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Innovative Silicon Inc. Announces Silicon Validation of Z-RAM Technology
"This is a real inflection point for ISi," stated Mark-Eric Jones, president and CEO of ISi. "The technical validation we have achieved, coupled with our recent announcement with AMD, demonstrates the value of our technology to leading semiconductor manufacturers." ISi's Z-RAM technology was created to solve one of the biggest challenges for SOC designers, how to shrink die sizes when memory dominates chip area and cost. With Z-RAM IP, IC manufacturers gain the benefit of having more dense memory which in turn means their SOCs, developed on SOI, can be produced at lower cost than those on bulk CMOS silicon. "We achieved outstanding results in these 90nm technologies," noted Dr. Pierre Fazan, co-founder and CTO of ISi. "I am particularly excited about our Soft Error Rate (SER) data obtained on multi-megabit memory macros. This data shows our memory IP is an order of magnitude better than embedded SRAM technologies and comparable to the leading embedded DRAM technologies. This, coupled with our density and performance advantages, makes Z-RAM the ideal solution for anyone using large blocks of embedded memory." Z-RAM Background ISi's Z-RAM (Zero-Capacitor DRAM) technology uses a single transistor to create an extremely dense, high-performance memory instance. Embedded SRAM is the most widely used embedded memory technology and is based on a six transistor cell. Embedded DRAM is a less-widely used technology that uses a single transistor, single capacitor structure, providing much greater density than SRAM, but with lower performance, and, typically requiring changes to the semiconductor process. Z-RAM harnesses the Floating Body (FB) effect of Silicon On Insulator (SOI) devices that enables state storage without a capacitor storage device. Because the memory cell uses only a single transistor, Z-RAM is typically twice the density of embedded DRAM and 5 times the density of embedded SRAM, yet requires no exotic materials, no extra mask steps, and no new physics. Since embedded memories can comprise 70 percent of the area of a complex IC such as a microprocessor, memory density can be the single most important factor to overall system cost. About Soft Error Rates All semiconductor memories are subject to bit errors caused by radiation. At terrestrial altitudes, the predominant sources of radiation include both cosmic rays and alpha particle radiation from radioisotopic impurities in the package and chip materials. When a bit error occurs, the affected memory cell will change to the opposite state - a '1' will become a '0', and vice versa. This is known as a "Soft error" since the semiconductor device is not damaged and the error is removed once the correct value is restored to the memory cell. The rate at which these errors occur is known as the Soft Error Rate (SER), and, at a high enough level, these errors can significantly impact system reliability. Recent analysis of ISi's Z-RAM technology performed by accelerated testing demonstrates that it is an order of magnitude less susceptible to the effects of ionizing radiation than embedded SRAM - the dominant embedded memory technology - and is comparable to leading embedded DRAM technologies. About Innovative Silicon Incorporated in 2002, Innovative Silicon was founded to develop and commercialize Floating Body effect memory for SoC/MPU products used in diverse applications including microprocessors, handheld computers, games consoles, cellular communications devices, and cameras. The company closed its first round of VC funding in 2003, completed its first 90nm megabit Z-RAM memory designs in 2004 and its first 65nm designs in 2005. The company is incorporated in the USA with R&D in Lausanne, Switzerland. For more information see http://www.z-ram.com.
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