Georgia Tech's Ferroelectric NAND Flash Revolutionizes Radiation-Resistant Space Data Storage

May 29, 2026
Georgia Tech's Ferroelectric NAND Flash Revolutionizes Radiation-Resistant Space Data Storage
  • A Georgia Tech team has developed ferroelectric NAND flash memory as a more radiation-resistant data storage solution for deep space missions.

  • Ferroelectric memory stores data via polarization within the material, making it significantly less susceptible to radiation than conventional trapped-charge flash memory.

  • The ferroelectric NAND stores data as polarization rather than trapped charge, enhancing its resistance to radiation compared with traditional NAND flash.

  • The research indicates current space radiation environments—from Low-Earth Orbit to deep space—fall within the tested tolerance range, supporting potential deployment on future missions.

  • The work is part of broader DARPA and DoD-supported programs and is detailed in Nano Letters (2026), highlighting the project’s official backing.

  • The technology comes at a time when spacecraft rely more on onboard AI, making reliable autonomous data processing and storage increasingly important.

  • Experts say memory reliability could be a deciding factor in mission success, influencing whether data remains intact during exploration.

  • Deep space missions face high radiation and long communication delays, making robust autonomous storage crucial for exploring Jupiter’s moons, outer planets, or venturing beyond the Solar System.

  • The approach demonstrates reliable operation in extremely harsh radiation environments, aligning with needs for space AI data processing and storage.

  • Ferroelectric NAND flash could become essential for ensuring data survives on missions at the edge of the Solar System.

  • Lance Fernandes, an ECE Ph.D. student, built the ferroelectric NAND chips in Georgia Tech’s cleanroom, with radiation testing conducted at Pennsylvania State University.

  • Lab-fabricated ferroelectric NAND chips were radiation-tested at Penn State and withstood up to one million rads, roughly 100 million chest X-rays, about 30 times more durable than standard flash memory.

Summary based on 2 sources


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