Protein-coated disc
Protein-Coated Disc (PCD) is a theoretical optical disc technology currently being developed by Professor Venkatesan Renugopalakrishnan, Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School. PCD would greatly increase storage over Holographic Versatile Disc optical disc systems. It involves coating a normal DVD with a special light-sensitive protein made from a genetically altered microbe, which would in principle allow storage of up to 50 Terabytes on one disc. Working with the Japanese NEC Corporation, Renugopalakrishnan's team created a prototype device and estimated in July, 2006 that a USB disk would be commercialised in 12 months and a DVD in 18 to 24 months.[1] [2]
The technology uses the photosynthetic pigment bacteriorhodopsin created from bacteria.
Technology
The information in such discs would be highly dense, due to being stored in proteins that are only a few nanometres across. However, a method to address individual protein molecules to read and write information to and from them would have to be developed in order to achieve the theoretical 50 TB capacity. Practically, capacity would probably be limited by the size that addressing light can be focused to, so a DVD-sized disc might be able to hold ~50 GB, or perhaps ~240 GB if near-field optics were used.[3]
See also
References
- ↑ Richard Blanchard (July 11, 2006). "50 terabyte flash drive made of bug protein". GetUSB info (& ABC News Australia). Retrieved 17 Mar 2012.
- ↑ Tuan Nguyen (July 12, 2006). "New Research Promises 50TB on DVD-size Discs". DailyTech.
- ↑ Evan Blass (July 12, 2006). "Protein Coated Discs". Engadget.
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