An SSD (solid-state
drive) is a type of nonvolatile storage media that stores persistent data on
solid-state flash memory and has no moving parts unlike a hard disk drive
(HDD), which stores data on a spinning disk. Two key components make up an SSD:
a flash controller and NAND flash memory chips. The architectural configuration
of the SSD controller is optimized to deliver high read and write performance
for both sequential and random data requests. SSDs are sometimes referred to as
flash drives or solid-state disks.
To prevent volatility, SSD manufacturers
design the devices with floating gate transistors (FGRs) to hold the electrical
charge. This allows an SSD to retain stored data even when it is not connected
to a power source. Each FGR contains a single bit of data, designated either as
a 1 for a charged cell or a 0 if the cell has no electrical charge.
Unlike a hard disk drive
(HDD), an SSD has no moving parts to break or spin up or down. A traditional
HDD consists of a spinning disk with a read/write head on a mechanical arm
called an actuator. The HDD mechanism and hard disk are packaged as an
integrated unit. Businesses and computer manufacturers have used spinning disk
historically, owing to their lower unit cost and higher average durability,
although SSDs are now common in desktop and laptop PCs.
Things Should Know before
you Buy SSD
1. SSD Disk Capacity
When you buy SSD for your
laptop or Desktop, you can keep your SSD for OS and Apps and secondary HDD for
your data in a Dual Drive Configuration. A 40GB SSD will be enough to run your
PC on Windows or MAC operating system with a couple of essential apps. But if
you can afford 80GB SSD, that will be a decent size and no need to worry about
low memory for a while.
You can’t go with a
smaller size if you are planning to replace your entire HDD with new SSD
(Single Drive Configuration). An SSD with 250GB should be the starting point
for your computer to take care of your OS, Application, and Data. There are
SSDs that comes in Terabytes if you are ready to burn some additional bucks.
2. SSD Performance
Manufacturers are
specifying the SSD performance related to the Sequential Read, and Sequential
Write speed that typically goes up to 500MB/s in reading and bit lower in
write.
3. SSD Data Random Transfer
Rate:
SSD Random Write Speed
and Random Read Speed is another benchmark to measure the performance of SSD.
Random Read/Write Testing performs with small blocks of at random locations on
the drive. Naturally, this process will be slow compared to Sequential Data
handling. Typically, around 25% read-write operation will be random for an
actual user.
4. SSD Flash Memory:
Solid state drives are
based on flash memories with different level of NAND memories. The table below
will give us a quick review of technologies those are available in the market
now.
5. SSD Endurance MTBF
(Reliability):
Mean Time Between
Failures (MTBF) is the manufacturer’s estimate of total running hours of
product shipped divided by the number of failed units. Long MTBF is always
useful indication but no guarantee that the product can last that long. The
reliability for SSDs falls in the range of a couple of million hours.
6. SSD Hardware Interface:
Most of the SSDs are
coming with built-in Serial ATA (SATA) interface SATA support. The transfer
speed can vary on the SATA versions. The new SSDs support up to SATA III that
offers 6GB transfer speed where SATA II is capable of transferring 3GB where
SATA I is limited to 1.5GB in data transfer.
I Like to add one more important thing here, The Solid State Drive (SSD) Market is expected to be around US$ 69 Billion by 2025 at a CAGR of 15% in the given forecast period.
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