• Researchers have used lasers on a material used in nuclear fuel t

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Wed Apr 17 17:30:05 2024
    Researchers have used lasers on a material used in nuclear fuel to create a quasi-eternal data storage media super-hard silicon carbide DVD-like discs could have a capacity of 677GB

    Date:
    Wed, 17 Apr 2024 17:16:28 +0000

    Description:
    Researchers have used lasers on silicon carbide to create a new long-term
    data storage concept.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    The daily creation of data is soaring, with the last two years alone have reportedly generated 90% of the world's data, with daily estimates reaching 330 million terabytes. Traditional storage media, however, have a limited lifespan.

    Researchers at the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf ( HZDR ) say they
    have employed lasers on silicon carbide, a material used in nuclear fuel, to develop a new form of high-capacity media that could potentially
    revolutionize the way we store data.

    The team, headed by Dr. Georgy Astakhov from the Institute of Ion Beam
    Physics and Materials Research at HZDR, says the solution to the problem is
    to create a new long-term data storage concept using atomic-scale defects in silicon carbide. These defects, created by a focused beam of protons or
    helium ions, offer high spatial resolution, fast writing speed, and low
    energy consumption for storing a single bit. Overcoming existing limitations

    The HZDR team's method overcomes the limitations of current data storage solutions by using 4D encoding schemes. This involves controlling the lateral position and depth as well as the number of defects, enabling data to be read optically through photoluminescence. The areal storage density can be further improved using focused electron-beam excitation.

    The researchers believe that the data stored in these silicon carbide disks could last for generations, depending on environmental conditions. The temperature-dependent deactivation of these defects suggests a retention time minimum over a few generations under ambient conditions, says Astakhov.

    With near-infrared laser excitation, modern encoding techniques, and multi-layer data storage, the team expects to achieve a storage density equivalent to Blu-ray discs. If electron-beam excitation is used instead of optical excitation for data read-out, the storage density could match the current record for prototype magnetic tapes, but with a longer storage time and lower energy consumption.

    This breakthrough research, which is not limited to silicon carbide and can
    be extended to other materials with optically active defects, potentially represents a significant step towards meeting the challenging demands of data storage. More from TechRadar Pro DNA storage is coming, it's just a matter of when not if Chinese engineers develop 200TB optical disc This is what a ceramic cartridge with a 10,000TB capacity looks like



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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/pro/researchers-have-used-lasers-on-a-material-used- in-nuclear-fuel-to-create-a-quasi-eternal-data-storage-media-super-hard-silico n-carbide-dvd-like-discs-could-have-a-capacity-of-677gb


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