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Kingston 32Gbit DDR5 DRAM modules

Introduction of 32Gbit DRAM

32Gbit density planar (non-stacked) DDR5 DRAM production commences in the second half of 2024 from the world’s leading DRAM semiconductors, enabling new, high-capacity DDR5 modules for client, workstation and server-class systems. Using advanced next-generation lithography, 32Gbit DRAM packs more memory cells into the same physical package size as 16Gbit and 24Gbit DDR5 chips. More cells per chip mean more capacity for existing memory module form factors, such as DIMMs and SODIMMs, allowing systems to achieve higher total capacities not seen before without using costly stacked DRAM (3D TSV / DDP) technologies.

UDIMM / SODIMM with 32Gbit DRAM

4x (2G x16) DRAM = 16GB in 1 rank
8x (4G x8) DRAM = 32GB in 1 rank
16x (8G x8) DRAM = 64GB in 2 ranks

Traditional desktop systems with a four-socket dual channel memory architecture can achieve up to 256GB with 64GB DIMMs, while laptops and small-form-factor systems using the SODIMM form factor can achieve a total 128GB of system RAM in two sockets.

Servers and workstations primarily benefit from the cost savings and unrestricted availability of 128GB-capacity Registered DIMMs (RDIMMs) using 32Gbit DRAM, since this and higher-capacity DDR5 RDIMMs were previously restricted to using 3DS stacked DRAM components.

Module configurations (non-ECC unbuffered)

A chart detailing how module configuration with high-density DRAM makes different capacities possible at different quantities.

RDIMM with 32Gbit DRAM

10x (4G x8) DRAM = 32GB in 1 rank
20x (4G x8) DRAM = 64GB in 2 ranks
20x (8G x4) DRAM = 64GB in 1 rank
40x (8G x4) DRAM = 128GB in 2 ranks

Both Intel and AMD support 32Gbit DRAM from top to bottom across servers, workstations and client systems on all DDR5-based platforms. However, BIOS updates may be required to enable support, so be sure to check with the system or motherboard manufacturer for the latest firmware.

Kingston was the first memory module manufacturer to build 64GB UDIMMs featuring 32Gbit DRAM for demonstration at CES 2024, and worked closely with major motherboard manufacturers (ASRock, Gigabyte, MSI) in late 2023 to enable them to achieve 256GB total memory capacity on their systems.

ASRock
GIGABYTE
MSI

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