DRAM's inventor, 76, still going strong at IBM
51-year Big Blue veteran Robert Dennard to receive IEEE medal next week
Computerworld - Dennard's Law? It doesn't have quite the ring of Moore's Law, mostly because IBM researcher Robert H. Dennard remains unknown to the general public.
The research community, however, knows all about two significant contributions made by the 76-year-old scientist.
In the late 1960s, Dennard invented Dynamic Random Access Memory, or DRAM, the memory used in virtually all computers today.
Dennard followed in the mid-1970s with a groundbreaking paper describing how to keep shrinking transistors to build smaller, faster and less expensive chips.
Dennard's "scaling theory" (PDF document) is often ascribed to Moore's Law, when, as Dennard modestly puts it, "scaling and Moore's Law go very well together."
For those achievements, Dennard, who celebrated his 51st year as an IBM employee this week, will receive a Medal of Honor from the Institute of Electrical Engineers next Thursday.
Fittingly, Dennard will get his Medal from IEEE one year after Intel's Gordon Moore did.
Without the invention of DRAM, computer memory might be the technology laggard that hard-disk drives and laptop batteries remain today.
As Dennard recalls it, the dominant memory used in IBM's mainframe computers of the late 1960s was magnetic core memory. Co-invented by An Wang (who later co-founded workstation pioneer Wang Laboratories), magnetic core memory used small loops of wire to store bits of data.
Magnetic-core memory "was delicate like jewelry," Dennard said. "They were these teeny little things, almost like cheerios, but made out of ferrite [iron-based] material."
Not only was magnetic-core memory fragile, but it was expensive and slow. But it had one great advantage: It was non-volatile, meaning that you didn't need to send electric current to maintain the data.
DRAM, by contrast, was volatile, making it tricky. All of the prototypes other researchers had built up to that time were memory chips that involved multiple transistors, which made designs more complicated and expensive.
To solve this issue, some researchers were testing the use of bi-polar junction transistors. But Dennard preferred metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors, or MOSFETs, even though, he admits "MOS was definitely less advanced and more problematical. There were some basic problems to be solved to make it manufacture-able. But I still considered it more promising."
Dennard was eventually able to create a memory cell that was able to store a charge (representing a bit of data) and keep it continually refreshed, all in a simple single-transistor package. Dennard patented his invention in 1968. But multi-transistor DRAM continued to reign, both at IBM, then a major memory maker, and others.
It wasn't until the mid-1970s that the first single-transistor DRAM appeared. And the market never looked back.
Today, gamers and PC performance addicts can buy gigabytes of DDR3-1600 DRAM with a peak transfer speed of 12800 Megabytes/second (12.8 Gigabytes/second) for less than $100.
At 76, Dennard doesn't play many shoot-em-up videogames, or overclock many PCs. So he doesn't fully reap the fruits of his innovations.
"I have a seven-year-old PC in my office. Truthfully, I'm not a big computer user," he said, adding that if IBM still issued patent notebooks to its researchers for recording their ideas, he would.
"This was what I was taught at Carnegie Mellon. It was a very efficient way to work," he said.
Interest in DRAM has cooled, giving way to alternatives such as flash memory, used in solid-state disks (SSDs) and touted as an ultra-fast-albeit-still-thorny replacement for hard-disk drives.
"Flash? Well, I've got a lot of it in my digital camera," Dennard joked. More seriously, Dennard concedes that "a lot of people are hopeful that flash memory can play more of a role in basic computing as well."
What about other non-silicon forms of memory, such as holographic storage?
"Optical computing has been a Holy Grail for a long time, but it's never broken through," he said. "I'm not sure what people are most hopeful about today."
His prediction: "Miniaturized CMOS technology will keep reaching a high level of performance," Dennard said. "People are still working on improving it. It's what's being manufactured today, so it will be very hard to replace."
Read more about Storage Hardware in Computerworld's Storage Hardware Topic Center.



- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- Overcome Top 7 Admin Challenges of Active Directory
- As Active Directory's role in the enterprise has drastically increased, so has the need to secure the data. Gain insight on creating repeatable,...
- Insiders Can Ruin Your Company. Take Action.
- Did you know that 80 percent of threats to an organization come from the inside? The threat from insiders is often overlooked in...
- Top Solutions and Tools to Prevent Devastating Malware
- Custom malware frequently goes undetected. According to Forrester Research, the best way to reduce risk of breach is to deploy file integrity monitoring...
- Streamline Compliance and Increase ROI
- Streamline, simplify, and automate compliance related activities; especially those that impact multiple business units. This white paper from NetIQ, outlines solutions that will...
- X-Ray of the PCI Process-4 Proactive Steps
- This white paper from Forrester Research Inc., helps break PCI into understandable components. Security and risk professionals will gain knowledge and insight into... All Storage Hardware White Papers
- Optimizing Networks for the Cloud
- Join guest speaker, Rohit Mehra, IDC Director of Enterprise Communications Infrastructure, to explore current trends, discuss best practices for optimizing Data Center and...
- Apps QuickStart Series Part 2: Designing and Deploying SQL Server on VMware vSphere
- Download this webcast to learn about the design considerations for virtualizing SQL workloads, performance and scalability information and high-availability options, as well as...
- Apps QuickStart Series Part 1: Designing and Deploying Exchange 2010 on VMware vSphere
- Download this webcast to learn the virtual hardware design considerations for Exchange 2010, deployment using the building block approach, options for high-availability and...
- Customer Spotlight: How IPC The Hospitalist Company Implemented Oracle on VMware
- Have you been looking to hear about customer's experiences with the new VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager product? View this webcast to learn...
- Virtualize Business-Critical Applications with Confidence
- Virtualizing business-critical applications has become a key focus for organizations as they move along their virtualization journey. With the launch of VMware vSphere®... All Storage Hardware Webcasts