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Chinese team’s memory leap shrinks data centre storage capacity into DVD-sized disk

  • In world first, researchers use 3D optical data storage architecture to reach petabit level capacity
  • Technology stores 24 times the data of most advanced hard disk drives, paving way for energy efficient, cost-effective exabit data centres

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Chinese researchers have built a 3D nanoscale optical disk memory with petabit capacity, capable of storing more than 10,000 times the data of a Blu-ray Disc. Photo: Handout

Imagine a DVD-sized disk that could store more than 10,000 times the data of a Blu-ray Disc, a feat that could lead to vast savings of storage space and energy in an era of big data and artificial intelligence.

A research team in China says it has developed a technology that allows a massive data set – equal to about 5.8 billion indexed web pages – to be stored in a device the size of a desktop computer.

For perspective, if the data was stored using 1-terabyte hard drives, the devices would cover an area about the size of an average playground.

“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,” the team wrote in an article published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature on Thursday.

The scientists are from the University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, Peking University, as well as the Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics and Key Laboratory of Photochemistry, both under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

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