Abstract
A single 3.3-V only, 8-Gb NAND flash memory with the smallest chip to date, 98.8 mm 2, has been successfully developed. This is the world's first integrated semiconductor chip fabricated with 56-nm CMOS technologies. The effective cell size including the select transistors is 0.0075 μm 2 per bit, which is the smallest ever reported. To decrease the chip size, a very efficient floor plan with one-sided row decoder, one-sided page buffer, and one-sided pad is introduced. As a result, an excellent 70% cell area efficiency is realized. The program throughput is drastically improved to twice as large as previously reported and comparable to binary memories. The best ever 10-MB/s programming is realized by increasing the page size from 4 kB to 8 kB. In addition, noise cancellation circuits and the dual V DD-line scheme realize both a small die size and a fast programming. An external page copy achieves a fast 93-ms block copy, efficiently using a 1-MB block size. $ 2007 IEEE.
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Takeuchi, K., Kameda, Y., Fujimura, S., Otake, H., Hosono, K., Shiga, H., … Ohshima, S. (2007). A 56-nm CMOS 99-mm 2 8-Gb multi-level NAND flash memory with 10-MB/s program throughput. IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, 42(1), 219–229. https://doi.org/10.1109/JSSC.2006.888299
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