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Stacked Volumetric Optical Disc

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Stacked Volumetric Optical Disc (or SVOD) is an optical disc format developed by Hitachi Maxell, which uses an array of wafer-thin optical discs to allow data storage.

Each "layer" (a thin polycarbonate disc) holds around 9.4 GB[1] of information, and the wafers are stacked in layers of 20, 25, 100, or more, giving a substantially larger overall data capacity; for example, 100× cartridges could hold 940 GB using the system as announced.

Hitachi Maxell announced the creation of the SVOD standard in 2006, intending to launch it the next year. Aimed primarily at commercial users, the target price was ¥40,000 for a cartridge of 100 thin discs, with the potential to expand into the home user market. When they announced the system, Hitachi Maxell publicly recognized the possibility that the system could be eventually modified for use with a blue-violet laser, similar to Blu-ray discs, which could have expanded the capacity of the system to 3-5 TB. It is possible that they in fact developed this "second generation" SVOD for use with standard Blu-ray lasers, with each thin disc having a storage capacity of 25 GB, or a 100-disc cartridge having a storage of 5 TB.[2] Hitachi Maxell developed systems both for burning to the media using standard DVD optical heads, and pre-recording to the media using a special heat imprint technique they called "nanoimprinting." Though nanoimprinting initially required 6 minutes per disc for pressing, they had improved it to 8 seconds, and intended to achieve a comparable throughput to standard DVD pressing.[3] The primary application of the SVOD system seemed to be business data archival, replacing digital tape archives.[4][2]

In 2007, Japanese broadcaster NHK announced a similar system, based on Blu-ray discs, of stacked optical storage media specifically designed to rotate at high speeds, up to 15,000 RPM.[5]

SVOD was anticipated to be a likely be a candidate, along with Holographic Versatile Discs (HVDs), to be a next-generation optical disc standard.[citation needed] However, as of 2021, little has been done with the format.[citation needed]

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Transcription

References

  1. ^ "New DVD Discs Will Store One Terabyte Data". RealityPod. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  2. ^ a b Dripchak, Al (19 September 2007). "SVOD: Stacked Volumetric Optical Discs" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 15 October 2017. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  3. ^ Yasushi Uchida (20 April 2006). "Hitachi Maxell Develops New Optical Storage Technology Enabling Approx. 1 TB Capacity with 6.5 cm thick Cartridge". Nikkei Technology. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  4. ^ "Hitachi Maxell 1TB SVOD optical disc cart". Engadget. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  5. ^ Williams, Martyn (29 May 2007). "NHK Pushes Optical Disc Speed Limit". TechHive. Retrieved 8 April 2021.

External links

This page was last edited on 15 October 2023, at 21:33
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