Technalysis Research
 
Previous Blogs

May 20, 2014
The Technological Divining Rod

May 13, 2014
Computing in the Cloud

May 6, 2014
Device Usage a Question of Degree

April 29, 2014
The Next Smartphone Battleground: Durability

April 22, 2014
BYOD: A Work in Progress

April 18, 2014
Insider Extra: AMD Back in the Groove

April 15, 2014
The Mobility Myth

April 9, 2014
BYOD Dilemma: Devices vs. Data

April 8, 2014
Insider Extra: Qualcomm's Evolving Story

April 1, 2014
A Wearables Forecast

March 25, 2014
Measuring Success in Wearables? It's Thousands of Thousands

March 24, 2014
Insider Extra: Intel Strategy Moves Forward

March 18, 2014
IOT: Islands of Isolated Things?

March 11, 2014
Wearables Cautionary Tale

March 4, 2014
The New Platform Battle

February 25, 2014
Watch What Happens

February 18, 2014
Talkin' 'bout Touchpads

February 11, 2014
The MultiOS Conundrum

February 4, 2014
Computing Redefined

January 28, 2014
The Apple Problem

January 21, 2014
The 2-in-1s People Might Want

January 14, 2014
The Post Tablet Era

January 7, 2014
The Innovation Asymptote

December 31, 2013
Top 5 2014 Predictions

December 17, 2013
Holiday Shoppers Gifting Themselves

December 10, 2013
Companion Apps

December 3, 2013
Aisle Check
















TECHnalysis Research Blog Extra

May 22, 2014
Insider Extra: SanDisk: The Many Faces of Flash

If you were to ask most people about flash memory, you’d probably get a somewhat puzzled stare. Throw in a comment about 3D memory and that stare will likely turn into a frustrated frown. Even most industry observers tend to think of flash as just another commodity that, while important, isn’t that interesting. I have to admit that I pretty much fell into the latter camp as well, but the recent SanDisk Investor Day event provided a number of rather surprising new insights into flash memory and the technology behind it.

For one thing, not all flash is the same. In fact, I was startled to find out just how many different types of flash memory there are. From variations in speed, lifetime, manufacturing technology, and more, there are flash varieties for all kinds of devices and applications, including simple external memory cards and sticks, solid-state disks (SSDs) designed for PCs and high-performance servers, and integrated storage for mobile devices ranging from smartphones to tablets and wearables. Through a combination of different performance characteristics, available circuit board real estate and controller chip types, companies like SanDisk put together a staggering array of different flash memory product options.

One of the most intriguing elements about flash has to do with how it’s produced. Because of the nature of how flash operates, it’s starting to run into challenges with the traditional lithography-based techniques used to manufacture almost all semiconductors. Plus, it’s doing so even before CPUs and other more mainstream chips. As a result, flash vendors like SanDisk and Samsung are having to take more radical approaches to manufacturing in order to maintain the Moore’s Law-type progress in performance and capacity that we’ve all become accustomed to with semiconductors.

The path these companies are currently taking is called 3D memory (3D NAND to be precise) because it involves building up a memory cell from a flat surface into a vertical, 3D structure. Traditional semiconductor lithography techniques have evolved over the last few decades by making the size of each component piece (measured in nanometers or nm) smaller and smaller—basically, it’s like drawing finer and finer lines onto a flat surface. At their investor day, in fact, SanDisk announced that their next near-term development in manufacturing was to produce traditional 2D NAND flash memory in the world’s first 15 nm process (something they had previously referred to as 1Z).

As these lines have gotten smaller, however, they’ve run into problems due to basic physics. Each line is now only a few atoms wide and changing the state from positive to negative only involves moving a few electrons. In addition, the potential for voltage leakage (which can cause errors) across these small barriers increases as their size goes down.

Moving to 3D manufacturing literally turns the problem on its side by moving elements that were previously on a horizontal plane up to a vertical plane and creating a tube-like structure. Because the manufacturing process, and the challenges associated with it, are significantly different from traditional semiconductor manufacturing, vendors can move back to older (i.e., wider) lithography methods and yet still maintain the same curve of progress for capacity expansion and speed improvements that traditional methods have brought them to today.

As a result, this technology will allow vendors to avoid what some feared would be the end of Moore’s Law-based improvements in semiconductor manufacturing. 3D manufacturing does not, however, create an entirely new innovation curve that could greatly surpass where current technologies have brought the industry, as some had thought. Instead, it provides a way to get over a forthcoming challenge on the current curve and sets a new path to continue that curve for another 10 years or so.

3D manufacturing isn’t the only method for breaking through the inevitable limitations of traditional lithography-based production methods, by the way, and some vendors may end up using different approaches. Nevertheless, it’s an impressive technology that could prove to be extremely important for many different types of semiconductors towards the end of this decade.

Plus, for companies like SanDisk, this technology can help it to continue meeting the storage demands of end users and their devices for many years to come.

.Here's a link to the original column: http://techpinions.com/sandisk-the-many-faces-of-flash/30634


Podcasts
Leveraging more than 10 years of award-winning, professional radio experience, TECHnalysis Research participates in a video-based podcast called Everything Technology.
LEARN MORE
  Research Schedule
A list of the documents that TECHnalysis Research plans to publish in 2015 can be found here.
READ MORE