News
[CD/DVD drives]| Wednesday 30th July 2008 |
Today's optical discs store and rewrite data on one or two layers, limiting the available storage capacity to 50GB for dual-layer Blu-ray discs.
However, a team from the University of California claim it's possible to create hundreds of layers on a single optical disc, pushing storage to 1TB and beyond.
The disc is comprised of a material called polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA), which comprises dye precursor
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When exposed to an ultraviolet photon, the photoacid generators break down to form a strong acid, which turns the dye precursor molecules into a fluorescent dye, which is used to store data.
The Californian team were able to create 200 layers of data using the materials, each capable of storing around 5GB each - like a regular DVD.
However, the team claims it can go much further using 405nm diodes to record a Blu-ray disc's worth of data on each layer. "Results show that bit dimensions are further reduced, which enables future recordings of 5TB disc capacities by recording 25 GB/layer," the team's research paper claims.
Sadly, there's no indication of when this technology might arrive on the market.
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