Toshiba To Test Sub-25nm NAND Flash
An anonymous reader writes "Toshiba plans to spend about $159.8 million this year to build a test production line for NAND flash memory chips of less than 25 nanometers. The company hopes to kick off mass production of the chip as early as 2012. The fabrication facility for this key NAND flash memory will be located at Yokkaichi, Mie Prefecture."
The reason this is a big deal, is that this is the type of flash that goes into SSD's. Right now, a 256GB SSD costs over $600. Read/write speeds on mainstream HDDs are one of the biggest bottlenecks in today's machines, and SSDs are the answer to the problem, once they come down in price. Also, SSDs draw less power than traditional hard drives, so longer laptop battery life is an added benefit. Not to mention the benefit that data centers could see, both from a throughput standpoint, and a lower power/cooling requirement.
witch means an approx 4 x larger yield on a 300mm wafer
I'm not sure what witches have to do with it, but the yield improvement from a process shrink is more than just the 4x that you get from cramming four times as many chips on a wafer. An impurity in the wafer typically destroys one die. If you're unlucky it may be between 2 or even 4. If you make each die smaller then an impurity of the same size may only destroy 1-3 of the 4 in the same area as one of the originals.
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