Mobile Memory: LPDDR, Wide I/O, Memory MCP

Ever-increasing expectations for mobile device performance are driving the need for versatile mobile memory solutions. Users and suppliers are collaborating to develop the JEDEC standards needed to define those solutions.
 

LPDDR4

First published in August 2014 and most recently updated in November 2015, JESD209-4 LPDDR4 is designed to significantly boost memory speed and efficiency for mobile devices. LPDDR4 will eventually operate at an I/O rate of 4266 MT/s, twice that of LPDDR3.  To achieve this performance, the committee completely redesigned the architecture, going from a one-channel die with 16 bits per channel to a two-channel die with 16 bits per channel, for a total of 32 bits.  For more information about LPDDR4 including the steps taken to save power, see the LPDDR4 press release.

JESD209-4A LPDDR4 is available for free download with registration.  

LPDDR3

First published in May 2012 and most recently updated in August 2015, JESD209-3 LPDDR3 is designed to satisfy the performance and memory density demands of the latest generation of mobile devices such as smartphones, tablets, ultra-thin notebooks and similar connected devices on the newest, high-speed 4G networks. LPDDR3 offers a higher data rate, improved bandwidth and power efficiency, and higher memory densities over its groundbreaking predecessor, LPDDR2.
 
LPDDR3 will preserve the power-efficient features and signaling interface of LPDDR2, allowing for fast clock stop/start, low-power self-refresh, and smart array management. Download JESD209-3C free of charge with registration.
 

LPDDR2

First published in April 2009 and most recently updated in June 2013 by the JC-42.6 Subcommittee for Low Power Memories, the JEDEC LPDDR2 standard (JESD209-2F) offers advanced power management features, a groundbreaking shared interface for nonvolatile memory (NVM) and volatile memory (SDRAM), and a range of densities and speeds. The standard will enhance the design of such products as smart phones, cell phones, PDAs, GPS units, handheld gaming consoles, and other mobile devices by enabling increased memory density, improved performance, smaller size, overall reduction in power consumption as well as a longer battery life.  Download JESD209-2F free of charge with registration.
 

Wide I/O & Wide I/O 2

Published in September 2014, Wide I/O 2 offers a significant speed increase over Wide I/O, while retaining Wide I/O’s vertically stacked through silicon via (TSV) architecture and optimized packaging. Combined, these characteristics position Wide I/O 2 to deliver the ever-increasing speed, capacity, and power efficiency demanded by mobile devices such as smartphones, tablets and handheld gaming consoles. Download JESD229-2 free of charge with registration. 

Wide I/O 2 provides four times the memory bandwidth (up to 68GBps) of the previous version of the standard, but at lower power consumption (better bandwidth/Watt) with the change to 1.1V supply voltage. From a packaging standpoint, the Wide I/O 2 die is optimized to stack on top of a system on chip (SOC) to minimize power consumption and footprint.

Wide I/O 2 mobile DRAM is an extension of the breakthrough technology pioneered with the publication of Wide I/O. Just as switching to multicore processors significantly increased overall computer speed without the need to jump to a new process node, so the vertically stacked architecture allows the Wide I/O 2 interface to deliver four times the bandwidth of LPDDR4 DRAM for around one quarter of the I/O speed.

With the recent publication of LPDDR4, these two new standards from JEDEC offer designers a range of mobile memory solutions, allowing for maximum flexibility. Designers working with a horizontal architecture can choose LPDDR4, while those working with a vertical architecture are supported by Wide I/O 2. In either case, the committee worked to deliver the memory performance that the market requires.

Published in December 2011 by JC-42.6, Wide I/O Mobile DRAM is a breakthrough technology that will meet industry demands for increased levels of integration as well as improved performance, bandwidth, latency, power, weight and form factor. Download JESD229 Wide I/O Single Data Rate (SDR) free of charge with registration.

Wide I/O Mobile DRAM uses chip-level three dimensional (3D) stacking with Through Silicon Via (TSV) interconnects and memory chips directly stacked upon a System on a Chip (SoC). Wide I/O is particularly suited for applications requiring increased memory bandwidth up to 17GBps, such as 3D Gaming, HD Video (1080p H264 video, pico projection), simultaneously-running applications, etc.  Wide I/O will provide the ultimate in performance, energy efficiency and small size for smartphones, tablets, handheld gaming consoles and other high performance mobile devices. 

Memory MCP

Memory Multiple Chip Package (MCP) stacks multiple chips into a single package, offering increased spatial density and performance benefits, while reducing overall power consumption. This enables designers to pack more functionality into a smaller form factor, facilitating the development of smaller electronic devices.
 
JEDEC Committee JC-63 for Multiple Chip Package is working to enable the MCP market. Manufacturers likely to produce chips to be sold in an MCP form have common ballouts on the chips being defined in JEDEC, thereby facilitating the use of multiple vendors’ devices in one MCP solution. JC-63 also defines MCP packages for mixed technologies.

Search by Keyword or Document Number

Events and Meetings

Related Committees and Subcommittees

JC-42.6 Low Power Memories
JC-63 Multiple Chip Packages