EETimes recently posted a column written by Ed. Doller, Chief Technology Officer of Intel's
flash memory spin-off Numonyx, in which he addresses the growing concerns for
alternative solutions to NAND-flash memory insufficiencies.
The column highlights
several aspects of Solid State Disk endurance requirements meeting application
demands, particularly in the enterprise market where storage reliability and
scalability are mission-critical aspects of data maintenance. What caught our attention,
however, was Mr. Doller's seasoned opinions on phase-change memory serving as a
viable long-term replacement solution for the growing concerns of NAND-flash
endurance.
"Remember with any
non-volatile floating gate memory device, the more you cycle the device the
more failures you tend to observe, and the less data retention you get,"
stated Dollar. "One alternative to
[NAND-flash] that holds tremendous promise is phase-change memory (PCM). Much has
been said and written about PCM, but what is interesting about PCM is that
retention is decoupled from endurance."
In perspective, one of the
main advantages that phase-change memory has over NAND-flash is its ability to
cycle data millions and millions of times and hold a very steady level of data
retention. In contrast, the NAND-flash memory used in conventional SSDs impose
quite different usage conditions as they are limited by read-write cycles
causing increased performance degradation and lower MTBF occurrences over time.
Nevertheless, Mr. Dollar predicts
that 2010 could be the year that this industry sees conventional NAND-flash SSD
technology "topping out." However, the good news is that there is
hope for a very promising phase-change memory alternative that should be taken
into consideration as R&D engineers plan for more viable and stable storage
approaches as the decade progresses.
More here.
Published in
Cloud
Phase-change memory may viably replace NAND-flash
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