How to Use Redundancy for Memory Reliability: Replace or Code?

  • Hyosang Ju
  • , Dong Hyun Kong
  • , Kijun Lee
  • , Myung Kyu Lee
  • , Sunghye Cho
  • , Sang Hyo Kim

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Modern digital systems rely on DRAM as main memory and flash-based SSDs for storage, forming the backbone of today’s computing infrastructure. As demands for faster processing and larger data services increase, the memory subsystems have become denser, pushing technologies to their physical limits and increasing susceptibility to faults. To ensure data integrity, two complementary approaches are employed: replacement-based techniques, which map defective cells to redundant areas, and error-correcting code (ECC) methods, which dynamically detect and correct errors. This paper theoretically investigates the most efficient use of redundancy for DRAM reliability by categorizing detects into hard faults and soft errors. Each scenario is evaluated in terms of required redundancy and residual error rate, using finite-length channel coding capacity. We compare the ECC schemes with BCH codes, which are widely favored in on-die ECC applications due to their low latency and decoding complexity.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1812
JournalElectronics (Switzerland)
Volume14
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • error correction coding
  • memory ECC
  • memory reliability
  • memory repair

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