If this page does not print out automatically, select Print from the File menu.

Boffins promise 500,000GB iPod

Nanotech breakthrough could see 300 million tracks on one device

Guy Dixon, vnunet.com 17 Apr 2008

A nanotechnology breakthrough at the University of Glasgow could pave the way for MP3 players with a storage capacity 150,000 times greater than today's top-of-the-range devices.

Researchers claim to have developed a molecule-sized switch which dramatically boosts storage capacity without the need to increase the physical size of players.

The technology could see 500,000GB crammed into a square inch microchip, allowing users to store hundreds of millions of video clips and music tracks on a single device, well in excess of the 40,000 songs on today's largest capacity players.

The breakthrough, undertaken with colleagues at Daresbury Laboratory in Warrington using a giant X-ray machine, could also transform storage on other consumer electronics, including DVD players.

"We have found a way to potentially increase the data storage capabilities in a radical way," said Professor Lee Cronin at the University of Glasgow.

"This is unprecedented and provides a route to produce new a molecule-based switch that can be easily manipulated using an electric field.

"The fact that these switches work on carbon means they could be embedded in plastic chips so silicon is not needed. The system becomes much more flexible both physically and technologically."

Glasgow University's Dr Vin Dhanak said that the team now faces the challenge of dealing with "fabrication issues".

www.businessgreen.com/2214564
This article was printed from the BusinessGreen web site
© Incisive Media Ltd. 2008
Incisive Media Limited, Haymarket House, 28-29 Haymarket, London SW1Y 4RX, is a company registered in the United Kingdom with company registration number 04038503
Close this window to return to the website