Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Secure Digital (SD)

Secure Digital

Secure Digital memory (known as SD or SD Card) is a type of memory card created by Matsushita Electronic, SanDisk and Toshiba in January 2000. Secure Digital memory is a memory specifically developed to meet new safety requirements in the field of electronic audio and video devices. It therefore includes a copyright protection system that satisfies the SDMI (Secure Digital Music Initiative) standard.

The architecture of the SD cards is based on NAND-type flash memory circuits (EEPROM).

The Secure Digital memory has small dimensions (24.0mm x 32.0mm x 2.1mm), equivalent to those of a postage stamp, and weighs barely 2 grammes.


                                                                                     SD Card - Secure Digital


Data are accessed using a 9-pin lateral connector achieving a transfer speed of 2 Mb/s with the potential to go up to 10 MB/s.

SD memory access time is around 25µs for first access and cycles of 50 ns for subsequent cycles.