Best buy guide: Galaxy Watch 6 or Galaxy S24+. Woo-hoo join SamMobile on WhatsApp or Telegram!

SamMobile has affiliate and sponsored partnerships. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn a commission.

Notifications
    News for you

    Samsung becomes the world’s first brand to demonstrate MRAM technology for in-memory computing

    General
    By 

    Last updated: January 13th, 2022 at 10:06 UTC+01:00

    Samsung, the world's biggest memory chip maker, has announced that it has become the first in the world to demonstrate the MRAM (Magnetoresistive Random Access Memory) technology for in-memory computing. The company's paper on its innovation, titled ‘A crossbar array of magnetoresistive memory devices for in-memory computing,' was published by Nature on its website, and its print edition is coming next.

    The research was a collaboration between SAIT (Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology), Samsung Foundry, and Samsung Semiconductor R&D. Dr. Seungchul Jung (Staff Researcher at SAIT), Dr. Donhee Ham (Fellow of SAIT and Professor of Harvard University), and Dr. Sang Joon Kim (Vice President of Technology at SAIT) worked on the research.

    Usually, data is stored in memory chips (DRAM) and processed by a CPU or an AP (Application Processor). However, data storage and computing happen on the same chip with in-memory computing. Since there is no need to transfer data from memory to the processor and vice versa, a lot of time is saved. Data processing inside the memory happens in a highly parallel manner, resulting in substantial power savings. Samsung claims that MRAM technology will be great for things like AI processing.

    Other in-memory computing solutions like PRAM (Phase-change Random Access Memory) and RRAM (Resistive Random Access Memory) have been demonstrated worldwide, but MRAM has been difficult to prove. Despite MRAM's non-volatile nature, high operational speed, and endurance, it was difficult to use it for in-memory computing due to its low resistance. It was also impossible to use MRAM's power efficiency advantage in a standard in-memory computing architecture.

    Samsung has now created a solution to the problem through its new architecture innovation. The South Korean firm developed an MRAM array chip that uses ‘Resistance Sum' instead of the standard ‘Current-Sum.' The new solution counters the problem of small resistances of individual MRAM devices.

    The company's new MRAM in-computing was tested by running AI applications, and it offered 98% accuracy in the classification of handwritten digits and 93% accuracy in detecting faces in images. Samsung says that its new technology can be used to make highly power-efficient AI chips.

    Dr. Seungchul Jung, the first author of the paper, said, “In-memory computing draws similarity to the brain in the sense that in the brain, computing also occurs within the network of biological memories, or synapses, the points where neurons touch one another. In fact, while the computing performed by our MRAM network for now has a different purpose from the computing performed by the brain, such solid-state memory network may in the future be used as a platform to mimic the brain by modeling the brain's synapse connectivity.

    Join SamMobile's Telegram group and subscribe to our YouTube channel to get instant news updates and in-depth reviews of Samsung devices. You can also subscribe to get updates from us on Google News and follow us on Twitter.

    General MRAMSamsung FoundrySamsung Semiconductor

    You might also like

    Samsung rival introduces cheaper 4nm chips, vows to bring 1.6nm chips in 2026

    Samsung rival introduces cheaper 4nm chips, vows to bring 1.6nm chips in 2026

    Samsung Foundry and TSMC are the world's most advanced contract chip manufacturers, and TSMC has had the upper hand over the past few years. While Samsung has been trying to up its game, it hasn't succeeded. With its 3nm chip fabrication process, the South Korean firm had hoped to win back big-name clients, but even […]

    • By Asif Iqbal Shaik
    • 2 days ago
    Samsung is world’s first to start mass production of 1Tb 9th Gen. V-NAND chips

    Samsung is world’s first to start mass production of 1Tb 9th Gen. V-NAND chips

    Samsung, the world's biggest memory chip maker, has announced it is the first brand to start mass-producing 1Tb TLC 9th Gen V-NAND flash chips. TLC refers to Triple Level Cell, and the new chips can store 3-bit data in one cell. Samsung becomes world's first brand to start mass production of 1Tb 9th Generation V-NAND […]

    • By Asif Iqbal Shaik
    • 6 days ago
    Apple iPhones to get 2nm chips before Galaxy phones

    Apple iPhones to get 2nm chips before Galaxy phones

    In 2022, TSMC announced that its 2nm fabrication process, dubbed N2, will be ready for mass production by 2025. Soon after that, it was reported that the chipset in Apple’s iPhone 17 Pro series phones would be the first to use TSMC’s 2nm fabrication process. However, after that, we didn’t get any update on the […]

    • By Abid Iqbal Shaik
    • 1 week ago
    Samsung is under emergency mode, switches to six-day workweek

    Samsung is under emergency mode, switches to six-day workweek

    Last year was bad for Samsung. Its revenue and profit took extreme hits, and the company has been under pressure from competition and the global economic downturn. While its profit increased in the first quarter of this year, Samsung has reportedly switched to a six-day workweek to inject a sense of crisis in its employees. […]

    • By Asif Iqbal Shaik
    • 1 week ago
    Galaxy S25’s Exynos 2500 to be more efficient than Snapdragon 8 Gen 4

    Galaxy S25’s Exynos 2500 to be more efficient than Snapdragon 8 Gen 4

    Samsung is developing the Exynos 2500 chipset, which it could offer with the Galaxy S25 series smartphones in some regions. Last year, the company confirmed that it would make the upcoming chipset on Samsung Foundry’s second-generation 3nm fabrication process, which is expected to offer better power efficiency than not only Samsung’s 4nm fabrication process that […]

    • By Abid Iqbal Shaik
    • 1 week ago
    Samsung unveils world’s first 10.7Gbps LPDDR5X DRAM chip, designed for AI

    Samsung unveils world’s first 10.7Gbps LPDDR5X DRAM chip, designed for AI

    Samsung, the world's biggest memory chip manufacturer, has unveiled its fastest LPDDR5X DRAM chip. The new chip can attain data transfer speeds of up to 10.7Gbps, higher than the 6.4Gbps LPDDR5X chip launched in 2021 and the 8.5Gbps LPDDR5X DRAM chip unveiled in 2022. Samsung's new LPDDR5X DRAM chips will be available in late 2024 […]

    • By Asif Iqbal Shaik
    • 2 weeks ago