Random-access memory

Random-access memory (RAM /ræm/) is a form of computer memory that can be read and changed in any order, typically used to store working data and machine code.[1][2] A random-access memory device allows data items to be read or written in almost the same amount of time irrespective of the physical location of data inside the memory. In contrast, with other direct-access data storage media such as hard disks, CD-RWs, DVD-RWs and the older magnetic tapes and drum memory, the time required to read and write data items varies significantly depending on their physical locations on the recording medium, due to mechanical limitations such as media rotation speeds and arm movement.

Example of writable volatile random-access memory: Synchronous Dynamic RAM modules, primarily used as main memory in personal computers, workstations, and servers.
8GB DDR3 RAM stick with a white heatsink

RAM contains multiplexing and demultiplexing circuitry, to connect the data lines to the addressed storage for reading or writing the entry. Usually more than one bit of storage is accessed by the same address, and RAM devices often have multiple data lines and are said to be "8-bit" or "16-bit", etc. devices.

In today's technology, random-access memory takes the form of integrated circuit (IC) chips with MOS (metal-oxide-semiconductor) memory cells. RAM is normally associated with volatile types of memory (such as dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) modules), where stored information is lost if power is removed, although non-volatile RAM has also been developed.[3] Other types of non-volatile memories exist that allow random access for read operations, but either do not allow write operations or have other kinds of limitations on them. These include most types of ROM and a type of flash memory called NOR-Flash.

The two main types of volatile random-access semiconductor memory are static random-access memory (SRAM) and dynamic random-access memory (DRAM). Commercial uses of semiconductor RAM date back to 1965, when IBM introduced the SP95 SRAM chip for their System/360 Model 95 computer, and Toshiba used DRAM memory cells for its Toscal BC-1411 electronic calculator, both based on bipolar transistors. Commercial MOS memory, based on MOS transistors, was developed in the late 1960s, and has since been the basis for all commercial semiconductor memory. The first commercial DRAM IC chip, the Intel 1103, was introduced in October 1970. Synchronous dynamic random-access memory (SDRAM) later debuted with the Samsung KM48SL2000 chip in 1992.

History

These IBM tabulating machines from the mid-1930s used mechanical counters to store information
1 Megabit (MiBit) chip, one of the last models developed by VEB Carl Zeiss Jena in 1989

Early computers used relays, mechanical counters[4] or delay lines for main memory functions. Ultrasonic delay lines were serial devices which could only reproduce data in the order it was written. Drum memory could be expanded at relatively low cost but efficient retrieval of memory items required knowledge of the physical layout of the drum to optimize speed. Latches built out of vacuum tube triodes, and later, out of discrete transistors, were used for smaller and faster memories such as registers. Such registers were relatively large and too costly to use for large amounts of data; generally only a few dozen or few hundred bits of such memory could be provided.

The first practical form of random-access memory was the Williams tube starting in 1947. It stored data as electrically charged spots on the face of a cathode ray tube. Since the electron beam of the CRT could read and write the spots on the tube in any order, memory was random access. The capacity of the Williams tube was a few hundred to around a thousand bits, but it was much smaller, faster, and more power-efficient than using individual vacuum tube latches. Developed at the University of Manchester in England, the Williams tube provided the medium on which the first electronically stored program was implemented in the Manchester Baby computer, which first successfully ran a program on 21 June 1948.[5] In fact, rather than the Williams tube memory being designed for the Baby, the Baby was a testbed to demonstrate the reliability of the memory.[6][7]

Magnetic-core memory was invented in 1947 and developed up until the mid-1970s. It became a widespread form of random-access memory, relying on an array of magnetized rings. By changing the sense of each ring's magnetization, data could be stored with one bit stored per ring. Since every ring had a combination of address wires to select and read or write it, access to any memory location in any sequence was possible. Magnetic core memory was the standard form of computer memory system until displaced by solid-state MOS (metal-oxide-silicon) semiconductor memory in integrated circuits (ICs) during the early 1970s.[8]

Prior to the development of integrated read-only memory (ROM) circuits, permanent (or read-only) random-access memory was often constructed using diode matrices driven by address decoders, or specially wound core rope memory planes.

Semiconductor memory began in the 1960s with bipolar memory, which used bipolar transistors. While it improved performance, it could not compete with the lower price of magnetic core memory.[9]

MOS RAM

The invention of the MOSFET (metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor), also known as the MOS transistor, by Mohamed M. Atalla and Dawon Kahng at Bell Labs in 1959,[10] led to the development of metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) memory by John Schmidt at Fairchild Semiconductor in 1964.[8][11] In addition to higher performance, MOS semiconductor memory was cheaper and consumed less power than magnetic core memory.[8] The development of silicon-gate MOS integrated circuit (MOS IC) technology by Federico Faggin at Fairchild in 1968 enabled the production of MOS memory chips.[12] MOS memory overtook magnetic core memory as the dominant memory technology in the early 1970s.[8]

An integrated bipolar static random-access memory (SRAM) was invented by Robert H. Norman at Fairchild Semiconductor in 1963.[13] It was followed by the development of MOS SRAM by John Schmidt at Fairchild in 1964.[8] SRAM became an alternative to magnetic-core memory, but required six MOS transistors for each bit of data.[14] Commercial use of SRAM began in 1965, when IBM introduced the SP95 memory chip for the System/360 Model 95.[9]

Dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) allowed replacement of a 4 or 6-transistor latch circuit by a single transistor for each memory bit, greatly increasing memory density at the cost of volatility. Data was stored in the tiny capacitance of each transistor, and had to be periodically refreshed every few milliseconds before the charge could leak away. Toshiba's Toscal BC-1411 electronic calculator, which was introduced in 1965,[15][16][17] used a form of capacitive bipolar DRAM, storing 180-bit data on discrete memory cells, consisting of germanium bipolar transistors and capacitors.[16][17] While it offered improved performance over magnetic-core memory, bipolar DRAM could not compete with the lower price of the then dominant magnetic-core memory.[18]

MOS technology is the basis for modern DRAM. In 1966, Dr. Robert H. Dennard at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center was working on MOS memory. While examining the characteristics of MOS technology, he found it was capable of building capacitors, and that storing a charge or no charge on the MOS capacitor could represent the 1 and 0 of a bit, while the MOS transistor could control writing the charge to the capacitor. This led to his development of a single-transistor DRAM memory cell.[14] In 1967, Dennard filed a patent under IBM for a single-transistor DRAM memory cell, based on MOS technology.[19] The first commercial DRAM IC chip was the Intel 1103, which was manufactured on an 8 µm MOS process with a capacity of 1 Kibit, and was released in 1970.[8][20][21]

Synchronous dynamic random-access memory (SDRAM) was developed by Samsung Electronics. The first commercial SDRAM chip was the Samsung KM48SL2000, which had a capacity of 16 Mibit.[22] It was introduced by Samsung in 1992,[23] and mass-produced in 1993.[22] The first commercial DDR SDRAM (double data rate SDRAM) memory chip was Samsung's 64 Mibit DDR SDRAM chip, released in June 1998.[24] GDDR (graphics DDR) is a form of DDR SGRAM (synchronous graphics RAM), which was first released by Samsung as a 16 Mibit memory chip in 1998.[25]

Types

The two widely used forms of modern RAM are static RAM (SRAM) and dynamic RAM (DRAM). In SRAM, a bit of data is stored using the state of a six-transistor memory cell, typically using six MOSFETs (metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors). This form of RAM is more expensive to produce, but is generally faster and requires less dynamic power than DRAM. In modern computers, SRAM is often used as cache memory for the CPU. DRAM stores a bit of data using a transistor and capacitor pair (typically a MOSFET and MOS capacitor, respectively),[26] which together comprise a DRAM cell. The capacitor holds a high or low charge (1 or 0, respectively), and the transistor acts as a switch that lets the control circuitry on the chip read the capacitor's state of charge or change it. As this form of memory is less expensive to produce than static RAM, it is the predominant form of computer memory used in modern computers.

Both static and dynamic RAM are considered volatile, as their state is lost or reset when power is removed from the system. By contrast, read-only memory (ROM) stores data by permanently enabling or disabling selected transistors, such that the memory cannot be altered. Writeable variants of ROM (such as EEPROM and flash memory) share properties of both ROM and RAM, enabling data to persist without power and to be updated without requiring special equipment. These persistent forms of semiconductor ROM include USB flash drives, memory cards for cameras and portable devices, and solid-state drives. ECC memory (which can be either SRAM or DRAM) includes special circuitry to detect and/or correct random faults (memory errors) in the stored data, using parity bits or error correction codes.

In general, the term RAM refers solely to solid-state memory devices (either DRAM or SRAM), and more specifically the main memory in most computers. In optical storage, the term DVD-RAM is somewhat of a misnomer since, unlike CD-RW or DVD-RW it does not need to be erased before reuse. Nevertheless, a DVD-RAM behaves much like a hard disc drive if somewhat slower.

Memory cell

The memory cell is the fundamental building block of computer memory. The memory cell is an electronic circuit that stores one bit of binary information and it must be set to store a logic 1 (high voltage level) and reset to store a logic 0 (low voltage level). Its value is maintained/stored until it is changed by the set/reset process. The value in the memory cell can be accessed by reading it.

In SRAM, the memory cell is a type of flip-flop circuit, usually implemented using FETs. This means that SRAM requires very low power when not being accessed, but it is expensive and has low storage density.

A second type, DRAM, is based around a capacitor. Charging and discharging this capacitor can store a "1" or a "0" in the cell. However, the charge in this capacitor slowly leaks away, and must be refreshed periodically. Because of this refresh process, DRAM uses more power, but it can achieve greater storage densities and lower unit costs compared to SRAM.

SRAM Cell (6 Transistors)
DRAM Cell (1 Transistor and one capacitor)

Addressing

To be useful, memory cells must be readable and writeable. Within the RAM device, multiplexing and demultiplexing circuitry is used to select memory cells. Typically, a RAM device has a set of address lines A0... An, and for each combination of bits that may be applied to these lines, a set of memory cells are activated. Due to this addressing, RAM devices virtually always have a memory capacity that is a power of two.

Usually several memory cells share the same address. For example, a 4 bit 'wide' RAM chip has 4 memory cells for each address. Often the width of the memory and that of the microprocessor are different, for a 32 bit microprocessor, eight 4 bit RAM chips would be needed.

Often more addresses are needed than can be provided by a device. In that case, external multiplexors to the device are used to activate the correct device that is being accessed.

Memory hierarchy

One can read and over-write data in RAM. Many computer systems have a memory hierarchy consisting of processor registers, on-die SRAM caches, external caches, DRAM, paging systems and virtual memory or swap space on a hard drive. This entire pool of memory may be referred to as "RAM" by many developers, even though the various subsystems can have very different access times, violating the original concept behind the random access term in RAM. Even within a hierarchy level such as DRAM, the specific row, column, bank, rank, channel, or interleave organization of the components make the access time variable, although not to the extent that access time to rotating storage media or a tape is variable. The overall goal of using a memory hierarchy is to obtain the highest possible average access performance while minimizing the total cost of the entire memory system (generally, the memory hierarchy follows the access time with the fast CPU registers at the top and the slow hard drive at the bottom).

In many modern personal computers, the RAM comes in an easily upgraded form of modules called memory modules or DRAM modules about the size of a few sticks of chewing gum. These can quickly be replaced should they become damaged or when changing needs demand more storage capacity. As suggested above, smaller amounts of RAM (mostly SRAM) are also integrated in the CPU and other ICs on the motherboard, as well as in hard-drives, CD-ROMs, and several other parts of the computer system.

Other uses of RAM

A SO-DIMM stick of laptop RAM, roughly half the size of desktop RAM.

In addition to serving as temporary storage and working space for the operating system and applications, RAM is used in numerous other ways.

Virtual memory

Most modern operating systems employ a method of extending RAM capacity, known as "virtual memory". A portion of the computer's hard drive is set aside for a paging file or a scratch partition, and the combination of physical RAM and the paging file form the system's total memory. (For example, if a computer has 2 GiB (10243 B) of RAM and a 1 GiB page file, the operating system has 3 GiB total memory available to it.) When the system runs low on physical memory, it can "swap" portions of RAM to the paging file to make room for new data, as well as to read previously swapped information back into RAM. Excessive use of this mechanism results in thrashing and generally hampers overall system performance, mainly because hard drives are far slower than RAM.

RAM disk

Software can "partition" a portion of a computer's RAM, allowing it to act as a much faster hard drive that is called a RAM disk. A RAM disk loses the stored data when the computer is shut down, unless memory is arranged to have a standby battery source.

Shadow RAM

Sometimes, the contents of a relatively slow ROM chip are copied to read/write memory to allow for shorter access times. The ROM chip is then disabled while the initialized memory locations are switched in on the same block of addresses (often write-protected). This process, sometimes called shadowing, is fairly common in both computers and embedded systems.

As a common example, the BIOS in typical personal computers often has an option called “use shadow BIOS” or similar. When enabled, functions that rely on data from the BIOS's ROM instead use DRAM locations (most can also toggle shadowing of video card ROM or other ROM sections). Depending on the system, this may not result in increased performance, and may cause incompatibilities. For example, some hardware may be inaccessible to the operating system if shadow RAM is used. On some systems the benefit may be hypothetical because the BIOS is not used after booting in favor of direct hardware access. Free memory is reduced by the size of the shadowed ROMs.[27]

Recent developments

Several new types of non-volatile RAM, which preserve data while powered down, are under development. The technologies used include carbon nanotubes and approaches utilizing Tunnel magnetoresistance. Amongst the 1st generation MRAM, a 128 KiB (128 × 210 bytes) chip was manufactured with 0.18 µm technology in the summer of 2003. In June 2004, Infineon Technologies unveiled a 16 MiB (16 × 220 bytes) prototype again based on 0.18 µm technology. There are two 2nd generation techniques currently in development: thermal-assisted switching (TAS)[28] which is being developed by Crocus Technology, and spin-transfer torque (STT) on which Crocus, Hynix, IBM, and several other companies are working.[29] Nantero built a functioning carbon nanotube memory prototype 10 GiB (10 × 230 bytes) array in 2004. Whether some of these technologies can eventually take significant market share from either DRAM, SRAM, or flash-memory technology, however, remains to be seen.

Since 2006, "solid-state drives" (based on flash memory) with capacities exceeding 256 gigabytes and performance far exceeding traditional disks have become available. This development has started to blur the definition between traditional random-access memory and "disks", dramatically reducing the difference in performance.

Some kinds of random-access memory, such as "EcoRAM", are specifically designed for server farms, where low power consumption is more important than speed.[30]

Memory wall

The "memory wall" is the growing disparity of speed between CPU and memory outside the CPU chip. An important reason for this disparity is the limited communication bandwidth beyond chip boundaries, which is also referred to as bandwidth wall. From 1986 to 2000, CPU speed improved at an annual rate of 55% while memory speed only improved at 10%. Given these trends, it was expected that memory latency would become an overwhelming bottleneck in computer performance.[31]

CPU speed improvements slowed significantly partly due to major physical barriers and partly because current CPU designs have already hit the memory wall in some sense. Intel summarized these causes in a 2005 document.[32]

First of all, as chip geometries shrink and clock frequencies rise, the transistor leakage current increases, leading to excess power consumption and heat... Secondly, the advantages of higher clock speeds are in part negated by memory latency, since memory access times have not been able to keep pace with increasing clock frequencies. Third, for certain applications, traditional serial architectures are becoming less efficient as processors get faster (due to the so-called Von Neumann bottleneck), further undercutting any gains that frequency increases might otherwise buy. In addition, partly due to limitations in the means of producing inductance within solid state devices, resistance-capacitance (RC) delays in signal transmission are growing as feature sizes shrink, imposing an additional bottleneck that frequency increases don't address.

The RC delays in signal transmission were also noted in "Clock Rate versus IPC: The End of the Road for Conventional Microarchitectures"[33] which projected a maximum of 12.5% average annual CPU performance improvement between 2000 and 2014.

A different concept is the processor-memory performance gap, which can be addressed by 3D integrated circuits that reduce the distance between the logic and memory aspects that are further apart in a 2D chip.[34] Memory subsystem design requires a focus on the gap, which is widening over time.[35] The main method of bridging the gap is the use of caches; small amounts of high-speed memory that houses recent operations and instructions nearby the processor, speeding up the execution of those operations or instructions in cases where they are called upon frequently. Multiple levels of caching have been developed to deal with the widening gap, and the performance of high-speed modern computers relies on evolving caching techniques.[36] There can be up to a 53% difference between the growth in speed of processor speeds and the lagging speed of main memory access.[37]

Solid-state hard drives have continued to increase in speed, from ~400 Mbit/s via SATA3 in 2012 up to ~3 GB/s via NVMe/PCIe in 2018, closing the gap between RAM and hard disk speeds, although RAM continues to be an order of magnitude faster, with single-lane DDR4 3200 capable of 25 GB/s, and modern GDDR even faster. Fast, cheap, non-volatile solid state drives have replaced some functions formerly performed by RAM, such as holding certain data for immediate availability in server farms - 1 terabyte of SSD storage can be had for $200, while 1 TiB of RAM would cost thousands of dollars.[38][39]

Timeline

SRAM

Static random-access memory (SRAM)
Date of introduction Chip name Capacity (bits) Access time SRAM type Manufacturer(s) Process MOSFET Ref
March 1963 N/A 1-bit ‹See Tfd›? Bipolar (cell) Fairchild N/A N/A [9]
1965 ‹See Tfd›? 8-bit ‹See Tfd›? Bipolar IBM ‹See Tfd›? N/A
SP95 16-bit ‹See Tfd›? Bipolar IBM ‹See Tfd›? N/A [40]
‹See Tfd›? 64-bit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Fairchild ‹See Tfd›? PMOS [41]
1966 TMC3162 16-bit ‹See Tfd›? Bipolar (TTL) Transitron ‹See Tfd›? N/A [8]
‹See Tfd›? ‹See Tfd›? ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET NEC ‹See Tfd›? ‹See Tfd›? [42]
1968 ‹See Tfd›? 64-bit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Fairchild ‹See Tfd›? PMOS [42]
144-bit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET NEC ‹See Tfd›? NMOS
512-bit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET IBM ‹See Tfd›? NMOS [41]
1969 ‹See Tfd›? 128-bit ‹See Tfd›? Bipolar IBM ‹See Tfd›? N/A [9]
1101 256-bit 850 ns MOSFET Intel 12,000 nm PMOS [43][44][45][46]
1972 2102 1 Kibit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Intel ‹See Tfd›? NMOS [43]
1974 5101 1 Kibit 800 ns MOSFET Intel ‹See Tfd›? CMOS [43][47]
2102A 1 Kibit 350 ns MOSFET Intel ‹See Tfd›? NMOS (depletion) [43][48]
1975 2114 4 Kibit 450 ns MOSFET Intel ‹See Tfd›? NMOS [43][47]
1976 2115 1 Kibit 70 ns MOSFET Intel ‹See Tfd›? NMOS (HMOS) [43][44]
2147 4 Kibit 55 ns MOSFET Intel ‹See Tfd›? NMOS (HMOS) [43][49]
1977 ‹See Tfd›? 4 Kibit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Toshiba ‹See Tfd›? CMOS [44]
1978 HM6147 4 Kibit 55 ns MOSFET Hitachi 3,000 nm CMOS (twin-well) [49]
TMS4016 16 Kibit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Texas Instruments ‹See Tfd›? NMOS [44]
1980 ‹See Tfd›? 16 Kibit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Hitachi, Toshiba ‹See Tfd›? CMOS [50]
64 Kibit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Matsushita
1981 ‹See Tfd›? 16 Kibit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Texas Instruments 2,500 nm NMOS [50]
October 1981 ‹See Tfd›? 4 Kibit 18 ns MOSFET Matsushita, Toshiba 2,000 nm CMOS [51]
1982 ‹See Tfd›? 64 Kibit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Intel 1,500 nm NMOS (HMOS) [50]
February 1983 ‹See Tfd›? 64 Kibit 50 ns MOSFET Mitsubishi ‹See Tfd›? CMOS [52]
1984 ‹See Tfd›? 256 Kibit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Toshiba 1,200 nm CMOS [50][45]
1987 ‹See Tfd›? 1 Mibit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Sony, Hitachi, Mitsubishi, Toshiba ‹See Tfd›? CMOS [50]
December 1987 ‹See Tfd›? 256 Kibit 10 ns BiMOS Texas Instruments 800 nm BiCMOS [53]
1990 ‹See Tfd›? 4 Mibit 1523 ns MOSFET NEC, Toshiba, Hitachi, Mitsubishi ‹See Tfd›? CMOS [50]
1992 ‹See Tfd›? 16 Mibit 1215 ns MOSFET Fujitsu, NEC 400 nm
December 1994 ‹See Tfd›? 512 Kibit 2.5 ns MOSFET IBM ‹See Tfd›? CMOS (SOI) [54]
1995 ‹See Tfd›? 4 Mibit 6 ns Cache (SyncBurst) Hitachi 100 nm CMOS [55]
256 Mibit ‹See Tfd›? MOSFET Hyundai ‹See Tfd›? CMOS [56]

DRAM

Dynamic random-access memory (DRAM)
Date of introduction Chip name Capacity (bits) DRAM type Manufacturer(s) Process MOSFET Area Ref
1965 N/A 1-bit DRAM (cell) Toshiba N/A N/A N/A [16][17]
1967 N/A 1-bit DRAM (cell) IBM N/A MOS N/A [19][42]
1968 ‹See Tfd›? 256-bit DRAM (IC) Fairchild ‹See Tfd›? PMOS ‹See Tfd›? [8]
1969 N/A 1-bit DRAM (cell) Intel N/A PMOS N/A [42]
1970 1102 1 Kibit DRAM (IC) Intel, Honeywell ‹See Tfd›? PMOS ‹See Tfd›? [42]
1103 1 Kibit DRAM Intel 8,000 nm PMOS 10 mm² [57][58][20]
1971 μPD403 1 Kibit DRAM NEC ‹See Tfd›? NMOS ‹See Tfd›? [59]
‹See Tfd›? 2 Kibit DRAM General Instrument ‹See Tfd›? PMOS 13 mm² [60]
1972 2107 4 Kibit DRAM Intel ‹See Tfd›? NMOS ‹See Tfd›? [43][61]
1973 ‹See Tfd›? 8 Kibit DRAM IBM ‹See Tfd›? PMOS 19 mm² [60]
1975 2116 16 Kibit DRAM Intel ‹See Tfd›? NMOS ‹See Tfd›? [62][8]
1977 ‹See Tfd›? 64 Kibit DRAM NTT ‹See Tfd›? NMOS 35 mm² [60]
1979 MK4816 16 Kibit PSRAM Mostek ‹See Tfd›? NMOS ‹See Tfd›? [63]
‹See Tfd›? 64 Kibit DRAM Siemens ‹See Tfd›? VMOS 25 mm² [60]
1980 ‹See Tfd›? 256 Kibit DRAM NEC, NTT 1,0001,500 nm NMOS 3442 mm² [60]
1981 ‹See Tfd›? 288 Kibit DRAM IBM ‹See Tfd›? MOS 25 mm² [64]
1983 ‹See Tfd›? 64 Kibit DRAM Intel 1,500 nm CMOS 20 mm² [60]
256 Kibit DRAM NTT ‹See Tfd›? CMOS 31 mm²
January 5, 1984 ‹See Tfd›? 8 Mibit DRAM Hitachi ‹See Tfd›? MOS ‹See Tfd›? [65][66]
February 1984 ‹See Tfd›? 1 Mibit DRAM Hitachi, NEC 1,000 nm NMOS 7476 mm² [60][67]
NTT 800 nm CMOS 53 mm² [60][67]
1984 TMS4161 64 Kibit DPRAM (VRAM) Texas Instruments ‹See Tfd›? NMOS ‹See Tfd›? [68][69]
January 1985 μPD41264 258 Kibit DPRAM (VRAM) NEC ‹See Tfd›? NMOS ‹See Tfd›? [70][71]
June 1986 ‹See Tfd›? 1 Mibit PSRAM Toshiba ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [72]
1986 ‹See Tfd›? 4 Mibit DRAM NEC 800 nm NMOS 99 mm² [60]
Texas Instruments, Toshiba 1,000 nm CMOS 100137 mm²
1987 ‹See Tfd›? 16 Mibit DRAM NTT 700 nm CMOS 148 mm² [60]
October 1988 ‹See Tfd›? 512 Kibit HSDRAM IBM 1,000 nm CMOS 78 mm² [73]
1991 ‹See Tfd›? 64 Mibit DRAM Matsushita, Mitsubishi, Fujitsu, Toshiba 400 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [50]
1993 ‹See Tfd›? 256 Mibit DRAM Hitachi, NEC 250 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›?
1995 ‹See Tfd›? 4 Mibit DPRAM (VRAM) Hitachi ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [55]
January 9, 1995 ‹See Tfd›? 1 Gibit DRAM NEC 250 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [74][55]
Hitachi 160 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›?
1996 ‹See Tfd›? 4 Mibit FRAM Samsung ‹See Tfd›? NMOS ‹See Tfd›? [75]
1997 ‹See Tfd›? 4 Gb QLC NEC 150 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [50]
1998 ‹See Tfd›? 4 Gibit DRAM Hyundai ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [56]
June 2001 TC51W3216XB 32 Mibit PSRAM Toshiba ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [76]
February 2001 ‹See Tfd›? 4 Gibit DRAM Samsung 100 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [50][77]

SDRAM

Synchronous dynamic random-access memory (SDRAM)
Date of introduction Chip name Capacity (bits) SDRAM type Manufacturer(s) Process MOSFET Area Ref
1992 KM48SL2000 16 Mb SDR Samsung ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [78][22]
1996 MSM5718C50 18 Mb RDRAM Oki ‹See Tfd›? CMOS 325 mm² [79]
N64 RDRAM 36 Mb RDRAM NEC ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [80]
‹See Tfd›? 1 Gb SDR Mitsubishi 150 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [50]
1997 ‹See Tfd›? 1 Gb SDR Hyundai ‹See Tfd›? SOI ‹See Tfd›? [56]
1998 MD5764802 64 Mb RDRAM Oki ‹See Tfd›? CMOS 325 mm² [79]
March 1998 Direct RDRAM 72 Mb RDRAM Rambus ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [81]
June 1998 ‹See Tfd›? 64 Mb DDR Samsung ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [82][83][84]
1998 ‹See Tfd›? 64 Mb DDR Hyundai ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [56]
128 Mb SDR Samsung ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [85][83]
1999 ‹See Tfd›? 128 Mb DDR Samsung ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [83]
1 Gb DDR Samsung 140 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [50]
2000 GS eDRAM 32 Mb eDRAM Sony, Toshiba 180 nm CMOS 279 mm² [86]
2001 ‹See Tfd›? 288 Mb RDRAM Hynix ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [87]
‹See Tfd›? DDR2 Samsung 100 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [84][50]
2002 ‹See Tfd›? 256 Mb SDR Hynix ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [87]
2003 EE+GS eDRAM 32 Mb eDRAM Sony, Toshiba 90 nm CMOS 86 mm² [86]
‹See Tfd›? 72 Mb DDR3 Samsung 90 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [88]
512 Mb DDR2 Hynix ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [87]
Elpida 110 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [89]
1 Gb DDR2 Hynix ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [87]
2004 ‹See Tfd›? 2 Gb DDR2 Samsung 80 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [90]
2005 EE+GS eDRAM 32 Mb eDRAM Sony, Toshiba 65 nm CMOS 86 mm² [91]
Xenos eDRAM 80 Mb eDRAM NEC 90 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [92]
‹See Tfd›? 512 Mb DDR3 Samsung 80 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [84][93]
2006 ‹See Tfd›? 1 Gb DDR2 Hynix 60 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [87]
2008 ‹See Tfd›? ‹See Tfd›? LPDDR2 Hynix ‹See Tfd›?
April 2008 ‹See Tfd›? 8 Gb DDR3 Samsung 50 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [94]
2008 ‹See Tfd›? 16 Gb DDR3 Samsung 50 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›?
2009 ‹See Tfd›? ‹See Tfd›? DDR3 Hynix 44 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [87]
2 Gb DDR3 Hynix 40 nm
2011 ‹See Tfd›? 16 Gb DDR3 Hynix 40 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [95]
2 Gb DDR4 Hynix 30 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [95]
2013 ‹See Tfd›? ‹See Tfd›? LPDDR4 Samsung 20 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [95]
2014 ‹See Tfd›? 8 Gb LPDDR4 Samsung 20 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [96]
2015 ‹See Tfd›? 12 Gb LPDDR4 Samsung 20 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [85]
2018 ‹See Tfd›? 8 Gb LPDDR5 Samsung 10 nm FinFET ‹See Tfd›? [97]
128 Gb DDR4 Samsung 10 nm FinFET ‹See Tfd›? [98]

SGRAM and HBM

Synchronous graphics random-access memory (SGRAM) and High Bandwidth Memory (HBM)
Date of introduction Chip name Capacity (bits) SDRAM type Manufacturer(s) Process MOSFET Area Ref
November 1994 HM5283206 8 Mibit SGRAM (SDR) Hitachi 350 nm CMOS 58 mm² [99][100]
December 1994 µPD481850 8 Mibit SGRAM (SDR) NEC ‹See Tfd›? CMOS 280 mm² [101][102]
1997 µPD4811650 16 Mibit SGRAM (SDR) NEC 350 nm CMOS 280 mm² [103][104]
September 1998 ‹See Tfd›? 16 Mibit SGRAM (GDDR) Samsung ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [82]
1999 KM4132G112 32 Mibit SGRAM (SDR) Samsung ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [105]
2002 ‹See Tfd›? 128 Mibit SGRAM (GDDR2) Samsung ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [106]
2003 ‹See Tfd›? 256 Mibit SGRAM (GDDR2) Samsung ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [106]
SGRAM (GDDR3)
March 2005 K4D553238F 256 Mibit SGRAM (GDDR) Samsung ‹See Tfd›? CMOS 77 mm² [107]
October 2005 ‹See Tfd›? 256 Mibit SGRAM (GDDR4) Samsung ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [108]
2005 ‹See Tfd›? 512 Mibit SGRAM (GDDR4) Hynix ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [87]
2007 ‹See Tfd›? 1 Gibit SGRAM (GDDR5) Hynix 60 nm
2009 ‹See Tfd›? 2 Gibit SGRAM (GDDR5) Hynix 40 nm
2010 K4W1G1646G 1 Gibit SGRAM (GDDR3) Samsung ‹See Tfd›? CMOS 100 mm² [109]
2012 ‹See Tfd›? 4 Gibit SGRAM (GDDR3) SK Hynix ‹See Tfd›? CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [95]
2013 ‹See Tfd›? ‹See Tfd›? HBM
March 2016 MT58K256M32JA 8 Gibit SGRAM (GDDR5X) Micron 20 nm CMOS 140 mm² [110]
June 2016 ‹See Tfd›? 32 Gibit HBM2 Samsung 20 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [111][112]
2017 ‹See Tfd›? 64 Gibit HBM2 Samsung 20 nm CMOS ‹See Tfd›? [111]
January 2018 K4ZAF325BM 16 Gibit SGRAM (GDDR6) Samsung 10 nm FinFET ‹See Tfd›? [113][114][115]

See also

References

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