Samsung Electronics showcased a series of cutting-edge
semiconductor solutions set to drive digital transformation through the decade,
at Samsung Tech Day 2022. An annual conference since 2017, the event returned
to in-person attendance at the Signia by Hilton San Jose hotel after three
years.
This year's event,
attended by more than 800 customers and partners, featured presentations from
Samsung's Memory and System LSI business leaders - including Jung-bae Lee,
President and Head of Memory Business; Yong-In Park, President and Head of
System LSI Business; and Jaeheon Jeong, Executive Vice President and Head of
Device Solutions (DS) Americas Office - on the company's latest advancements
and its vision for the future.
System
LSI Business Highlights
In the morning session of
this year's Tech Day, the System LSI Business emphasized its goal of becoming a
‘total solution fabless' through maximizing the synergy between its unique and
wide-range product lineup. As Samsung Electronics' fabless IC design house, the
System LSI Business currently offers around 900 products, which include SoC
(System on Chip), image sensor, modem, display driver IC (DDI), power
management IC (PMIC) and security solutions.
The System LSI Business
not only makes leading individual products, but is also a total solution
provider that can merge the various logic technologies into one platform, in
order to deliver optimized solutions to customers.
"In an age that requires
machines to learn and think as people do, the importance of logic chips, which
play the roles of the brain, heart, nervous system and eyes, is growing to
unprecedented levels," said Yong-In Park, President and Head of System LSI
Business at Samsung Electronics. "Samsung will converge and combine its
technology embedded in various products like SoC, sensor, DDI and modem, in
order to lead the Fourth Industrial Revolution as a total solution provider."
A Vision of
Chips With Human-Like Performance
The Fourth Industrial
Revolution was a key theme in System LSI's Tech Day sessions. The System LSI
Business' logic chips are crucial physical foundations of Hyper-Intelligence,
Hyper-Connectivity and Hyper-Data, which are the key areas of the Fourth
Industrial Revolution. Samsung Electronics aims to enhance the performance of
these chips to a level at which they can carry out human tasks just as well as
people can.
With this vision in mind,
the System LSI Business is focusing on improving the performance of its
essential IP like NPU (Neural Processing Unit) and modem, as well as innovating
CPU (Central Processing Unit) and GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) technology by
collaborating with global industry leading companies.
The System LSI Business is
also continuing its work on ultra-high resolution image sensors so that its
chips can capture images as the human eye does, and also has plans for sensors
that can play the role of all five of the human senses.
Next-Generation
Logic Chips Showcased
Samsung Electronics
revealed a number of advanced logic chip technology for the first time at the
Tech Day booth, including 5G Exynos Modem 5300, Exynos Auto V920 and QD OLED
DDI, which are essential parts of various industries such as mobile, home appliance
and automotive.
Chips that were newly
released or announced this year including the premium mobile processor Exynos
2200 were also on display, along with the 200MP ISOCELL HP3 - the
image sensor with the industry's smallest 0.56-micrometer (μm)-pixels. Built on
the most advanced 4-nanometer (nm) EUV (extreme ultraviolet lithography)
process and combined with cutting-edge mobile, GPU and NPU technology, the
Exynos 2200 provides the finest experience for smartphone users. The ISOCELL
HP3, with a 12 percent smaller pixel size than the predecessor's 0.64μm, can
enable an approximately 20 percent reduction in camera module surface area,
allowing smartphone manufacturers to keep their premium devices slim.
Samsung showcased its
ISOCELL HP3 in action by showing the attendees of Tech Day the picture quality
of photographs taken with a 200MP sensor camera, as well as demonstrating the
workings of System LSI's fingerprint security IC for biometric payment cards
that combines a fingerprint sensor, Secure Element (SE) and Secure Processor,
adding an extra layer of authentication and security in payment cards.
Memory
Business Highlights
In a year marking 30 years
and 20 years of leadership in DRAM and NAND flash memory respectively, Samsung
unveiled its fifth-generation 10nm-class (1b) DRAM as well as eighth- and
ninth-generation Vertical NAND (V-NAND), affirming the company's commitment to
continue providing the most powerful combination of memory technologies over
the next decade.
Samsung also emphasized
how the company will demonstrate greater resilience through collaborative
partnerships in the face of new industry challenges.
"One trillion gigabytes is
the total amount of memory Samsung has made since its beginning over 40 years
ago. About half of that trillion was produced in the last three years alone,
indicating just how fast digital transformation is progressing," said Jung-bae
Lee, President and Head of Memory Business at Samsung Electronics. "As advances
in memory bandwidth, capacity and power efficiency enable new platforms and
these, in turn, stimulate more semiconductor innovations, we will increasingly
push for a higher level of integration on the journey toward digital
coevolution."
DRAM Solutions
to Advance Data Intelligence
Samsung's 1b DRAM is
currently under development with plans for mass production in 2023. To overcome
challenges in DRAM scaling beyond the 10nm range, the company has been
developing disruptive solutions in patterning, materials and architecture, with
technology like High-K material well underway.
The company then
highlighted upcoming DRAM solutions such as 32Gb DDR5 DRAM, 8.5Gbps LPDDR5X
DRAM and 36Gbps GDDR7 DRAM that will bring new capabilities to data center,
HPC, mobile, gaming and automotive market segments.
Expanding beyond
conventional DRAM, Samsung also underscored the importance of tailored DRAM
solutions such as HBM-PIM, AXDIMM and CXL that can fuel system-level innovation
in better handling the explosive growth of data worldwide.
1,000+
V-NAND Layers by 2030
Since its inception a
decade ago, Samsung's V-NAND technology has progressed through eight
generations, bringing 10 times the layer count and 15 times the bit growth.
Samsung's most recent, 512Gb eighth-generation V-NAND features a bit density
improvement of 42%, attaining the industry's highest bit density among 512Gb
triple-level cell (TLC) memory products to date. The world's highest capacity
1Tb TLC V-NAND will be available to customers by the end of the year.
The company also noted
that its ninth-generation V-NAND is under development and slated for mass
production in 2024. By 2030, Samsung envisions stacking over 1,000 layers to
better enable data-intensive technologies of the future.
As AI and big data
applications drive the need for faster and higher-capacity memory, Samsung will
continue to leapfrog bit density by accelerating the transition to quad-level
cell (QLC), while further enhancing power efficiency in support of more
sustainable customer operations worldwide.
More
Far-Reaching Solutions Amidst Greater Collaboration
Samsung introduced an
extensive portfolio of storage solutions spanning data center, enterprise
server, mobile, client, consumer and automotive applications. The company
highlighted its high-performance, low-power computational storage optimized for
AI and how it can contribute to eco-conscious computing. Samsung also presented
a new DRAM-less SSD, the PM9C1a, which supports both PCIe 4.0 and 5.0.
Samsung then shared
aggressive plans to lead the industry in intelligent mobility solutions. The
company discussed its wide-ranging memory offerings designed for every modern
automotive function, from in-vehicle infotainment (IVI), autonomous driving
(AD) and advanced driver assisted systems (ADAS), clusters and gateways to
telematics. Since entering the automotive memory market in 2015, Samsung has
been rapidly growing its market presence with the intent of becoming the
largest automotive memory provider by 2025.
Reaffirming its
overriding goals of enhancing customer value and pursuing a customer-oriented
development philosophy, Samsung stressed its intent to further expand its
ecosystem partnerships. To stimulate more widespread open innovation, Samsung
revealed a key element of its blueprint for greater customer collaboration. The
company will open a Samsung Memory Research Center (SMRC) where customers and
partners can test and verify Samsung memory and software solutions in various
server environments. Beginning with the opening of its first SMRC in Korea in
the fourth quarter of this year, Samsung plans to later launch additional hubs
in the U.S. and around the world, in collaboration with ecosystem partners like
Red Hat and Google Cloud.