Optware to commercialize 1T-byte optical disc

Japanese company Optware Co. Ltd. will commercialize an optical disc that can store more than 1T bytes of data and an associated disc player later this year, the company said earlier this week.

The disc and player are based a 12-centimeter optical disc like existing CDs and DVDs, but the new disc will be able to store about 120 DVD-format movies, according to Atsushi Machida, a spokesman for Optware.

The high capacity — around 20 times the storage available on existing discs — and a data transfer speed of 1G bps (bits per second) have been achieved by using digital volume holography read/write technology, developed under the DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Project Agency) project in the U.S., according to Optware’s statement.

The system firstly splits a laser source into two beams, signal (data-carrying) and reference beams. The signal beam goes through a spatial light modulator, which has pages of data arranged in a checkerboard pattern. The pattern either blocks or transmits light, therefore the signal beam will encode data via the spatial light modulator. This encoded beam then interferes with the reference beam via an optical lens to record onto a photosensitive volumetric recording medium.

By changing the angle or wavelength of the reference beam, the technology allows many different data pages to be recorded in three dimensions (3D) and read out in the same recording medium, allowing for enormous storage capacity.

In this form, though, the technology is costly, unreliable, and not compatible with existing disc media.

“That was the reason why it has been said that an optical disc based on holography is difficult for commercialization,” Machida said.

According to its statement, Optware has developed a reliable method of storing data in 3D on existing CD/DVD media.

Conventional optical disc systems use a single red laser beam to write a dot, containing one bit of information, to a disc surface. Optware’s technology, known as polarized collinear holography, splits the signal laser beam into 1 million narrower beams, creates data pages in the same way as the DARPA system, and with the help of a separate reference laser beam, writes the data in 3D to the disc’s volumetric recording layer. One million bits of information can be stored for each dot, Optware said.

The company will start sample shipping of the disc and the replay device in the third quarter of this year. Its first product will be a write-once disc, to be followed by rewritable discs, Machida said.

Optware, in Yokohama City, Kanagawa Prefecture, can be contacted at +81-45-470-5131 orhttp://www.optware.co.jp/

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