Samsung introduced its 4th generation, 64-layer triple-level-cell V-NAND flash memory at this week’s Flash Memory Summit in Santa Clara, California.

This makes possible 1 TB Flash in a device weighing less than 1g, weighing less than half of a U.S. dime. The Samsung 1TB BGA SSD will use an extremely compact, ball grid array (BGA) package design that contains all essential SSD components including triple-level-cell V-NAND flash chips, LPDDR4 mobile DRAM and a state-of-the-art Samsung controller. It will deliver unprecedented performance, reading sequentially at 1,500MB/s and writing sequentially at 900MB/s.
Samsung also announced its latest Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) SSD — 32 TB — the world largest single drive introduced to date. This is also based on 512-gigabit (Gb) V-NAND chips. A total of 512 V-NAND chips are stacked in 16 layers to form a 1-terabyte (TB) package and the 32-terabyte (TB) SSD contains 32 of those packages.