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Leading Flash memory supplier confirms viability
of 'Post-Flash' candidate
- Aggressive Flash development will continue
for another decade
- Phase-Change Memory passes 'post-Flash'
viability test
Geneva, June 16, 2004 - STMicroelectronics (NYSE: STM), one
of the world's leading semiconductor suppliers, has announced significant
progress in the development of a new type of electronic memory that
could eventually replace the Flash memory technology. Today, Flash is
a key component of many electronic applications, from mobile phones,
digital cameras, and set-top boxes to automotive engine controllers.
The new technology, called Phase-Change Memory (PCM), potentially offers
better performance than Flash. Most importantly, PCM is better suited
to continuing the rapid shrinking of features for cost and speed advantage
that has long characterized the semiconductor industry than Flash and
other so-called "Non-Volatile Memories" (NVM), which are able to store
information even when their power is switched off.
Even though the market for Flash memories today is very large and is
currently one of the fastest growing sectors of the semiconductor market,
chip manufacturers have known for many years that it will become increasingly
difficult to keep on reducing the size of the basic Flash memory cell.
The continual reduction of cell size is essential to electronics equipment
manufacturers because it makes the electronic memories and the equipment
that relies on them cheaper, thereby stimulating market growth. In the
ten years from 1990 to 2000, the size of an individual Flash cell was
reduced by a factor of 30 and chip manufacturers are confident that
they can continue developing innovative new Flash products for at least
another ten years before they will face increasingly difficult challenges
to overcome fundamental physical limits. For this reason, all Flash
memory manufacturers have been investigating candidate technologies
for the "post-Flash" era.
Three years ago, ST concluded that the Phase-Change Memory technology,
developed by California-based Ovonyx, Inc and already used in re-writable
CDs, could be adapted as a semiconductor memory technology. In 2001,
ST licensed the technology, also known as Ovonic Unified Memory, from
Ovonyx and the two companies set up a joint-development team, largely
based in Agrate Brianza, near Milan, where ST's worldwide NVM development
is centred.
The new memory technology exploits the fact that certain so-called 'chalcogenide'
materials can be reversibly switched between two stable states - one
amorphous with a high electrical resistance, the other crystalline with
a low resistance - by appropriately heating the material. A memory cell
in the new technology consists essentially of a variable resistance
formed by the chalcogenide material and its tiny electrical heater,
along with a selection transistor used for the read/write operations.
ST's progress towards developing a commercial PCM technology was described
in two papers presented at one of the semiconductor industry's most
important annual forums, the VLSI Technology and Circuits Symposia held
in Honolulu on June 15-19, 2004. In one paper, ST showed for the first
time an innovative cell structure that can be easily integrated into
the mainstream chip manufacturing process and which gives good indications
of its manufacturability and cost. In a second paper, ST described the
practical implementation of this technology in the form of an 8-Mbit
demonstrator chip designed to assess the feasibility of cost-effective
large non-volatile memories.
Based on the highly-promising results it has obtained to date, ST already
envisages the new Phase-Change Memory technology being used in medium-density,
stand-alone memories and embedded applications. Moreover, by demonstrating
the feasibility of the key features that make the PCM cell most attractive,
ST has increased its confidence in the long-term scalability of the
technology, which will eventually allow PCM to become a mainstream Non-Volatile
Memory technology.
Notes for editors
- A chalcogen is any material that contains sulphur, selenium,
or tellurium (three elements that have closely related chemical properties)
but in ST's new technology tellurium plays a key role.
- According to the latest figures from market analyst iSuppli,
in Q1 2004, ST was the No.3 supplier worldwide of NOR Flash, with
revenues of $276 million and a market share of 12.2 percent.
- According to ST estimates, the Flash market is expected to show
a CAGR of 19% from 2003 to 2008.
About STMicroelectronics
STMicroelectronics is a global leader in developing and delivering
semiconductor solutions across the spectrum of microelectronics applications.
An unrivalled combination of silicon and system expertise, manufacturing
strength, Intellectual Property (IP) portfolio and strategic partners
positions the Company at the forefront of System-on-Chip (SoC) technology
and its products play a key role in enabling today's convergence markets.
The Company's shares are traded on the New York Stock Exchange, on Euronext
Paris and on the Milan Stock Exchange. In 2003, the Company's net revenues
were $7.24 billion and net earnings were $253 million. Further information
on ST can be found at www.st.com.
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