Samsung has developed the world’s first 900-layer V-NAND flash memory chip prototype, marking a major milestone in semiconductor innovation as the race toward 1,000-layer memory intensifies.
Breakthrough in Memory Technology
The new prototype uses Cell Multi-Bonding (CMB), a technology that combines two 450-layer cell wafers into a single chip. As a result, Samsung can significantly boost storage density while also lowering power consumption, both of which are critical for AI-driven computing workloads.
Samsung pioneered commercial 3D V-NAND technology in 2013, and since then, it has continuously refined its manufacturing processes. However, increasing layer counts created engineering challenges such as wafer warping and stack misalignment. To overcome these issues, the company introduced advanced Upper Chuck design, Overlay Correction technology, and improved Bitline and Wordline structures to enhance efficiency while reducing chip size.
Competition Heats Up
Although this breakthrough strengthens Samsung’s innovation credentials, competition in the NAND market remains intense. SK Hynix currently leads the high-layer segment, with its 321-layer NAND chips already in mass production. Meanwhile, China’s YMTC has entered the race aggressively, producing 294-layer NAND chips with strong domestic backing and localized manufacturing support.
At the same time, Samsung is preparing mass production of its tenth-generation 400-layer NAND chips while continuing research into higher-density architectures. Company leadership has previously indicated ambitions to surpass 1,000 layers by 2030.
AI Fuels the Storage Race
Demand for advanced storage solutions continues to surge as artificial intelligence systems require faster and denser data handling. Consequently, higher-layer NAND development has become a key measure of competitiveness in the AI infrastructure market.
While the 900-layer prototype remains in the research phase, it clearly signals Samsung’s intent to reclaim leadership in next-generation flash memory rather than lose momentum to emerging rivals.








