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Need a soup to nuts primer on non-volatil memory, particularly 3D nand

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Sho'Nuff

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See thread title. Can anyone recommend a solid primer on non-volatile memory (NVM), particularly 3D NAND? I know there are a bunch on the web, but they all assume a basic level of knowledge with respect to various structures (memory arrays, word lines, etc.) and their functions, whereas I am looking for something that starts with what memory cells in NVM are and how they function, and progresses through the various other elements of NVM in the same fashion in a clearly understandable way.

So . . . anyone got a recommendation for me?
 
http://www-inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~ee130/sp13/

Here's a course I didn't do very well in when I took it. Subsequently, I didn't take any of the follow on courses. Most likely it's more hard corps engineering/science than you need, as it's more of a physics behind how integrated circuits work course.

Searching my old undergrad's website, here's an old website for the undergraduate follow on that will have some information that may be at the level you want to start at.
http://bwrcs.eecs.berkeley.edu/Classes/icdesign/ee141_s02/notes.html

After that, it's graduate level engineering, which is always bad at having course information online and following textbooks as the lecturing professors are specialists in those fields.
 
http://www-inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~ee130/sp13/

Here's a course I didn't do very well in when I took it. Subsequently, I didn't take any of the follow on courses. Most likely it's more hard corps engineering/science than you need, as it's more of a physics behind how integrated circuits work course.

Searching my old undergrad's website, here's an old website for the undergraduate follow on that will have some information that may be at the level you want to start at.
http://bwrcs.eecs.berkeley.edu/Classes/icdesign/ee141_s02/notes.html

After that, it's graduate level engineering, which is always bad at having course information online and following textbooks as the lecturing professors are specialists in those fields.

Thanks. This might be helpful as I am actually looking for something that is more engineering oriented.
 
http://www-inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~ee130/sp13/

Here's a course I didn't do very well in when I took it. Subsequently, I didn't take any of the follow on courses. Most likely it's more hard corps engineering/science than you need, as it's more of a physics behind how integrated circuits work course.

Searching my old undergrad's website, here's an old website for the undergraduate follow on that will have some information that may be at the level you want to start at.
http://bwrcs.eecs.berkeley.edu/Classes/icdesign/ee141_s02/notes.html

After that, it's graduate level engineering, which is always bad at having course information online and following textbooks as the lecturing professors are specialists in those fields.

Go Bears 🙂
 
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