Sony has increased the capacity of
magnetic tape, which is still widely used for data backups (Photo: Shutterstock)
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At
the INTERMAG Europe 2014 international magnetics conference in Dresden, Sony
announced a new breakthrough in magnetic tape technology that keeps the medium
relevant by allowing a tape cartridge to carry 74 times the data of a
conventional data tape, or the equivalent of 3,700 Blu-ray discs.
Tapes
were the backbone of computer memory storage from the 1950s until the late
1980s. They're familiar to early home computer users in the form of the humble
audio cassette that saved them from having to laboriously
type in a program every time they wanted to run it. In everyday life, tapes
were replaced so universally by hard discs, flash drives and optical media
including CDs, DVDs and Blu-rays that it often comes as a surprise to learn that
magnetic tape is still widely used as back up memory for servers and databases.
Because, while discs may be fast and flexible, tape still has the advantage of
being very stable and using much less power than hard disc drives, so tape is
anything but yesterday’s technology.
Sony’s breakthrough, which pushes past the previous record set in 2010 by a
factor of five, produces a recording density of 146 Gb per square inch. This
results in a cartridge capable of holding 185 TB. Conventional tapes fall well
short of this by comparison with a density of 2 Gb per square inch and a maximum
capacity of 2.5 TB.
To
achieve this density, Sony uses a new “sputter”
technique to deposit fine nano-grain magnetic particles on a soft polymer
underlayer less than 5 micrometers thick. These particles are much smaller than
those found in conventional tapes, which are tens of nanometers wide. The
fineness of the particles already improves the storage capacity of the material,
but the tricky bit was getting particles to line up in an orderly fashion
instead of landing at random on the underlayer.
This
uniformity was achieved by using an electrostatic discharge to force argon ions
into the target material, which forms it into a thin, uniform layer. It involves
having the magnetic particles of both the same average size (about 7.7
nanometers) and lined up in the same direction. In addition, the polymer
underlayer has been re-engineered to make it much smoother, so the particles lie
more evenly. The result is a tape material that Sony boasts has the world's
highest recording density by area.
Sony
says that it is currently working on commercializing the new tape material, as
well as improving the sputter technique to achieve even greater recording
densities.
Source: Gizmag URL:
http://www.gizmag.com/sony-185-tb-magnetic-tape-storage/31910/Sony