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Microchip enters memory infrastructure market

2 mins read

Microchip Technology has announced an expanded data centre portfolio and its entrance into the memory infrastructure market.

As the computational demands of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning workloads accelerate, traditional parallel attached DRAM memory has presented a major roadblock for next-generation CPUs, which require an increased number of memory channels to deliver more memory bandwidth.

Microchip's decision to enter the infrastructure market comes as it introduces the industry’s first commercially available serial memory controller.

The SMC 1000 8x25G enables CPUs and other compute-centric SoCs to utilize four times the memory channels of parallel attached DDR4 DRAM within the same package footprint. The serial memory controllers are able to deliver higher memory bandwidth and media independence to these compute-intensive platforms with ultra-low latency.

As the number of processing cores within CPUs has risen, the average memory bandwidth available to each processing core has decreased because CPU and SoC devices cannot scale the number of parallel DDR interfaces on a single chip to meet the needs of the increasing core count. The SMC 1000 8x25G interfaces to the CPU via 8-bit Open Memory Interface (OMI)-compliant 25 Gbps lanes and bridges to memory via a 72-bit DDR4 3200 interface. The result is a significant reduction in the required number of host CPU or SoC pins per DDR4 memory channel, allowing for more memory channels and increasing the memory bandwidth available.

A CPU or SoC with OMI support can use a broad set of media types with different cost, power and performance metrics without having to integrate a unique memory controller for each type. In contrast, CPU and SoC memory interfaces today are typically locked to specific DDR interface protocols, such as DDR4, at specific interface rates. The SMC 1000 8x25G is the first memory infrastructure product in Microchip’s portfolio that enables the media-independent OMI interface.

Data centre application workloads require OMI-based DDIMM memory products to deliver the same high-performance bandwidth and low latency results associated with parallel-DDR based memory products. Microchip’s SMC 1000 8x25G features an innovative low latency design that delivers less than 4 ns incremental latency to the first DRAM data access and identical subsequent data access performance. This results in OMI-based DDIMM products having virtually identical bandwidth and latency performance to comparable LRDIMM products.

“Microchip is excited to introduce the industry’s first serial memory controller device to the market,” said Pete Hazen, vice president of Microchip’s Data Center Solutions business unit. “New memory interface technologies such as Open Memory Interface (OMI) enable a broad range of SoC applications to support the increasing memory requirements of high-performance data centre applications. Microchip’s entrance into the memory infrastructure market underscores our commitment to improving performance and efficiency in the data centre.”

SMART Modular, Micron and Samsung Electronics are building multiple pin-efficient 84-pin DDR4 Differential Dual-Inline Memory Modules (DDIMM) with capacities ranging from 16 GB to 256 GB. These DDIMMs will leverage the SMC 1000 8x25G and will seamlessly plug into any OMI-compliant 25 Gbps interface.