Samsung’s ‘melting’ memory chips could boost mobile phone battery life by 20%

By Andrew Nusca | Sep 30, 2009 |

Samsung has begun producing a new type of “melting” memory chip that could replace flash memory and boost battery life in mobile phones by more than 20 percent.

The world’s largest maker of memory chips, Samsung said that it is now manufacturing phase-change random access memory, or PRAM, in 512-megabit capacities.

Phase change memory chips have been discussed for decades. In them, a chemical compound called chalcogenide — which is also used in CD-RW rewritable disks — is heated to very high temperatures. The heat changes the physical state of the compound, and the two resulting states become the binary “ones and zeros” used by computers for data storage.

What’s advantageous about PRAM is that it can read and write data 10 times faster and at lower power than the conventional flash memory found in mobile phones, portable media players and USB thumb drives, the company says. Specifically, single bits can be changed to a zero or a one without the need to first erase an entire block of cells, a drawback of flash memory.

Phase change memory is also “executable,” another advantage as cell phone applications continue to grow in popularity.

“We expect it to become one of our core memory products in the future,” said Sei-Jin Kim, vice president of the mobile memory planning and enabling group in the Memory Division at Samsung Electronics, in a statement.

Samsung’s chip is produced using 60-nanometer manufacturing technology, the same process technology currently used in flash memory production.

 
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  •  
    1

    ECD Fan

    09/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Samsung's 'melting' memory chips could boost mobile phone battery life

    You are quite mistaken. PRAM CANNOT "read and write data 10 times
    faster and at lower power than the conventional flash memory found in
    mobile phones, portable media players and USB thumb drives."

    NAND Flash writes and reads at speeds up to 200 megabytes per second.
    PRAM reads almost as fast as Flash, but writes at 0.3 megabytes a
    second (per Numonyx P8P datasheet). So, actually, Flash is 500x as
    fast as PRAM in write. And in terms of PRAM's power consumption, it
    is the same as Flash, not better.

    No so smart, after all!

    http://ecdfan.blogspot.com/2009/05/how-to-spot-fake-samsung-and-
    pram.html

  •  
    2

    lpeters@...

    10/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Samsung's 'melting' memory chips could boost mobile phone battery life by 20%

    Perhaps the problem in speed is in the semantics. The previous comment disputes the claim that the memory is faster saying that ?Flash is 500x as fast as PRAM in write?. The press release from Samsung (quoted here) says that ?it is effectively 30-times faster than conventional flash?. Key word there is ?effectively?, without the overhead of deleting a block prior to a write may be why.

  •  
    3

    Kiryat8

    10/01/09 | Report as spam

    DIP package

    Where did you guys get the photo?
    Highly unlikely any company would use old dual in line packaging, is it?

  •  
    4

    leopards

    10/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Samsung's 'melting' memory chips could boost mobile phone battery life by 20%

    It seems that is the picture from the Samsung website! I also think the DIP choice is kind of weird in this day and age! Though it would mitigate the problem of heat from soldering a surface mounted chip!

  •  
    5

    chefp

    10/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Samsung's 'melting' memory chips could boost mobile phone battery life by 20%

    it's just a prototype. DIPs are much easier to probe and debug.

  •  
    6

    ECD Fan

    10/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Samsung's 'melting' memory chips could boost mobile phone battery life

    The picture is of the 2005 prototype (not the 2009 one). The Smart
    Takes are not so smart, after all.

    To avoid semantics issues, Samsung should publish a detailed datasheet,
    where the actual performance data is disclosed. Their failure to do so
    indicates that the chip is basically inferior and unusable. But it
    makes for a good PR, as the Smart Takes here have proven. They have no
    clue what they wrote about, but they sound smart, don't they.

  •  
    7

    andrew.nusca

    10/01/09 | Report as spam

    @ECD Fan

    My mistake! I accidentally included the wrong link and image. It's been updated.

    Thanks for the catch.

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Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic. He was most recently Executive Editor of News and Blogs at ZDNet. Prior to that he was executive news editor at eWeek and news editor at Baseline. He also served as the East Coast news editor and finance editor at CNET News.com. Larry has covered the technology and financial services industry since 1995, publishing articles in WallStreetWeek.com, Inter@ctive Week, The New York Times, and Financial Planning magazine. He's a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism and the University of Delaware.

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He is a New York University graduate and former news editor and columnist of the Washington Square News. He is a graduate of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He has been named "Howard Kurtz, Jr." by film critic John Lichman despite having no relation to him. A native of Philadelphia, he lives in New York with his fiancée and his cat, Spats.

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