SDR sound card is built from 2
Micron 48LC32M8A2 SDRAM chips. They run at 133 MHz (7.5 ns clock period) and have 8-bit wide data buses. Originally simply known as
SDRAM, single data rate SDRAM can accept one command and transfer one word of data per clock cycle. Chips are made with a variety of data bus sizes (most commonly 4, 8 or 16 bits), but chips are generally assembled into 168-pin
DIMMs that read or write 64 (non-ECC) or 72 (
ECC) bits at a time. Use of the data bus is intricate and thus requires a complex DRAM controller circuit. This is because data written to the DRAM must be presented in the same cycle as the write command, but reads produce output 2 or 3 cycles after the read command. The DRAM controller must ensure that the data bus is never required for a read and a write at the same time. Typical SDR SDRAM clock rates are 66, 100, and 133 MHz (periods of 15, 10, and 7.5 ns), respectively denoted PC66, PC100, and PC133. Clock rates up to 200 MHz were available. It operates at a voltage of 3.3 V. This type of SDRAM is slower than the DDR variants, because only one word of data is transmitted per clock cycle (single data rate). But this type is also faster than its predecessors
extended data out DRAM (EDO-RAM) and
fast page mode DRAM (FPM-RAM) which took typically two or three clocks to transfer one word of data.
PC66 PC66 refers to internal removable computer
memory standard defined by the
JEDEC. PC66 is Synchronous DRAM operating at a clock frequency of 66.66 MHz, on a 64-bit bus, at a voltage of 3.3 V. PC66 is available in 168-pin
DIMM and 144-pin
SO-DIMM form factors. The theoretical bandwidth is 533 MB/s. (1 MB/s = one million bytes per second) This standard was used by
Intel Pentium and
AMD K6-based PCs. It also features in the Beige
Power Mac G3, early
iBooks and
PowerBook G3s. It is also used in many early
Intel Celeron systems with a 66 MHz
FSB. It was superseded by the PC100 and PC133 standards.
PC100 PC100 is a standard for internal removable computer
random-access memory, defined by the
JEDEC. PC100 refers to Synchronous DRAM operating at a clock frequency of 100 MHz, on a 64-bit-wide bus, at a voltage of 3.3 V. PC100 is available in 168-pin
DIMM and 144-pin
SO-DIMM form factors. PC100 is
backward compatible with PC66 and was superseded by the PC133 standard. A module built out of 100 MHz SDRAM chips is not necessarily capable of operating at 100 MHz. The PC100 standard specifies the capabilities of the
memory module as a whole. PC100 is used in many older computers; PCs around the late 1990s were the most common computers with PC100 memory.
PC133 PC133 is a computer memory standard defined by the
JEDEC. PC133 refers to
SDR SDRAM operating at a clock frequency of 133 MHz, on a 64-bit-wide bus, at a voltage of 3.3 V. PC133 is available in 168-pin
DIMM and 144-pin
SO-DIMM form factors. PC133 is the fastest and final SDR SDRAM standard ever approved by the JEDEC, and delivers a bandwidth of 1.066 GB per second ([133.33 MHz * 64/8]=1.066 GB/s). (1 GB/s = one billion bytes per second) PC133 is
backward compatible with PC100 and PC66.
DDR While the access latency of DRAM is fundamentally limited by the DRAM array, DRAM has very high potential bandwidth because each internal read is actually a row of many thousands of bits. To make more of this bandwidth available to users, a
double data rate interface was developed. This uses the same commands, accepted once per cycle, but reads or writes two words of data per clock cycle. The DDR interface accomplishes this by reading and writing data on both the rising and falling edges of the clock signal. In addition, some minor changes to the SDR interface timing were made in hindsight, and the supply voltage was reduced from 3.3 to 2.5 V. As a result, DDR SDRAM is not backwards compatible with SDR SDRAM. DDR SDRAM (sometimes called
DDR1 for greater clarity) doubles the minimum read or write unit; every access refers to at least two consecutive words. Typical DDR SDRAM clock rates are 133, 166 and 200 MHz (7.5, 6, and 5 ns/cycle), generally described as DDR-266, DDR-333 and DDR-400 (3.75, 3, and 2.5 ns per beat). Corresponding 184-pin DIMMs are known as PC-2100, PC-2700 and PC-3200. Performance up to DDR-550 (PC-4400) is available.
DDR2 DDR2 SDRAM is very similar to DDR SDRAM, but doubles the minimum read or write unit again, to four consecutive words. The bus protocol was also simplified to allow higher performance operation. (In particular, the "burst terminate" command is deleted.) This allows the bus rate of the SDRAM to be doubled without increasing the clock rate of internal RAM operations; instead, internal operations are performed in units four times as wide as SDRAM. Also, an extra bank address pin (BA2) was added to allow eight banks on large RAM chips. Typical DDR2 SDRAM clock rates are 200, 266, 333 or 400 MHz (periods of 5, 3.75, 3 and 2.5 ns), generally described as DDR2-400, DDR2-533, DDR2-667 and DDR2-800 (periods of 2.5, 1.875, 1.5 and 1.25 ns). Corresponding 240-pin DIMMs are known as PC2-3200 through PC2-6400. DDR2 SDRAM is now available at a clock rate of 533 MHz generally described as DDR2-1066 and the corresponding DIMMs are known as PC2-8500 (also named PC2-8600 depending on the manufacturer). Performance up to DDR2-1250 (PC2-10000) is available. Note that because internal operations are at 1/2 the clock rate, DDR2-400 memory (internal clock rate 100 MHz) has somewhat higher latency than DDR-400 (internal clock rate 200 MHz).
DDR3 DDR3 continues the trend, doubling the minimum read or write unit to eight consecutive words. This allows another doubling of bandwidth and external bus rate without having to change the clock rate of internal operations, just the width. To maintain 800–1600 M transfers/s (both edges of a 400–800 MHz clock), the internal RAM array has to perform 100–200 M fetches per second. Again, with every doubling, the downside is the increased
latency. As with all DDR SDRAM generations, commands are still restricted to one clock edge and command latencies are given in terms of clock cycles, which are half the speed of the usually quoted transfer rate (a
CAS latency of 8 with DDR3-800 is 8/(400 MHz) = 20 ns, exactly the same latency of CAS2 on PC100 SDR SDRAM). DDR3 memory chips were being made commercially from 2006, and computer systems using them were available from the second half of 2007, with significant usage from 2008 onwards. Initial clock rates were 400 and 533 MHz, which are described as DDR3-800 and DDR3-1066 (PC3-6400 and PC3-8500 modules), but 667 and 800 MHz, described as DDR3-1333 and DDR3-1600 (PC3-10600 and PC3-12800 modules) are now common. Performance up to DDR3-2800 (PC3 22400 modules) are available.. DDR3 SDRAM was still in production at the start of 2025, but there were reports that manufacturers were planning to cease further production by the end of the year.
DDR4 DDR4 SDRAM is the successor to
DDR3 SDRAM. It was revealed at the
Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco in 2008, and was due to be released to market during 2011. The timing varied considerably during its development – it was originally expected to be released in 2012, and later (during 2010) expected to be released in 2015, before samples were announced in early 2011 and manufacturers began to announce that commercial production and release to market was anticipated in 2012. DDR4 reached mass market adoption around 2015, which is comparable with the approximately five years taken for DDR3 to achieve mass market transition over DDR2. The DDR4 chips run at 1.2
V or less, compared to the 1.5 V of DDR3 chips, and have in excess of 2 billion
data transfers per second. They were expected to be introduced at frequency rates of 2133 MHz, estimated to rise to a potential 4266 MHz and lowered voltage of 1.05 V by 2013. DDR4 did
not double the internal prefetch width again, but uses the same 8
n prefetch as DDR3. Thus, it will be necessary to interleave reads from several banks to keep the data bus busy. In February 2009,
Samsung validated 40 nm DRAM chips, considered a "significant step" towards DDR4 development since, as of 2009, current DRAM chips were only beginning to migrate to a 50 nm process. In January 2011,
Samsung announced the completion and release for testing of a 30 nm 2048 MB DDR4 DRAM module. It has a maximum bandwidth of 2.13
Gbit/s at 1.2 V, uses
pseudo open drain technology and draws 40% less power than an equivalent DDR3 module.
DDR5 In March 2017, JEDEC announced a DDR5 standard is under development, but provided no details except for the goals of doubling the bandwidth of DDR4, reducing power consumption, and publishing the standard in 2018. The standard was released on 14 July 2020.
DDR6 It is the future series of DDR SDRAM, and has a target of 2027. It will have a speed of 8,800–17,600 MT/s with four memory channels, and a bandwidth up to 134.4 GB/s. == Failed successors ==