What with overheating issues and the reality that raw bandwidth only gets you so far, suffice to say that the latest generation of PCIe Gen 5 SSDs haven't exactly blown our socks off. So what to make of news that SSD controller specialist SiliconMotion is already deep into development with its Gen 6 technology?
In a post on China Flash Market (via Tom's Hardware) SiliconMotion head honcho Wallace C. Kou revealed that the company's first PCIe Gen 6 controller chip, dubbed SM8466, is «in the development stage.»
Kou didn't provide any specifications, though he did say that the chip was being fabricated on 4 nm silicon. That's likely TSMC N4 and a clear advance over the N6 node used by SiliconMotion's current most advanced controllers.
That's significant because one of the defining features of the initial crop of PCIe Gen 5 SSDs was excess power consumption and overheating, arguably in part due to using an outdated silicon node.
Admittedly, that was the Phison E26 chip built on elderly 12 nm silicon. SiliconMotion's own Gen 5 controller, the SM2508 was actually delayed to enable a jump to the 6nm node and hopefully sidestep those issues.
Thus, it stands to reason that if 6 nm is required to gen Gen 5 working nicely, 4 nm would be a good idea for the even more demanding Gen 6 protocol.
Speaking of which, PCIe Gen 6 theoretically doubles bandwidth from Gen 5. That means a peak bandwidth for a quad-lane drive of 32 GB/s, up from 16 GB/s for Gen 5.
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Of course, in practice there are various limitations. For starters there are protocol overheads that limit the effective data rate. Then there are hardware limitations in the form of the NAND and controller chips and even with broader signal integrity.
That SiliconMotion SM2508 controller, for instance, peaks at 14.5 GB/s and 14 GB/s sequential read and write, not the full 16 GB/s. Safe to say, then, that the new SM8466 won't hit
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