seminar report on third generation solid state drive

15
A SEMINAR REPORT ON THIRD GENERATION SOLID STATE DRIVE SSD Submitted to: Submitted By: Mr. Mukesh Chauhan Atishay Jain Mr. Manik Chand 1322531017 ECE 3 rd Year

Upload: atishay-jain

Post on 26-Jan-2017

325 views

Category:

Engineering


56 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

A

SEMINAR REPORT

ON

THIRD GENERATION SOLID STATE DRIVE

SSD

Submitted to: Submitted By:

Mr. Mukesh Chauhan Atishay Jain

Mr. Manik Chand 1322531017

ECE 3rd Year

2013-17

Page 2: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

PREFACE

I have made this report file on the topic SSD. I have tried my best to elucidate all the relevant details to be included in my report. While in the beginning I have tried to give a general view about this topic.

My effort and wholehearted co-operation of each and everyone has ended on a successful note . I express my sincere gratitude to Mr. Mukesh Chauhan and Mr. Manik who assisting me throughout the preparation of this topic.

I thank him for providing me the reinforcement, confidence and most importantly the track for the topic whenever I needed it.

Page 3: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

CONTENTS

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION

THE PROBLEMS WITH TODAY’S HARD DISKS

ARCHITECTURE OF SSD

MEMORY

CONTROLLER

COMPARISON OF SSD & HDD

ADVANTAGES & DISSADVANTAGES

APPLICATIONS OF SSD

CONCLUSION

REFERENCE

Page 4: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

THIRD GENERATION SOLID STATE DRIVE

SSD

ABSTRACT

A solid state drive (SSD) is a non-volatile memory system that emulates a magnetic hard disk drive (HDD). SSDs do not contain any moving parts, however, and depend on flash memory chips to store data. With proper design, an SSD is able to provide high data transfer rates, low access time, improved tolerance to shock and vibration, and reduced power consumption. For some applications, the improved performance and durability outweigh the higher cost of an SSD relative to an HDD.

Using flash memory as a hard disk replacement is not without challenges. The nano-scale of the memory cell is pushing the limits of semiconductor physics. Extremely thin insulating glass layers are necessary for proper operation of the memory cells. These layers are subjected to stressful temperatures and voltages, and their insulating properties deteriorate over time. Quite simply, flash memory can wear out. Fortunately, the wear-out physics are well understood and data management strategies are used to compensate for the limited lifetime of flash memory.

Flash memory was invented by Dr. Fujio Masuoka while working for Toshiba in 1984. The name "flash" was suggested because the process of erasing the memory contents reminded him of the flash of a camera. Flash memory chips store data in a large array of floating gate metal–oxide–semiconductor (MOS) transistors. Silicon wafers are manufactured with microscopic transistor dimension, now approaching 40 nanometers.

Intel Corporation introduces its highly anticipated third-generation solid-state drive (SSD) the Intel Solid-State Drive 320 Series. Based on its industry-leading 25-nanometer (nm) NAND flash memory, the Intel SSD 320 replaces and builds on its high-performing Intel X25-M SATA SSD. Delivering more performance and uniquely architected reliability features, the new Intel SSD 320 offers new higher capacity models, while taking advantage of cost benefits from its 25nm process with an up to 30 percent price reduction over its current generation.

Page 5: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

INTRODUCTION OF SSD

In 1995, M-Systems introduced first flash-based solid-state drives.

A solid-state drive (SSD) is a data storage device that uses solid state memory to store persistent data and SSDs use same I/O interfaces developed for hard disk drives.

SSDs do not have any moving mechanical components, which distinguishes them from traditional magnetic disks such as hard disk drives (HDDs).

SSDs use NAND-based flash memory or DRAM to store data.

A solid-state drive (SSD) is a data storage device that uses solid-state memory to store persistent data.

SSDs do not have any moving mechanical components, which distinguishes them from traditional magnetic disks such as HDDs or floppy disks.

SSDs use NAND-based flash memory or DRAM to store data.

Page 6: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

THE PROBLEMS WITH TODAY’S HARD DISKS

Processors have increased in speed by orders of magnitude over the years.

But spinning hard disk drives (HDD) have not.

Performance gap between how fast processors demand data and how quickly HDD responds.

HDD speed lags behind processors because it is constrained by physical components.

Hybrid Hard Drives are an incremental upgrade to the Hard Disk Drives.

Hybrid hard disk drive contains large-buffer.

It integrated with a cache using non-volatile Flash memory.

Flash memory buffer can speed up repeated reads from the same location.

Compared to normal HDD speed of data access and consequent faster computer boot process, decreased power consumption, and improved reliability.

Page 7: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

ARCHITECTURE OF SSD

MEMORY

SSDs mainly depend on flash memory chips to store data. The name "flash" was suggested because the process of erasing the memory contents reminded him of the flash of a camera. Flash memory chips store data in a large array of floating gate metal–oxide–semiconductor (MOS) transistors. Silicon wafers are manufactured with microscopic transistor dimension, now approaching 40 nanometers. In this flash memory thin insulating glass layers are necessary for proper operation of the memory cells. These layers are subjected to stressful temperatures and voltages, and their insulating properties deteriorate over time. Quite simply, flash memory can wear out.

Page 8: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

A floating gate memory cell is a type of metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET). Silicon forms the base layer, or substrate, of the transistor array. Areas of the silicon are masked off and infused with different types of impurities in a process called doping. Impurities are carefully added to adjust the electrical properties of the silicon.

Some impurities, for example phosphorous, create an excess of electrons in the silicon lattice. Other impurities, for example boron, create an absence of electrons in the lattice. The impurity levels and the proximity of the doped regions are set out in a lithographic manufacturing process. In addition to doped silicon regions, layers of insulating silicon dioxide glass (SiO2) and conducting layers of polycrystalline silicon and aluminum are deposited to complete the MOSFET structure.

MOS transistors work by forming an electrically conductive channel between the source and drain terminals. When a voltage is applied to the control gate, an electric field causes a thin negatively charged channel to form at the boundary of the SiO2 and between the source and drain regions. When the N-channel is present, electricity is easily conducted from the source to the drain terminals. When the control voltage is removed, the N-channel disappears and no conduction takes place. The MOSFET operates like a switch, either in the on or off state.

Page 9: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

In addition to the control gate, there is a secondary floating gate which is not electrically connected to the rest of the transistor. The voltage at the control gate required for N-channel formation can be changed by modifying the charge stored on the floating gate. Even though there is no electrical connection to the floating gate, electric charge can be put in to and taken off of the floating gate.

A quantum physical process called Fowler-Nordheim tunneling coaxes electrons through the insulation between the floating gate and the P-well. When electric charge is removed from the floating gate, the cell is considered in an erased state.

When electric charge is added to the floating gate, the cell is considered in the programmed state. A charge that has been added to the floating gate will remain for a long period of time. It is this process of adding, removing and storing electric charge on the floating gate that turns the MOSFET into a memory cell.

Erasing the contents of a memory cell is done by placing a high voltage on the silicon substrate while holding the control gate at zero. The electrons stored in the floating gate tunnel through the oxide barrier into the positive substrate. Thousands of memory cells are etched onto a common section of the substrate, forming a single block of memory. All of the memory cells in the block are simultaneously erased when the substrate is “flashed” to a positive voltage. An erased memory cell will allow N-channel formation at a low control gate voltage because all of the charge in the floating gate has been removed. This is referred to as logic level “1” in a single-level cell (SLC) flash memory cell.

Page 10: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

The cell is programmed by placing a high voltage on the control gate while holding the source and drain regions at zero. The high electric field causes the N-channel to form and allows electrons to tunnel through the oxide barrier into the floating gate. Programming the memory cells is performed one word at a time and usually an entire page is programmed in a single operation. A programmed memory cell inhibits the control gate from forming an N-channel at normal voltages because of the negative charge stored on the floating gate. To form the N-channel in the substrate, the control gate voltage must be raised to a higher level. This is referred to as logic level “0” in an SLC flash memory cell.

CONTROLLER

Controller is an embedded processor that executes firmware-level software.

SSD controller bridge the Flash memory components to the SSD input/output interfaces.

Page 11: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

System will communicates the controller to read data from or write data to the flash memory

COMPARISON OF SSD & HDD

Solid-state drive Hard disk drive

Random access time

0.1 ms

Random access time

5~10 ms

Read latency time

Very low

Read latency time

high

100MB/s to 500MB/s 50MB/s to 100MB/s.

High Reliability

SSDs have no moving parts to fail mechanically.

Low Reliability

HDDs have moving parts and are subject to sudden failure;

small and light in weight. relatively large and heavy

In 2013 SSDs were available in sizes up to 512GB, In 2013 HDDs of up to 4TB were available.

power consuption 2 watts 12 watts.

As of 2013 NAND flash SSDs cost about Rs.31000 for 500GB

As of 2013 HDDs cost about Rs.3200 for 500GB drives

ADVANTAGES

Page 12: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

High performance – significantly faster than a standard HDD

Faster seek time – up to 60x faster than HDD

Lower power – Lesser power consumption ,cooler operation

Silent operation – ideal for post production environments

Lighter weight – perfect for portable devices.

Ability to endure extreme shock, high altitude, vibration and extremes of temperature.

Immune to magnets.

SSDs are random access by nature and can perform parallel reads on multiple sections of the drive

DISADVANTAGES

They are more expensive than traditional hard drives.

They currently offer less storage space than traditional hard drives.

Slower Write Speed on low-end Models(MLC based types).

APPLICATIONS

Page 13: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

Servers

Desktop computers

Laptops

Ultrabooks

HD Camcorders

Smart Tv

CCTV Digital Video Recorder (DVR)

Set-Top Boxes

Gaming Consoles

CONCLUSION

Faster Data Access

Less Power Usage

Higher Reliability

Latest high-end laptops and ultrabooks now comes with SSD

In comming years SSD Will Replace Hard Disk Drives

REFERNECE

Page 14: Seminar report on third generation solid state drive

J. Katcher. PostMark: “A New Solid State Drives”. Technical Report TR3022, Network Appliance, October 1997.

“Evolution of the Solid-State Drive” By Benj Edwards, PCWorld

A. Birrell, M. Isard, C. Thacker, and T. Wobber. “A Design for High-Performance Flash Disks”, December 2007.

S. Nath and A. Kansal. FlashDB: “Dynamic Self-Tuning Database for NAND Flash”. In IPSN ’07: Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Information Processing in Sensor Networks June, 2009.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid-state_drive

http://www.intel.com/pressroom/.html

http://whatisasolidstatedrive.com/?p=14