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Guru3D.com » News » Kioxia and Western Digital Announce 6th-Gen 3D NAND Flash Memory with 162-layers

Kioxia and Western Digital Announce 6th-Gen 3D NAND Flash Memory with 162-layers

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 02/19/2021 08:25 AM | source: | 9 comment(s)
Kioxia and Western Digital Announce 6th-Gen 3D NAND Flash Memory with 162-layers

Kioxia Corporation and Western Digital Corp., today announced that the companies have developed their sixth-generation, 162-layer 3D flash memory technology. Marking the next milestone in the companies' 20-year joint-venture partnership, this is the companies' highest density and most advanced 3D flash memory technology to date, utilizing a wide range of technology and manufacturing innovations.

"Through our strong partnership that has spanned two decades, Kioxia and Western Digital have successfully created unrivaled capabilities in manufacturing and R&D," said Masaki Momodomi, Chief Technology Officer, Kioxia. "Together, we produce over 30 percent1 of the world's flash memory bits and are steadfast in our mission to provide exceptional capacity, performance and reliability at a compelling cost. We each deliver this value proposition across a range of data-centric applications from personal electronics to data centers as well as emerging applications enabled by 5G networks, artificial intelligence and autonomous systems."

Beyond Vertical Scaling - New Architecture Leverages New Innovations
"As Moore's Law reaches its physical limits across the semiconductor industry, there's one place where Moore's Law continues its relevancy—that's in flash," said Dr. Siva Sivaram, President of Technology & Strategy, Western Digital. "To continue these advances and meet the world's growing data demands, a new approach to 3D flash memory scaling is critical. With this new generation, Kioxia and Western Digital are introducing innovations in vertical as well as lateral scaling to achieve greater capacity in a smaller die with fewer layers. This innovation ultimately delivers the performance, reliability and cost that customers need."

This sixth-generation 3D flash memory features advanced architecture beyond conventional eight-stagger memory hole array and achieves up to 10 percent greater lateral cell array density compared to the fifth-generation technology. This lateral scaling advancement, in combination with 162 layers of stacked vertical memory, enables a 40 percent reduction in die size compared to the 112-layer stacking technology, optimizing cost.

The Kioxia and Western Digital teams also applied Circuit Under Array CMOS placement and four-plane operation, which together deliver nearly 2.4 times improvement in program performance and 10 percent improvement in read latency compared to the previous generation. I/O performance also improves by 66 percent, enabling the next-generation interface to support the ever-increasing need for faster transfer rates.

Overall, the new 3D flash memory technology reduces the cost per bit, as well as increases the manufactured bits per wafer by 70 percent, compared with the previous generation. Kioxia and Western Digital continue to drive innovation to ensure continued scaling to meet the needs of customers and their diverse applications.







« NVIDIA to limit hash rate of GeForce RTX 3060 GPUs, will launch CMP cards for professional mining · Kioxia and Western Digital Announce 6th-Gen 3D NAND Flash Memory with 162-layers · Synology Now Offers Higher-Capacity M.2 NVMe SSDs and 10/25GbE Network Cards »

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Exodite
Senior Member



Posts: 2087
Joined: 2006-09-28

#5888755 Posted on: 02/19/2021 09:24 AM
"Overall, the new 3D flash memory technology reduces the cost per bit, as well as increases the manufactured bits per wafer by 70 percent, compared with the previous generation."

It's funny how this is always the case with NAND advancements yet the end products are actually increasing in price.

rl66
Senior Member



Posts: 3604
Joined: 2007-05-31

#5888788 Posted on: 02/19/2021 11:57 AM
It's funny how this is always the case with NAND advancements yet the end products are actually increasing in price.

The price is drasticaly falling since almost a year... you can buy 1To now for the price you paid 500Go with the same tech 1 year ago.

Exodite
Senior Member



Posts: 2087
Joined: 2006-09-28

#5888794 Posted on: 02/19/2021 12:19 PM
The price is drasticaly falling since almost a year... you can buy 1To now for the price you paid 500Go with the same tech 1 year ago.

I can't speak to your local market of course but looking at mine, as well as press releases of new products it's definitely on an upwards trajectory.

It's possible the low end of the market, QLC and low-capacity drives, is dropping out though. If the demand isn't there, or the prices were absurd to begin with.

Personally I'm only looking at TLC, 2GB and up and there used to be units around ~2000SEK but now there aren't. And every new model comes in more expensive than what's already on the market.

Edit: Typo.

Stairmand
Senior Member



Posts: 356
Joined: 2007-07-25

#5888820 Posted on: 02/19/2021 01:29 PM
250GB drives in the UK are as low as £23-24 which is peanuts compared to a few years back. Even the PCIe 4 drives are surprisingly good value IMO. Although, yeah 2TB + drive prices are staying stubbornly high, but so have high capacity HDDs.

schmidtbag
Senior Member



Posts: 7237
Joined: 2012-11-10

#5888855 Posted on: 02/19/2021 03:34 PM
250GB drives in the UK are as low as £23-24 which is peanuts compared to a few years back. Even the PCIe 4 drives are surprisingly good value IMO. Although, yeah 2TB + drive prices are staying stubbornly high, but so have high capacity HDDs.

Over here, 2TB drives are starting to lower in price. Still a tad higher than I prefer, but the prices definitely are going down. I'm not in a rush though - I've got more important things to spend money on.

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