Samsung's 10-Year Plan Starts With 128TB QLC SSD, 960 Successor
Samsung disclosed more details than ever before about
V-NAND. The company has formulated the path to 8th generation V-NAND and has
ideas on how to take the technology to 10 generations. A number of new
manufacturing techniques must be applied, but a detailed discussion of those is
beyond the scope of this particular article.
Samsung says it can achieve its targets with its first
generation QLC (4-bits per cell) V-NAND technology.
The first product pre-announcement (it doesn't have a
product number yet) is a 128TB SAS SSD using QLC technology with a 1TB die
size. The company plans to go beyond 16 die per package using chip stacking
technology that will yield 32 die per package, a flash industry record.
QLC NAND will be slower than TLC on a per-die level, but
with that amount of parallelization, the performance could be much better than
expected. Samsung didn't share many details on what to expect from QLC, other
than massive capacity.
Just two years ago, the company announced the first flash-based
product to deliver more capacity than hard disk drives. A year later, the 16TB
capacity mark doubled to 32TB. The jump to 128TB shows just how fast flash
technology is moving.
Last year, Samsung announced a competing technology to
Intel's Optane but didn't give us too many details to write about. We
speculated the technology used some form of optimized SLC (single-level cell)
flash and, according to the latest from the company, we were correct. The Z-SSD
shipping today to select customers carries the SZ985 name, but this
first-generation product with 800GB of usable capacity will soon be replaced by
a second-gen model. The next leap for Z-SSD using Z-NAND technology will add a
bit to each cell, MLC Z-NAND, and increase overall density. Just don't expect
either Z-SSD to appear on Newegg anytime soon.
Samsung 970 and 980 NVMe SSD Coming Soon
We saved the best for last. Samsung hasn't announced or even
muttered the words "980" or "970" NVMe SSD, but we found a
reference to both on the UNH InterOperability Laboratory list. We usually fly
to Samsung's South Korean office in September to learn about new products
coming to market, but this year we may know about the successor to the 960 EVO
and Pro in advance.
With Samsung using 64-layer 3-bit per cell V-NAND for many
next-generation consumer products, the EVO / Pro naming structure may change.
The UNHIOL lists two new NVMe SSDs under the 97x and 98x product names. For
context, The 960 series appeared as "96x" last year.
We don't think Samsung will have QLC flash ready by the end
of the year to use in products, but the company has surprised us before with
aggressive launch cycles. We expect both of these products to ship with
64-layer 3-bit per cell V-NAND in late 2017 in limited volumes, with increased
availability in early 2018.
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