SanDisk has announced that it has developed the world’s smallest 128GB NAND flash memory chip. The chip is smaller than the area covered by a South African five cent coin.
Shrinking the size of NAND flash memory allows smaller, more powerful computing, communications and consumer electronics devices to be built while keeping costs low.
SanDisk built the 128GB NAND flash memory chip on the company’s 19 nanometer (nm) process technology. The chip also employs SanDisk’s three-bit per cell (X3) technology that allows the company to build NAND flash memory products with the ability to read and write three bits of information in each memory cell.
At 19nm, SanDisk is deploying its ninth generation of multi-level cell (MLC) NAND products and fifth generation of X3 technology. This combination of manufacturing and technical expertise helps SanDisk pack more information into each memory cell making it possible to create a smaller, denser NAND flash memory chip.
‚Building a 128GB NAND flash memory chip with this level of complexity is an incredible achievement,‚ said Mehrdad Mofidi, vice president, Memory Design.
In addition to reduced size, the 128GB flash drive has an write performance of 18 megabytes (MB) per second. This level of performance is achieved using SanDisk’s patented advanced all bit line (ABL) architecture.
The 128GB NAND flash memory chip was developed jointly by teams from SanDisk and Toshiba at SanDisk’s Milpitas campus. The effort was led by Yan Li, director of Memory Design at SanDisk. Products based on the 128GB three-bit per cell technology began shipping late last year and have already started to ramp into high volume production. SanDisk has also developed a derivative product based on the success of the 128GB chip ‚ a 64GB, X3 NAND flash memory chip that is compatible with the industry-standard microSD format. The company has also started to increase production of this additional chip technology.
NAND flash memory is the technology behind the high reliability, small form factor storage solutions that SanDisk sells to OEM customers for use in a wide variety of products such as smartphones, tablets and ultrabooks. It is also the technology used in products SanDisk sells through its retail channel in the form of imaging and mobile cards, USB drives and mp3 players.
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