7 research outputs found

    Flash Memory Devices

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    Flash memory devices have represented a breakthrough in storage since their inception in the mid-1980s, and innovation is still ongoing. The peculiarity of such technology is an inherent flexibility in terms of performance and integration density according to the architecture devised for integration. The NOR Flash technology is still the workhorse of many code storage applications in the embedded world, ranging from microcontrollers for automotive environment to IoT smart devices. Their usage is also forecasted to be fundamental in emerging AI edge scenario. On the contrary, when massive data storage is required, NAND Flash memories are necessary to have in a system. You can find NAND Flash in USB sticks, cards, but most of all in Solid-State Drives (SSDs). Since SSDs are extremely demanding in terms of storage capacity, they fueled a new wave of innovation, namely the 3D architecture. Today “3D” means that multiple layers of memory cells are manufactured within the same piece of silicon, easily reaching a terabit capacity. So far, Flash architectures have always been based on "floating gate," where the information is stored by injecting electrons in a piece of polysilicon surrounded by oxide. On the contrary, emerging concepts are based on "charge trap" cells. In summary, flash memory devices represent the largest landscape of storage devices, and we expect more advancements in the coming years. This will require a lot of innovation in process technology, materials, circuit design, flash management algorithms, Error Correction Code and, finally, system co-design for new applications such as AI and security enforcement

    Study On Endurance Of Flash Memory Ssds

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    Flash memory promises to revolutionize storage systems because of its massive performance gains, ruggedness, large decrease in power usage and physical space requirements, but it is not a direct replacement for magnetic hard disks. Flash memory possesses fundamentally different characteristics and in order to fully utilize the positive aspects of flash memory, we must engineer around its unique limitations. The primary limitations are lack of in-place updates, the asymmetry between the sizes of the write and erase operations, and the limited endurance of flash memory cells. This leads to the need for efficient methods for block cleaning, combating write amplification and performing wear leveling. These are fundamental attributes of flash memory and will always need to be understood and efficiently managed to produce an efficient and high performance storage system. Our goal in this work is to provide analysis and algorithms for efficiently managing data storage for endurance in flash memory. We present update codes, a class of floating codes, which encodes data updates as flash memory cell increments that results in reduced block erases and longer lifespan of flash memory, and provides a new algorithm for constructing optimal floating codes. We also analyze the theoretically possible limits of write amplification reduction and minimization by using offline workloads. We give an estimation of the minimal write amplification by a workload decomposition algorithm and find that write amplification can be pushed to zero with relatively low over-provisioning. Additionally, we give simple, efficient and practical algorithms that are effective in reducing write amplification and performing wear leveling. Finally, we present a quantitative model of wear levels in flash memory by constructing a difference equation that gives erase counts of a block with workload, wear leveling strategy and SSD configuration as parameters

    Power Efficient Data Compression Hardware for Wearable and Wireless Biomedical Sensing Devices

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    This thesis aims to verify a possible benefit lossless data compression and reduction techniques can bring to a wearable and wireless biomedical device, which is anticipated to be system power saving. A wireless transceiver is one of the main contributors to the system power of a wireless biomedical sensing device, and reducing the data transmitted by the transceiver with a minimum hardware cost can therefore help to save the power. This thesis is going to investigate the impact of the data compression and reduction on the system power of a wearable and wireless biomedical device and trying to find a proper compression technique that can achieve power saving of the device. The thesis first examines some widely used lossy and lossless data compression and reduction techniques for biomedical data, especially EEG data. Then it introduces a novel lossless biomedical data compression technique designed for this research called Log2 sub-band encoding. The thesis then moves on to the biomedical data compression evaluation of the Log2 sub-band encoding and an existing 2-stage technique consisting of the DPCM and the Huffman encoding. The next part of this thesis explores the signal classification potential of the Log2 sub-band encoding. It was found that some of the signal features extracted as a by-product during the Log2 sub-band encoding process could be used to detect certain signal events like epileptic seizures, with a proper method. The final section of the thesis focuses on the power analysis of the hardware implementation of two compression techniques referred to earlier, as well as the system power analysis. The results show that the Log2 sub-band is comparable and even superior to the 2-stage technique in terms of data compression and power performance. The system power requirement of an EEG signal recorder that has the Log2 sub-band implemented is significantly reduced

    A (Nearly) Free Lunch:Extending NAND Flash Lifetime by Exploiting Neglected Physical Properties

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    NAND flash is a key storage technology in modern computing systems. Without it, many devices would probably not exist today or would at least not benefit from as many features. The very large success of this technology motivated massive efforts to scale it down in order to increase its density further. However, NAND flash is currently facing physical limitations that prevent it reaching smaller cell sizes without severely reducing its storage reliability and lifetime. Accordingly, in the present thesis we aim at relieving some constraints from device manufacturing by addressing flash irregularities at a higher level. For example, we acknowledge the fact that process variation plus other factors render some regions of a flash device more sensitive than others. This difference usually leads to sensitive regions exhausting their lifetime early, which then causes the device to become unusable, while the rest of the device is still healthy, yet not exploitable. Consequently, we propose to postpone this exhaustion point with new strategies that require minimal resources to be implemented and effectively extend flash devices lifetime. Sometimes, our strategies involve unconventional methods to access the flash that are not supported by specification document and, therefore, should not be used lightly. Hence, we also present thorough characterization experiments on actual NAND flash chips to validate these methods and model their effect on a flash device. Finally, we evaluate the performance of our methods by implementing a trace-driven flash device simulator and execute a large set of realistic disk traces. Overall, we exploit properties that are either neglected or not understood to propose methods that are nearly free to implement and systematically extend NAND flash lifetime. We are convinced that future NAND flash architectures will regularly bring radical physical changes, which will inevitably come together with a new set of physical properties to investigate and to exploit

    Empirical evaluation of NAND flash memory performance

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