Intel is
scheduled to start sending the first samples of its next-generation phase-change
memory (PCM) chips to device makers in the second quarter of this year.
The technology combines the speed of DRam chips with the ability of Flash
memory to retain information when the power is turned off, and has the potential
to replace both technologies.
High data transfer speeds are needed to execute code where so-called
non-volatile memory is used to store data in mobile devices where power
consumption is a challenge.
"The nirvana is how to make non-volatile DRam," Ed Doller, chief technology
officer at Intel's Flash memory group, said during a meeting with reporters at
Intel's corporate headquarters. "Phase-change memory gets us pretty close to
nirvana."
Intel is developing the memory with
STMicroelectronics.
Commonly referred to as PCM or PRam (phase-change Ram) the technology stores
information by changing the phase of chalcogenide glass from crystalline to
amorphous through the application of heat.
Doller claimed that the read and write speeds of the upcoming PCM will
surpass that of Flash memory by a factor of at least 1,000.
The chip also allows applications to write information on top of existing
data, whereas existing memory technologies require data to be deleted first
before new information can be stored.
Although the technology is currently more expensive than traditional forms of
Flash and DRam, Doller predicted that prices for PCM will drop to a lower level
over time.
Intel will initially target its PCM at mobile phones, according to Doller,
which typically store the operating system and user data on Nor Flash memory.
Samsung
produced a
512Mb PCM
prototype in September that is scheduled to go into production in 2008.
IBM published a
research study in December on its
efforts
to build a PCM which it claimed could sound the death knell for Flash.
Intel showed off early silicon for a 128Mb device that was manufactured with
90nm technology in September.
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