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FBM could leave DRAM in the dust

October 6th, 2008 · No Comments




Dynamic random access memory (DRAM) has been the memory device of choice for design engineers worldwide for more than 30 years. While the technology has had a phenomenal life, it is running out of steam. The problem is obvious once you think about it–how can you store the same bit-cell charge in an ever-decreasing silicon area?

DRAM designers did what any city planner would do–they went vertical and made capacitors that resembled cylinders rather than plates. But now, with capacitors resembling needles, the ability to continue scaling cost-effectively is unknown. As the industry migrates to technologies below 40 nm, a new type of memory that will allow semiconductors to continue scaling at their current rate will be required.

The good news is that there’s a leading contender in resolving this critical challenge–floating-body memories. FBMs use a single transistor for the memory bit-cell, and eliminate the troublesome capacitor completely.

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Related Links
Floating-body memories gain ground
ZRAM announces latest advances in floating-body memory
Intel Scales Floating Body Cell Memory

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Tags: Memory

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