for each Word Line, then half as many Word Lines will fit into a given area as with a two-terminal configuration. This makes the memory cost roughly twice as much as it would with a two-terminal selector.
The developers who work on emerging memory technologies get really excited by technologies that can be selected with nothing more than a diode. This is a way that these chips can reduce their size and cost, since a chip’s cost is proportional to its area. Unfortunately, most emerging memory technologies require a forward current to write and a reverse current to erase, so a simple diode won’t work. Bidirectional selectors are being developed, but another issue gets in the way of them, too. (I’ll discuss that shortly.)
PCM appeared to have an advantage in this regard. As will be explained in the next post, PCM programs and erases with a forward current, so a simple diode is all that should be needed as a selector for a PCM cell. In fact, Intel Fellow Al Fazio, the godfather of 3D XPoint Memory, promoted this viewpoint as recently as two years prior to the announcement of 3D XPoint memory. It seems, however, that something more is required, as Ron Neale explained in a post he recently published on the Memory Guy HERE.
Selectors are very challenging to get right. When the 3D XPoint Memory was first introduced in 2015 Micron fellow Scott deBoer said that you can make a ReRAM bit element out of nearly anything, even an eggshell, but the selector is the tricky part.
So what’s so hard about bidirectional selectors? If a selector has a ratio of “On” to “Off” resistances of 100:1, and there are 100 sneak paths to a Bit Line, then the current from the 100 sneak paths will equal the current from the legitimate path. In a large array this is almost certain to happen. The selector must perform significantly better than that. In most cases, though, a transistor provides both a better “On” to “Off” ratio and it allows bidirectional currents, so it becomes a necessary evil.
All of this has been presented to explain that the selector has a significant influence on the amount of area a memory array consumes, and that the array’s cost is proportional to its area. For this reason memories that can use a two-terminal selector are much more likely to compete against established memories than are memories that must use a three-terminal selector.
This post is the second of a series on emerging memory technologies, looking at it from several angles, and predicting how these technologies will change both the chip market and the market for the capital equipment used to produce these chips. It consists of excerpts from a recently-released report from Objective Analysis and Coughlin Associates: Emerging Memories Poised to Explode.
There are six sections:
- Why Emerging Memories are Necessary
- Understanding Bit Selectors
- The Technologies: MRAM, ReRAM, PCM/XPoint, FRAM, etc.
- Process Equipment Requirements
- Emerging Memory Companies
- Forecasting Emerging Memories
The Memory Guy has provided these to help readers understand the emerging memory technologies and markets. Questions and comments are appreciated.
Reading & Writing Operation of DRAM
In Dynamic Random Access Memory CELL , transistor acts as a switch to Close (allowing current to flow) when voltage applied in address line or Open (no current flow) when no voltage applied in address line.Address Line also known as word line .Which use to signal the transistor to close or open.
During the Write operation,a voltage is applied on the bit line and a signal applied to the address line to close the transistor.Then the voltage applied on the bit line will transfer to capacitor and store in the capacitor
However the capacitor has tendency to discharge and has to refresh to maintain the bit.
While in Reading Operation ,the instruction find the bit store using the address line to read the data or bit.When the address line is selected ,the transistor turns on and the charge stored on the capacitor is fled out onto a bit line and to sense amplifier. Sense amplifiers compare the capacitor voltage to reference value to determine the logic 1 or logic 0.The read out from cell must be restored to complete the operation.
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Reading and Writing Operation of SRAM
The diagram below is illustrate Static Random Access Memory (SRAM)Cell for the explanation. SRAM cell is make up of 2 inverters are cross-connected to form a latch .The latch is connected to 2 bit line by transistor T1 and T2 . T1 and T2 can switch opened or closed under control of word line.When word line is ground level, the transistors are turned off and the latch retrains its state. During the Read Operation ,Word line is activated to close switches T1 and T2 . If the cell is in state 1; the signal on b line is high and the signal on b’ line is low.The opposite is true if the cell is in state 0.Thus, b and b’ are always complements of each other’s. The sense /write circuit at the end of the two bit line monitors their state and sets the corresponding output accordingly. While in Write Operation ,the Sense/Write circuit drives bit lines b and b’, instead of sensing their state.It places the appropriate value on bit line b and its complement on b’ and activate the word
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As we all know, an SSD is a storage device that uses integrated circuit assemblies (DRAM, NAND flash, 3D XPoint) to store data persistently. However, if you search on Amazon, most SSDs’ storage medium is NAND flash. Then, what about NAND SSD? Read this post, in which MiniTool explains to you what NAND flash is and what it brings to SSD.
NAND flash is a type of non-volatile flash memory. It relies on electric circuits to store data, but it does not require power to retain data, which is also one of the reasons why SSDs mostly use NAND flash as their storage media rather than DRAM (another reason is that NAND flash is cheaper than DRAM).
Further Reading:
3D XPoint is a non-volatile memory technology jointly developed by Intel and Micron Technology in July 2015. Intel names Optane for storage devices that use the technology and Micron calls them QuantX. It’s said that Optane’s performance is better than NAND SSD and the price is lower than DRAM.
NAND memory cells are made with two types of gates: control and floating gates. Both gates help control the flow of data. When you program one cell (write data), a voltage charge is sent to the control gate, making electrons enter the floating gate. Through this charge manner, data can be stored in each NAND memory cell.
But when power is detached from NAND flash memory, the floating-gate transistor will provide an extra charge to the memory cell, keeping the data.
NAND Flash’s Defects
NAND flash also has its inherent disadvantages like the following ones:
1. Block Erase
In general, a NAND flash chip has multiple LUNs (Logic Unit Number); each LUN has multiple planes; each plane has thousands of blocks; each block has hundreds of pages. When you write or read data, the unit is page. However, when you erase data, the unit is block.
On the other hand, data is usually written at random and non-continuous locations; whether to modify or write data, erasure is required. Therefore, write amplification cannot be avoided.
2. Limited P/E (Program/Erase)
Each NAND block has a limit on the number of times that it can be erased. When this number is exceeded, the block may become unusable. Because once the number of P/E cycles is exceeded, the following situations are most likely to occur:
- Electrons can’t enter the floating gate (write failure).
- The electrons in the floating gate can easily come out (data retention issue).
- The electrons in the floating gate cannot come out (erase failure).
If you worry about your SSD’s life, you can read the following post to know how to prolong your SSD’s life.
3. Read Disturb
As the flash memory is read multiple times, the contents of adjacent memory cells in the same block will change (become a write operation). The principle is as follows:
Each page has a space around 4KB or 8KB. Within a page, there are many cells. Each cell usually stores one bit of data (a cell can also store more than one bit of data and I will explain to you later).
When a page is read, a voltage Vref is applied to the control electrodes of cells on the page while the control electrodes of the cells on other pages is applied with a relatively larger voltage Vpass, which may create a stronger electric field to draw some electrons into the floating gate of the cells on the pages that are not read (program data), resulting in data error.
On the other hand, the more times you erase blocks, the worse the insulation effect, and the easier it is for electrons to enter the floating gate.
4. Program Disturb
When a page is written, a higher voltage will be applied to the control electrodes of cells on the page while a lower voltage will be applied to the control electrodes of the cells on other pages that are not written. Thus, electrons can be easily injected into the floating gates of the cells on the written page.
However, if the higher voltage and the lower voltage are close, especially when too many erasing times lead to poor insulation performance, it is very likely that electrons enter adjacent memory cells. This will also cause data error.
Technology Progress: Process Technology
Since the invention of the NAND flash in 1986, the manufacturers have made a lot of great progress in NAND flash technology, such as the improvement of the process technology, 3D NAND, MLC, TLC and QLC. In this part, I will explain the process technology to you.
In order to reduce the cost per bit and expand the capacity of SSD, manufacturers first think of improving the process technology, for example, from the early 50nm to the current 16/15nm process nodes.
The number in the process technology represents the distance from source to drain. The shorter the distance, the faster the electrons enter, and the smaller the size of the transistor, meaning that a chip of the same size has a larger capacity and faster speed.
However, when the process technology reaches 15nm nodes, it is approaching the limit. On the one hand, the continuous improvement of process technology will make the cost increase sharply, which cannot be offset by the cost reduction brought by the increase in capacity.
On the other hand, when the process technology is below 20nm nodes, the charge leakage (data retention issue) and charge interference (read disturb and program disturb) are more obvious.
Therefore, if the process technology goes further, the reliability and performance will decrease.
Technology Progress: SLC vs MLC vs TLC vs QLC
In order to increase capacity and reduce costs further, manufacturers proposed MLC, TLC, and QLC. In this part, I will explain SLC vs MLC vs TLC vs QLC to you.
In general, one memory cell stores only one bit of data, which is so-called SLC (Single-Level Cell). If you increase the number of bits that can be stored in each memory cell, for example, increasing to 2 (MLC, short for Multi-Level Cell), to 3 (TLC, short for Triple-Level Cell), or to 4 (QLC, short for Quad-Level Cell), the storage capacity of NAND flash will also increase accordingly.
For example, an ordinary flash memory created by SLC has a capacity of 128 GB; then, MLC will make it have a capacity of 256 GB (double); TLC will triple it to 384 GB; and QLC will quadruple it to 512 GB. And sequentially, costs are reduced.
However, the capacity increase and cost reduction come at the cost of reduced performance, reliability, and life.
As mentioned above, the NAND flash completes data reading and writing through applying voltage. In this process, there is one or multiple threshold voltages (Vth).
In SLC, there is only one threshold voltage, because it stores only one bit of data: 0 or 1. If the voltage in the cell exceeds the threshold voltage, it means 0. Conversely, if the voltage in the cell is below the threshold voltage, it means 1. Therefore, the read and write is very simple and fast.
However, if one memory cell stores more bits of data, there will be more threshold voltages. For example, an MLC NAND flash memory stores two bits of data, namely, 00, 01, 10, or 11. Hence, it needs 3 threshold voltages to distinguish them.
The more bits of data stored in the cell, the more threshold voltages it needs, the more time it takes to identify the voltage signal, so the longer it takes to read and write data.
On the other hand, if there are multiple threshold voltages, the assignable voltage for each bit of data will become less, and therefore the possibility of charge interference (read and program disturbs) increases.
Tip: MLC is the mainstream choice for high-end products. There is no need to choose TLC, unless you are cash-strapped or upgrading your temporary computer.
Technology Progress: 2D NAND vs 3D NAND
Unlike the above two technologies, 3D NAND provides different ideas for increasing capacity and reducing costs.
Traditional 2D NAND Flash (planar NAND flash) is composed in a two-dimensional manner. It is mainly composed of word lines (WL) and bit lines (BL), as shown in the figure below. A word line represents a page. The bit line represents the memory cells on the word line (page). There are as many memory cells on the word line as there are bit lines.
The word lines and bit lines intersect to form a block. Then tile the blocks to form the 2D NAND flash.
As for 3D NAND flash, it stacks the planar NAND flash like buildings. It increases more transistors per unit area by stacking more layers of flash.
Just through this way, manufacturers can increase NAND capacity and reduce costs and they don’t need to make efforts on improving the process technology or storing more bits of data in one cell. As a result, capacity, performance, and reliability are guaranteed.
Precautions for Using NAND SSD
If you decide to use a NAND SSD, here are some notes about using it:
1. Installing OS on the NAND SSD: It is the only way that can make the most of the advantages of an SSD and greatly boost the performance of a computer.
2. Running OS version above Windows 7: Operating systems above Windows 7 will automatically detect whether the disk system is an SSD and will decide to how to optimize it accordingly. For example, in Windows 7, you can only defrag a hard drive, which will hurt an SSD and shorten its life. However, OS above Windows 7 will recognize SSD and optimize it with a special method.
3. Enabling AHCI or NVMe mode: AHCI mode can allow your storage device with SATA III interface to perform better. As for NVMe mode, if your SSD has an M.2 interface, PCI interface, etc., this mode will allow your SSD to perform at its highest speed. To know more about AHCI and NVMe, please read this post: M.2 SSD vs. SATA SSD: Which One Is Suitable for Your PC?
4. Keeping 4K alignment: 4K misalignment will not only greatly reduce the data write and read speed, but also increase the number of unnecessary writes of the SSD, affecting its life.
To keep 4K alignment of the SSD, you can use the MiniTool Partition Wizard, whose Align All Partitions feature can help you. All you need to do is just clicking the following button to free download this tool, launching it, right-clicking the drive to choose Align All Partitions, and finally click the Apply button to execute operations.
Free Download
5. Reserving enough free space: The more data a solid-state drive stores, the slower the performance. If a partition has been in a state of over 90% usage for a long time, the probability of SSD crash will be greatly increased. Therefore, it is very important to clean up useless files in time and store large files like movies or music on a mechanical hard disk.
Of course, there are other methods to prolong SSD life and boost the performance of your SSD. I have mentioned a post on how to prolong the life of your SSD before. Hence, here I will recommend you: How to Get Best Performance from SSD in Windows 10/8/8.1/7.
How about NAND SSD? What does NAND flash bring to SSD? Read this post and you will get the answers.Click to Tweet
Bottom Line
Have this post answered all your doubts doubt about the NAND SSD? Please leave a comment below. In addition, if you have any problem in aligning SSD partitions, installing OS on SSD, or cleaning up useless files, please leave your questions below or email us at [email protected]. We will reply to you as soon as possible.