Researchers create DVDs with massive storage
Thu May 21, 2009 12:11am IST
 
 
LONDON  - "Five-dimensional" discs with a capacity 10,000 times greater than 
current DVDs could be on the market within 10 years, researchers reported on 
Wednesday
.
A team from Swinburne University of Technology in Australia said that by 
harnessing nanoparticles and a "polarisation" dimension to existing technology, 
storage can be massively boosted without changing the size of a current disc.
The researchers, who have signed a deal with Samsung Electronics, said the 
technique had allowed them to store 1.6 terabytes of data on a disc with the 
potential to one day store upto 10 terabytes.

One terabyte would be enough to hold 300 feature length films or 250,000 songs.

"We were able to show how nanostructured material can be incorporated onto a 
disc in order to increase data capacity, without increasing the physical size 
of the disc," Min Gu, who worked on the research, said in a statement.

"These extra dimensions are the key to creating ultra-high capacity discs."
Discs currently have three spatial dimensions but using nanoparticles the 
researchers said they were able to introduce a spectral -- or colour -- 
dimension as well as a polarisation dimension.

The researchers, who published their findings in the journal Nature, created 
the colour dimension by inserting gold nanorods -- which form so-called surface 
plasmons when hit by light -- onto a disc's surface.
Because nanoparticles react to light according to their shape, this allowed the 
researchers to record information in a range of different colour wavelengths on 
the same place on the disc.

Current DVDs are recorded in a single colour wavelength using a laser, the 
researchers said.
The researchers also created an extra dimension using polarisation, a technique 
in which they projected light waves onto the disc, to record different layers 
of information at different angles.

"The polarisation can be rotated 360 degrees," another member of the research 
team James Chon, said in a statement.
"So for example, we were able to record at zero degree polarisation. Then on 
top of that we were able to record another layer of information at 90 degrees 
polarisation, without them interfering with each other."

Some issues, such as the speed at which the discs can be written on, need 
further work but the scientists said their research could have immediate 
applications in a range of fields.

For instance, they could help store extremely large medical files such as MRIs 
as well as financial, military and security areas by offering higher data 
densities needed for encryption, they added.



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