Imagine storing more than 25 terabytes of data in a device the size of a U.S. quarter or British 50p coin
August 28, 2017
Original link: http://www.kurzweilai.net/single-molecule-level-data-storage-may-achieve-100-times-higher-data-density
Scientists at the University of Manchester have developed a data-storage method that could achieve 100 times higher data density than current technologies.*
The system would allow for data servers to operate at the (relatively high) temperature of -213 °C. That could make it possible in the future for data servers to be chilled by liquid nitrogen (-196 °C) — a cooling method that is relatively cheap compared to the far more expensive liquid helium (which requires -269 °C) currently used.
The research provides proof-of-concept that such technologies could be achievable in the near future “with judicious molecular design.”
Huge benefits for the environment
Molecular-level data storage could lead to much smaller hard drives that require less energy, meaning data centers across the globe could be smaller, lower-cost, and a lot more energy-efficient.
For example, Google currently has 15 data centers around the world. They process an average of 40 million searches per second, resulting in 3.5 billion searches per day and 1.2 trillion searches per year. To deal with all that data, Google had approximately 2.5 million servers in each data center, it was reported in 2016, and that number was likely to rise.
Some reports say the energy consumed at such centers could account for as much as 2 per cent of the world’s total greenhouse gas emissions. This means any improvement in data storage and energy efficiency could also have huge benefits for the environment as well as vastly increasing the amount of information that can be stored.
The research, led by David Mills, PhD, and Nicholas Chilton, PhD, from the School of Chemistry, is published in the journal Nature. “Our aim is to achieve even higher operating temperatures in the future, ideally functioning above liquid nitrogen temperatures,” said Mills.
* The method uses single-molecule magnets, which display “hysteresis” — a magnetic memory effect that is a requirement of magnetic data storage, such as hard drives. Molecules containing lanthanide atoms have exhibited this phenomenon at the highest temperatures to date. Lanthanides are rare earth metals used in all forms of everyday electronic devices such as smartphones, tablets and laptops. The team achieved their results using the lanthanide element dysprosium.