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Samsung assumes you'd be cloning a WinOS Drive anyways so yes of course it works properly for that. It will include boot sector + all partitions.
When done, then Restart using the Advanced + Enter UEFI/BIOS option and then change the boot options so you are booted from the New Drive now.
Or Macrium Reflect
I did that when I went from a 640 GB HDD to a 256 GB SSD back in 2012.
I've also used Macrium Reflect for non-Samsung drives and it's good too, a lot more powerful.
I'm not sure what DD is though. If it's shortened version of the name, maybe someone could spell it out for the OP so the OP knows they're looking at what you're talking about.
No, it won't matter. Clone from SATA to M.2, the interface of the hardware doesn't matter. The only thing that matters is will the amount of data you're trying to clone going to fit on the target. Of course you can't clone 1TB of data onto a 500GB drive. Equal sized or larger drives are preferable.
If you need complex features to cherry pick bits to clone, then Macrium Reflect would be your answer. The Samsung tool is only going to do a straight forward 1:1 clone.
However it will only allow you to clone to a Samsung (target) drive; it doesn't matter what the source drive is.
Clone from SATA or M2 shouldn't be a problem either.
Again though, after the clone is complete go to reboot and then enter bios and change the boot order so the new drive is now the only boot drive. Once inside OS on your new drive, go and download latest Chipset and NVME Drivers and install them.
Either one is fine, but should have an M.2 enclosure or dock in any case, just in case.
Some people say dd means "disk destroyer" because like most decades-old Linux tools, it's very powerful, but can mess things up if misused.
https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/dd.1.html
https://www.computerhope.com/unix/dd.htm
All you needs is Live Disk.