Graphics DDR SDRAM (GDDR SDRAM)
- is a type of VRAM
- is a type of synchronous dynamic random-access memory (SDRAM) specifically designed for applications requiring high bandwidth, e.g. GPUs)
- is distinct from the more widely known types of DDR SDRAM (e.g. DDR4 and DDR5)
- as of 2023, GDDR SDRAM has been succeeded by GDDR2, GDDR3, GDDR4, GDDR5, GDDR5X, GDDR6, GDDR6X and GDDR6W
Subpages
Versions
|
Version |
Release |
I/O Clock |
Bus Width per Chip |
Typical Capacity per Chip |
Max Bandwidth per Chip |
Voltage |
Notes / First GPUs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
GDDR1 |
1998 |
166–400 MHz |
32 bits |
32–128 MB |
1.3–1.6 GB/s |
2.5V |
Early 3D graphics memory, used in NVIDIA RIVA TNT2, ATI Rage 128 |
|
GDDR2 |
2001 |
200–400 MHz |
32 bits |
32–128 MB |
1.6–3.2 GB/s |
2.5V |
Limited adoption, higher signaling rate than GDDR1 |
|
GDDR3 |
2003 |
400–800 MHz |
32 bits |
128–512 MB |
3.2–6.4 GB/s |
1.8V |
Widely used; NVIDIA GeForce 6/7, ATI Radeon X series |
|
GDDR4 |
2005 |
800–1000 MHz |
32 bits |
256–512 MB |
6.4–8 GB/s |
1.5V |
Short-lived; ATI Radeon X1000 series |
|
GDDR5 |
2007 |
1000–2000 MHz |
32 bits |
512 MB – 1 GB |
8–16 GB/s |
1.5V |
Mainstream adoption; NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GTX, Radeon HD 4000 |
|
GDDR5X |
2016 |
1250–1400 MHz |
32 bits |
1–2 GB |
10–14 GB/s |
1.35V |
High-bandwidth variant of GDDR5; NVIDIA Pascal GPUs |
|
GDDR6 |
2018 |
1750–2000 MHz |
32 bits |
1–2 GB |
14–16 GB/s |
1.35V |
Widely used in gaming GPUs; RTX 20 series, AMD RX 5000 |
|
GDDR6X |
2020 |
1900–2200 MHz |
32 bits |
1–2 GB |
19–21 GB/s |
1.35–1.45V |
Uses PAM4 signaling for higher bandwidth; NVIDIA RTX 30 series |
|
GDDR7 |
2023–2024 |
3200–4000 MHz (effective) |
32 bits |
2–4 GB |
25–32 GB/s |
~1.1–1.2V |
Latest generation; very high bandwidth, supports next-gen GPUs |