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Tech war: Chinese memory chipmaker YMTC unveils new patents in sign of tech prowess

YMTC is known for 3D NAND, a flash memory in which transistor die are stacked vertically to increase storage density

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YMTC is known for its design and fabrication of 3D NAND chips. Photo: Shutterstock Images
Coco Fengin Guangdong

Yangtze Memory Technologies Co (YMTC), China’s leading flash memory chipmaker, has published nearly 20 new patents for processes that can boost computing efficiency and optimise chip-stacking structures, in a show of technological prowess, according to records from the country’s intellectual property agency.

YMTC is known for its design and fabrication of 3D NAND, a flash memory in which transistor dies are stacked vertically to increase storage density. Patent applications made public in late March include an improved stacking structure to resist potential deformation, a way to shield from electromagnetic interference, and a method to boost storage density, according to records posted on the website of the China National Intellectual Property Administration.

Several of the innovations involve software optimisation. For example, one patent titled “a memory system and a method of operating the memory system” innovates the way a flash memory refreshes data, thus “reducing the frequency of erasing the memory device, delaying the wear-out failure of the memory device and, to some extent, expanding the service life of the memory system”, according to the application.

YMTC’s 128-Layer 3D NAND flash memory chip. Photo: Handout
YMTC’s 128-Layer 3D NAND flash memory chip. Photo: Handout

The patents, applied for between 2021 and 2023, were all “published” on March 28.

You Yunting, a senior partner at Shanghai Debund Law Firm, said that the patent examination would take about a year in the best case. “Three years is also normal. In more complex cases, four or five years is possible,” You said.

The disclosure of the YMTC patents comes as China is making significant progress in building up its semiconductor self-sufficiency amid US technology restrictions.

Huawei Technologies last month disclosed a September 2023 patent application in ternary logic for the design of integrated circuits, while SiCarrier, a chip tool maker backed by Huawei, demonstrated its capabilities by unveiling a series of new products during last month’s Semicon China exhibition.
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