Thread: Scientists develop the petabit optical disc - 2000x UHD Blu-ray

Grisham

Ensuring Transparency

A new type of optical disc the size of a Blu-ray can hold up to 200,000 gigabytes of data and can be manufactured in existing DVD factories, according to scientists from the University of Shanghai.

The new optical disc has a capacity of up to 1.6 petabits, which corresponds to 1.6 million gigabits, 200,000 gigabytes, or 200 terabytes.

For comparison, UHD Blu-ray has a capacity of up to 100 gigabytes with a 3-layer disc, so it represents a massive 2000x increase.

The Chinese scientists published their findings in a research paper earlier this month in Nature, explaining that it is a "3D nanoscale" optical disc with up to 100 layers that can each hold data. It uses a novel light-sensitive material called AIE-DDPR and two types of lasers to read to disc; 480nm blue and 592nm orange, respectively.

The team believes that blank discs can be manufactured using conventional DVD mass production. It would take around 6 minutes to produce a blank disc.

8K Blu-ray is still unlikely


The breakthrough raises the question of whether the new optical disc could be used to create an 8K or even a 16K Blu-ray movie disc to supplant the current 4K UHD Blu-ray format.

However, the launch of an 8K Blu-ray format is still unlikely, not due to technological factors but market factors, as explained way back in 2019 in our article here. Unless consumers develop a newfound taste for physical media, our conclusion from 2019 is likely to stand.

The scientists imagine that it can instead be used as a high-storage technology in data centers.

- "This technology makes it possible to achieve exabit-level storage by stacking nanoscale disks into arrays, which is essential in big data centres with limited space," said Miao Zhao, Jing Wen, Qiao Hu, Xunbin Wei, Yu-Wu Zhong, Hao Ruan, and Min Gu from the University of Shanghai for Science and Technology.

- Source: Nature via IEEE
 
Assuming equal or better shelf life than Blu Ray and I would be all about this.

Honestly shelf life is the biggest factor on why I prefer BR to DVD. I have no problem watching 640p…. But knowing that 50 years from now they may or may not work is a big problem.
 
Assuming equal or better shelf life than Blu Ray and I would be all about this.

Honestly shelf life is the biggest factor on why I prefer BR to DVD. I have no problem watching 640p…. But knowing that 50 years from now they may or may not work is a big problem.

You'll be dead in 40.
 
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This would have massive ramifications on the entire storage market. My entire server could be backed up on one disc.

Hell every hollywood movie ever made could be put on one disc. There will be some downsides we don't know about I bet.