Thursday, September 4, 2008

What is DDR3 Memory?

Several major DRAM manufacturer have made announcement, they are supplying the industry's first DDR3 devices and modules to leading PC industry developers for

evaluation by early 2007. Intel’s Bearlake chipset will be the first to support DDR3 and it is expected to arrive in the third quarter of 2007

Key Features

  • The DDR3 components are twice as fast as today's highest speed DDR2 memory products.
  • The first computer systems equipped with the advanced DDR3 memory technology are expected to arrive in 2007.
  • The main advantages of DDR3 are the higher bandwidth and the increase in performance at low power.
  • The DDR3 SDRAM devices will offer data transfer rates up to 1600 Mbps (megabits per second).
  • The supply voltage for the memory technology is being reduced from 1.8 volts for DDR2 to just 1.5 volts for DDR3 targeting a work day equivalent of battery time. The

voltage reduction limits the amount of power that is consumed and heat that is generated in connection with the increase in bandwidths.

Component densities: standardized from 512Mbit thru 8Gbit.
The most important densities will be 512Mbit and 1Gbit at the beginning, later on a 2Gbit and eventually 4Gbit component to follow.

Module densities: from 256MByte up to 8GByte for standard JEDEC modules.
Higher module densities beyond 8Gbyte for special applications like servers may be introduced later on.

Features:

DDR3 SDRAM Components:


  • Introduction of asynchronous RESET pin
  • Support of system level flight time compensation
  • On-DIMM Mirror friendly DRAM ballout
  • Introduction of CWL (CAS Write Latency) per speed bin
  • On-die IO calibration engine

1 comment:

ShawnM said...

Thanks for informative post!
I thought that I knew enough about DD3 memory but having read your article I got that there was a lot to learn to get employed in Ideals.