Rather than using a hard disk form, Kioxia's EDSFF SSD uses new designs for chip placement and cooling efficiency. Credit: Addlink As the enterprise SSD matures it is shedding its legacy hard-disk identity one technology at a time. SATA has been replaced by PCI Express. Serial buses have given way to parallel data flow, and the 2.5-inch form factor is going to give way to a new design for greater chip density and cooling. Kioxia America, formerly Toshiba, has demonstrated a fully functional E3.S SSD called Enterprise and Datacenter SSD Form Factor (EDSFF), also known as E3. Both form factors are being developed by the Storage Network Infrastructure Association (SNIA) consortium. The E3.L has a long, thin shape like a ruler. Intel demonstrated a prototype ruler design three years ago, but it was a prototype and never went anywhere. EDSFF has been designed from the ground up to support SSDs in all-flash arrays for both cloud and enterprise data centers using a new form factor rather than the standard 2.5-inch drive. While that form factor works well in laptops, it was limiting for servers because of how chips could be placed. The current drive uses eight lanes of PCI Express Gen4 networking and draws 28 watts of power, more than the 5 watts a regular SSD consumes, but it has more chips. The PCI Express Gen5 drives of the future will use 40 watts. What does that extra power get you? For starters, better signal integrity to deliver the performance promised by PCIe Gen 5.0 and beyond, and the ability to power more chips. That also means a change in cooling methods. Featuring one common connector, this form-factor standard for PCIe-based devices, such as NVMe SSDs, graphics processing units (GPU) and network interface cards (NIC), enables a complete array of footprint, power and capacity options, offering unprecedented system flexibility. On top of the Long and Short form factors, the E3s come in thin (7.5mm) and thick (16.8mm) forms with different amounts of memory packed into them. The E3.L is more than a foot long and is designed to slide into a 1U rack and be cooled by the server fans. There is also the option for 9.5mm or 18mm heat sinks on the ruler. The long, thin design of the E3.L also improves data-center serviceability, making it easier to add or remove drives, which are designed to be hot pluggable and front-access serviceable. Kioxia has not said when it expects to ship the EDSFF. Related content news Pure Storage adds AI features for security and performance Updated infrastructure-as-code management capabilities and expanded SLAs are among the new features from Pure Storage. By Andy Patrizio Jun 26, 2024 3 mins Enterprise Storage Data Center news Nvidia teases next-generation Rubin platform, shares physical AI vision ‘I'm not sure yet whether I'm going to regret this or not,' said Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang as he revealed 2026 plans for the company’s Rubin GPU platform. By Andy Patrizio Jun 17, 2024 4 mins CPUs and Processors Data Center news Intel launches sixth-generation Xeon processor line With the new generation chips, Intel is putting an emphasis on energy efficiency. By Andy Patrizio Jun 06, 2024 3 mins CPUs and Processors Data Center news AMD updates Instinct data center GPU line Unveiled at Computex 2024. the new AI processing card from AMD will come with much more high-bandwidth memory than its predecessor. By Andy Patrizio Jun 04, 2024 3 mins CPUs and Processors Data Center PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe