Phison: PS5012-E12 Controller in Mass Production, 20+ SSDs Incoming
by Anton Shilov on September 7, 2018 4:15 PM EST- Posted in
- SSDs
- Storage
- Toshiba
- Phison
- MyDigitalSSD
- 3D NAND
- BiCS
- 3D TLC
- 3D QLC
- PS5012-E12
Phison and its partners have been absent from the high-end SSD market in the past couple of years. This is partly because its memory supplier, Toshiba, was somewhat late with its SSD-grade 3D NAND memory, but also partly due to its own product planning. Looking to put an end to this absence, this week the company has announced that it has initiated mass production and shipments of its latest PS5012-E12 controller, which is expected to bring Phison and its allies back to the high-end market segment.
The Phison PS5012-E12 controller features eight NAND channels with 32 CE targets, a DDR4/DDR3L interface for DRAM caching, and a PCIe 3.0 x4 interface. As for features, the chip supports the NVMe 1.3 protocol, LDPC-based error correction, a variety of encryption methods (AES-256, TCG Opal, TCG Pyrite), and a number of proprietary technologies to improve reliability and durability of SSDs. Notably, the controller is made using a 28 nm manufacturing technology, which is a very advanced fabrication process for SSD processors. This should ensure that it packs enough compute horsepower for proper ECC and signal processing when working with modern 3D TLC and 3D QLC NAND memory.
Phison will offer three versions of the PS5012-E12 controller: the original one for high-end client SSDs, the PS5012-E12C with a reduced number of channels and CE targets for mid-range drives, and the PS5012-E12DC for enterprise drives with some additional performance and feature set enhancements.
Speaking of performance, Phison promises that high-end SSDs based on the PS5012-E12 will offer up to 3450 MB/s sequential read speeds, up to 3150 MB/s sequential write speeds, as well as up to 600K random read/write IOPS.
Phison says that its partners have started development of over 20 projects based on the PS5012-E12, but does not disclose whether this includes the cheaper and datacenter variations of the controller. Keeping in mind that the chip is in volume production and Toshiba’s 64-layer 3D TLC NAND is readily available, expect drives based on the PS5012-E12 to hit the market in the coming months.
So far, Patriot and MyDigitalSSD have confirmed plans to use Phison’s PS5012-E12 controller, with the latter already taking pre-orders for the BPX Pro. In the meantime, Phison has a long list of partners who currently offer higher-end, mid-range, and entry-level SSDs powered by Phison’s controllers, including Corsair, GIGABYTE, Kingston, Lite-On, TEKQ, Team Group, Toshiba, Palit (Galax, KFA2, etc.), PNY, ZOTAC, and so on.
Phison NVMe SSD Controller Comparison | ||||||
Controller | E12 | E12C | E8 | E8T | E7 | |
Model Number | PS5012-E12 | PS5012-E12C | PS5008-E8 | PS5008-E8T | PS5007-E7 | |
Host Interface | PCIe 3.0 x4 | PCIe 3.0 x4 | PCIe 3.0 x2 | PCIe 3.0 x2 | PCIe 3.0 x4 | |
Protocol | NVMe 1.3 | NVMe 1.2 | NVMe 1.1b | |||
NAND Channels | 8 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 8 | |
NAND Chip Enable lines | 32 | 16 | 32 | 32 | 64 | |
Typical NAND | 3D TLC, 3D QLC | 64L 3D TLC | 15nm MLC | |||
Max Capacity | 8 TB | 2 TB | 2 TB | 1 TB | 2 TB | |
DRAM Support | DDR4, DDR3L | DDR3(L) | None (HMB) | DDR3(L) | ||
Error Correction | LDPC, StrongECC | StrongECC | BCH | |||
Manufacturing Process | TSMC 28nm | UMC 40nm | TSMC 28nm | |||
Sequential Read | 3200 MB/s | 1700 MB/s | 1600 MB/s | 1600 MB/s | 2600 MB/s | |
Sequential Write | 3000 MB/s | 1700 MB/s | 1300 MB/s | 1300 MB/s | 1300 MB/s | |
4KB Random Read | 600k IOPS | 340k IOPS | 240k IOPS | 120k IOPS | 300k IOPS | |
4KB Random Write | 600k IOPS | 400k IOPS | 220k IOPS | 130k IOPS | 200k IOPS | |
Retail SSD Availability | Soon | ? | Q4 2017 | ? | Q1 2016 |
MyDigitalSSD plans to start shipping the BPX Pro within a few weeks, and they are currently taking pre-orders. They are often one of the first to ship Phison's new controllers and have historically offered some of the best prices with drives like the original BPX and the more recent SBX. Most Phison E12 consumer drives will probably feature specs similar to the BPX Pro, though later drives may move to Toshiba's 96-layer 3D NAND:
MyDigitalSSD BPX Pro Specifications | ||||
Capacity | 240 GB | 480 GB | 960 GB | 1920 GB |
Controller | Phison PS5012-E12 | |||
NAND Flash | Toshiba 64-layer BiCS3 3D TLC | |||
Form-Factor, Interface | PCIe 3.1 x4, single-sided M.2 2280 | |||
Sequential Read | 3.4 GB/s | 3.4 GB/s | 3.4 GB/s | 3.4 GB/s |
Sequential Write | 1.1 GB/s | 2.1 GB/s | 3.1 GB/s | 3.1 GB/s |
Random Read IOPS (QD1) | 50 MB/s | 55 MB/s | 55 MB/s | 55 MB/s |
Random Write IOPS (QD1) | 315 MB/s | 325 MB/s | 325 MB/s | 325 MB/s |
Idle Power Consumption | < 900 mW | |||
PCIe L1.2 Idle | < 2 mW | |||
Pseudo-SLC Caching | Yes | |||
DRAM Buffer | Yes | |||
TCG Opal Encryption | Yes | |||
Warranty | 5 years | |||
Write Endurance | 380 TB 0.9 DWPD |
800 TB 0.9 DWPD |
1665 TB 0.9 DWPD |
3115 TB 0.9 DWPD |
Pre-Order Price | $92.77 (39¢/GB) | $138.55 (29¢/GB) | $263.17 (27¢/GB) | $563.63 (29¢/GB) |
Related Reading:
- The Phison E12 Reference Design Preview: A Next-Gen NVMe SSD Controller
- Patriot Demos Viper M.2 SSDs with Phison E12, Up to 2 TB
- The Kingston A1000 NVMe SSD Review: Phison E8 Revisited
- Patriot Readies Viper SSDs With Phison E12 And S12
- The MyDigitalSSD SBX SSD Review: NVMe On The Cheap
- GIGABYTE Launches Its First SSDs: Phison PS3110 S10 with Toshiba’s 3D TLC
Source: Phison
14 Comments
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brunis.dk - Tuesday, September 11, 2018 - link
Agreed, QD32+ is for servers and misleading. As an end user i just need to know r/w speeds of single files. Does anyone know if any OS' take advantage of SSD's when copying? I mean if i can copy 5-10x faster by doing 5-10 files in parallel, all OS' really should do that. But then there are varying degrees of performance for each SSD, so i'm guessing it's a minefield getting it right.Mikewind Dale - Saturday, September 8, 2018 - link
"a variety of encryption methods (AES-256, TCG Opal, TCG Pyrite)"But no IEEE 1667 (i.e. eDrive for BitLocker). Sigh.
DigitalFreak - Saturday, September 8, 2018 - link
Blame Microsoft. They should have supported Opal for Bitlocker, but chose to require IEEE 1667 instead. Pretty much every vendor supports Opal, but few support IEEE 1667.Alexvrb - Sunday, September 9, 2018 - link
I'm pretty sure they chose whatever the government / banking entities required.