United Business Media EE Times


Search

HOMELATEST NEWSSEMICONDUCTORSMOST POPULARMARKET INTELLIGENCE UNITFORUMSDESIGNNEW PRODUCTSCAREERSBLOGSCONTACTEVENTSSIGN UP!RSS

 

Standards for DDR-III start to take shape








Silicon Strategies


Future-generation DDR-III SDRAM surfaced here this week at the JEDEX chip conference, flaunting performance levels twice as good as DDR-II.

The JEDEC Solid State Technology Association, the semiconductor engineering standards body of the Electronic Industries Alliance, has begun drafting the first DDR-III industry standard even though DDR-II for PC and server main memory has yet to come to market.

Preliminary details indicate DDR-III SDRAM chips will have data transfer rates starting at 800Mbits/s and later increasing to 1.5Gbits/s. DDR-III will also consume much less power than previous memory devices, moving to as little as 1.2 or 1.5V compared with 1.8V for DDR-II and 2.5V for current DDR.

"Each voltage decrease allows a significant power reduction," said Kevin Ryan, director of strategic marketing at Micron Technology Inc., Boise, Idaho.

William Shen, memory applications market manager at Infineon Technologies North America Corp., San Jose, said the density of the first DDR-III SDRAM chip is likely to be 4Gbits.

A final JEDEC standard for DDR-III is expected to be completed by the end of 2005, with sampling starting a year later and production in 2007.

The JEDEX China audience got the first glimpse of next-generation memory chips, a privilege usually reserved for Silicon Valley or other global semiconductor centers. This week's meeting was JEDEC's first offshore conference, reflecting the importance chipmakers are placing on China's burgeoning electronics industry.

"Semiconductor sales in China should remain in double digits for many years, one of the few areas of the world experiencing such dramatic growth. Even RDRAM in which Samsung is the largest producer is shipping well to China," said Jon Kang, senior vice president of Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd.'s memory division.

The U.S. International Trade Office in Beijing estimates that China's chip sales this year will reach $19 billion, a 25% increase over 2001. The USITO projects that the China IC market next year will grow another 24%, to $23.6 billion, and climb 25% in 2004, to $29.6 billion.

Many foreign makers of memory chips are adding facilities in China to tap into the surging market. Samsung, which has a chip assembly and testing operation in China, is reportedly planning an initiative to expand its presence. Micron, which opened a module-assembly joint venture last year in Xiamen, is preparing to open a sales office in Shanghai.

DDR-III is expected to feature short-loop through (SLT), the signaling technique debuting in some DDR-II devices to reduce noise at high frequencies. Micron demonstrated a DDR-II chip with SLT at its JEDEX exhibition booth.

SLT eliminates "stubs" that branch off to carry the signal from the memory bus to each module in the system. The multiple data lines are vulnerable to greater noise at the very high frequencies of new-generation memory chips, said Dong Yang Lee, Samsung senior product planning manager. SLT connects a series of controller drivers directly with each memory module to reduce noise and signal reflection, he said.

The technique is aimed at servers to allow the addition of eight DIMMs per channel, or four times more than with the basic DDR-II configuration.

JEDEC sources at the conference said that SLT is similar to the technique used in Rambus Inc.'s RDRAM, a bitter competitor of DDR. They said that SLT is based on designs that go back to 1970 and aren't included in Rambus' patents.

JEDEC is also drafting an addendum to the DDR-II standard that would cover 2Gbit chips expected to come to market in 2005, sources said. The DDR-II spec also has been amended to double the number of memory banks to eight for chips of 1Gbit and above.

The increased number of banks reduces latency and boosts memory chip efficiency, according to the standards body.

All DDR-II memory modules will use new BGA packaging because of its smaller form factor, said David Chan, Infineon's applications marketing manager and chairman of the JEDEC DDR-II unbuffered DIMM working group.











  Free Subscription to EE Times
First Name Last Name
Company Name Title
Email address
  Click here for your Free Subscription to EETimes Europe
 
CAREER CENTER
Ready to take that job and shove it?
SEARCH JOBS
SPONSOR

RECENT JOB POSTINGS
CAREER NEWS
Federal CTO Sees IT Leading U.S. Out Of Recession
Aneesh Chopra is looking to other CIOs to advise him on fleshing out a more detailed agenda to best serve the president's IT agenda.

For more great jobs, career related news, features and services, please visit EETimes' Career Center.



All White Papers »   

  Around Silicon Strategies

10 in trouble: EE Times has assembled a list of 10 companies (or more) that seem in particular danger of continuing to spill red ink, being acquired, seeking bankruptcy protection or just not being around in current form a year from now. More...

10 fab technologies on the hot seat: There's trouble brewing in chip-making paradise. Delivery of chips at 32-nm and beyond won't be a cool breeze. EE Times has constructed the following list of 10 fab technologies that could make or break future IC scaling. More...

6 fab technologies on the bubble: It isn't going to be a slam-dunk to deliver chips at 32-nm and beyond. See our story about 10 fab technologies on the hot seat. Then read this article: 6 technologies on the bubble. More...

Our take on Intel-River: With its acquisition of embedded software leader Wind River Systems Inc., Intel Corp. has unambiguously signaled that it is again attempting to diversify beyond X86 processors. Here's our take on the deal. More...

Can wireless HD survive?: When Yoav Nissan-Cohen, chairman and CEO of Amimon, stopped by our offices here to discuss the state of the wireless video networking industry, he had three messages to deliver. More...

Hot technologies to watch for in 2009: Every technologist, marketer, industry analyst and reporter on a hunt for the next big thing is bracing for the 2009 Consumer Electronics Show scheduled less than a month away. More...

Top 20 predictions for semis in 2009: To help sort out the confusion in the market, EE Times has released its own chip forecasts--and other predictions--for 2009. So, what will happen in analog, FPGAs, foundry, memory, MPUs and other sectors? More...

Silicon 60 version 8.0 The EE Times 60 Emerging Startups list, first published in April 2004, has been updated to version 8.0 to reflect the latest corporate, commercial, technology and market conditions. More...

 
Education and
Learning


Learn Now:












Home | About | Editorial Calendar | Feedback | Subscriptions | Newsletter | Media Kit | Contact | Reprints|  RSS|   Digital|  Mobile
Network Websites
International
Network Features




All materials on this site Copyright © 2009 TechInsights, a Division of United Business Media LLC All rights reserved.
Privacy Statement | Terms of Service | About