Abstract:
Ternary optical data storage method and apparatus for Write Once Read Many Times (WORM) optical data storage with two-photon fluorescent writing and readout. The data storage capacity is limited by the optical resolution of a system. In CD/DVD systems, an increase in the aerial data density has been primarily achieved by decreasing the bit dimension. However, the size of the optical spot (bit) is restricted by limitations imposed by the diffraction of light (Rayleigh criterion). Therefore, technologies that can effectively create and detect spot sizes beyond the diffraction limit (sub-Rayleigh) hold promise to achieving high-density optical storage.

Description:
This invention is a Continuation-In-Part of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/306,960 filed Nov. 27, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,001,708 that issued on Feb. 21, 2006, which claims the benefit of priority based on U.S. Provisional application No. 60/339,283 filed Dec. 11, 2001 and U.S. Provisional application No. 60/333,972 filed on Nov. 28, 2001, and this invention further claims the benefit of priority based on U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/463,426 filed Apr. 16, 2003. 
    
    
     FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     This invention relates to optical data storage and more particularly to a ternary optical data storage methods and apparatus and systems for Write Once Read Many times (WORM) optical data storage with two-photon fluorescent writing and readout. 
     BACKGROUND AND PRIOR ART 
     Over the past 50 years, the field of organic photochemistry has produced a wealth of information, from reaction mechanisms to useful methodology for synthetic transformations. Many technological innovations have been realized during this time due to the exploits of this knowledge, including photoresists and lithography for the production of integrated circuits, photocharge generation for xerography, multidimensional fluorescence imaging, photodynamic therapy for cancer treatment, photoinitiated polymerization, and UV protection of plastics and humans through the development of UV absorbing compounds and sunscreens, to name a few. 
     The scientific basis of many of these processes continues to be utilized today, particularly in the development of organic three-dimensional optical data storage media and processes. 
     It is known that fluorescent properties of certain fluorophores may be changed (quenched) upon protonation by photogeneration of acid Two-photon induced photoacid generation using onium salts and short pulsed near-IR lasers in the presence of a polymerizable medium has been reported, resulting in two-photon photoinitiated cationic polymerizations The inherent three-dimensional features associated with two-photon absorption provides an intriguing basis upon which to combine spatially-resolved, two-photon induced photoacid generation and fluorescence quenching with two-photon fluorescence imaging 
     The quadratic, or nonlinear, dependence of two-photon absorption on the intensity of the incident light has substantial implications (dw/dt oc I 2 ). For example, in a medium containing one-photon absorbing chromophores significant absorption occurs all along the path of a focused beam of suitable wavelength light. This can lead to out-of focus excitation. In a two-photon process, negligible absorption occurs except in the immediate vicinity of the focal volume of a light beam of appropriate energy. This allows spatial resolution about the beam axis as well as radially, which circumvents out-of-focus absorption and is the principle reason for two-photon fluorescence imaging. Particular molecules can undergo upconverted fluorescence through nonresonant two-photon absorption using near-IR radiation, resulting in an energy emission greater than that of the individual photons involved (upconversion). The use of a longer wavelength excitation source for fluorescence emission affords advantages not feasible using conventional UV or visible fluoresence techniques, e.g., deeper penetration of the excitation beam and reduction of photobleaching, and is particularly well-suited for fluorescence detection in multilayer coatings. 
     Rentzepis et al. reported two-photon induced photochromism of spiropyran derivatives at 1064 nm. Analogous to single-photon absorption facilitated isomerizion, the spiropyran underwent ring-opening isomerizion to the zwitterionic colored merocyanine isomer. The merocyanine isomer underwent two-photon absorption at 1064 nm, resulting in upconverted fluoresence. However, spiropyrans are known to undergo photobleaching and photodegradation upon prolonged exposure, and hence are not suitable for long-term use. Nonetheless, an intriguing model for 3-D optical storage memory was proposed. An intriguing bacteriorhodopsin-based holographic recording media and process, using two-photon excitation, has been reported by Birge et al. 
     The synthesis and characterization of organic fluorescent dyes with high two-photon absorptivity has been reported. Several of these dyes also undergo substantial changes in the absorption and fluorescence spectral properties in the presence of strong acid, i.e., they undergo protonation, affording changes in their polarizability, absorption and emission maxima and fluorescence quantum yields. 
     With the ever-pressing demand for higher storage densities, researchers are pursuing a number of strategies to develop three-dimensional capabilities for optical data storage in organic-based systems. Among the various strategies reported are holographic data storage using photopolymerizable media photorefractive polymers, and two-photon induced photochromism, to mention a few. 
     In light of the foregoing, there is a need for an increased density of data storage, particularly for CD/DVD systems. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     It is a primary objective of the invention to develop increased data storage capacity of CD/DVD systems. 
     Another object of the invention is to develop increased data storage capacity of optical systems using ternary optical systems. 
     A further object of the invention is to produce a system of high density data storage that can create and detect optical spot (bit) sizes beyond the diffraction limit (sub-Rayleigh). 
     A preferred embodiment of the invention is the method of writing data in a ternary WORM (Write Once Read Many Times) optical data storage with two-photon fluorescent readout comprising the steps of:
         (a) providing a data storage medium composed of a transparent polymer impregnated with a photo-acid generator and a reactive dye;   (b) focusing a near infrared tunable laser into the storage medium with high intensity short pulses; and   (c) absorbing the high intensity short pulses in the photo-acid generator to form a data storage voxel (volume pixel).       

     A further preferred embodiment of the invention includes a method of reading data from a ternary WORM (Write Once Read Many Times) optical data storage with two-photon fluorescent encoded data comprising the steps of:
         (d) providing a data storage voxel (volume pixel) containing a photo-acid generator and a reactive dye;   (e) exciting the reactive dye with a plurality of light sources to generate fluorescent values;   (f) measuring intensity values of each of the fluorescent values; and   (g) reading differences in the intensity values to determine data in the data storage voxel.       

     Further objects and advantages of this invention will be apparent from the following detailed descriptions of presently preferred embodiments which are illustrated schematically in the accompanying drawings. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES 
         FIG. 1  shows conceptualized illustration of terabit/in 2  optical storage using ternary encoding 2-photon technology. 
         FIG. 2  shows two-Photon write/read systems involves a near-IR laser and a multilayered optical storage disk. 
         FIG. 3  shows irradiation of storage media with 730 nm laser light creates Photoacid generator (PAG−) and Reactive dye (RD+). 
         FIG. 4  shows stable ion pair data storage “voxel” formed. 
         FIG. 5  shows voxel is irradiated with 800 nm laser light. 
         FIG. 6  shows voxel fluoresces at two wavelengths, 650 nm and 530 nm. 
         FIG. 7  shows intensity dependence of two- vs. single-photon absorption. 
         FIG. 8  shows reaction of fluorene  1  with acid, resulting in the formation of monoprotonated product  2 . 
         FIG. 9  ( a ) shows two photon fluorescent images of photosensitive films developed (via 350 nm broadband exposure, 4.4 mW/cm 2 ) using an Air Force resolution target mask which is the Image recorded by channel  1 . 
         FIG. 9  ( b ) shows two photon fluorescent images of photosensitive films developed (via 350 nm broadband exposure, 4.4 mW/cm 2 ) using an Air Force resolution target mask which is the image recorded by channel  2 . 
         FIG. 9  ( c ) shows two photon fluorescent images of photosensitive films developed (via 350 nm broadband exposure, 4.4 mW/cm 2 ) using an Air Force resolution target mask which is the image recorded of fluorescence intensity by scanning an x-y line across one sct of three-member elements (yellow line across set  5 ). 
         FIG. 10  shows comparison of Storage Capacities of the Current Conventional and Potential Other Optical Data Storage Technologies, 
     
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     Before explaining the disclosed embodiments of the present invention in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of the particular arrangements shown since the invention is capable of other embodiments. Also, the terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and not of limitation. 
     The innovation disclosed herein is a three-dimensional storage system that relies on a ternary data encoding scheme to achieve high data storage densities. The absolute fluorescence emission intensity recorded by one channel will be used to read a “0” or “1” with an appropriate threshold set. This will provide binary encoding. The ratio of fluorescence emission detected by each of two channels (set to record the emission at different wavelength regions corresponding to two different species in the recording medium) will be writing intensity dependent and will provide the “2” for “0”, “1”, and “2” ternary data encoding. The ternary data encoding is expected to increase data storage density by approximately 50%. Thus, this technology combines all of the three-dimensional (3-D) spatially-resolved and deep writing/readout advantages associated with two-photon excitation writing and two-photon fluorescence readout with the innovation made possible using these particular types of materials for ternary data encoding. 
     The technique proposed does not require the near field optics to achieve the sub-diffraction limited feature size. The system of the invention will achieve sub-diffraction feature size through intensity dependent 2-photon processes.  FIG. 1  illustrates the conceptual design of the 2-photon write/read system. The data is encoded in multiple layers  12 , allowing data to be encoded with x, y, and z spatial coordinates. The 0-1-2 ternary code provides the potential to increase the storage densities by approximately 50% relative to binary two-photon based technologies. Since the overall x-y storage area is fixed in the CD/DVD disk  14  format at 120 mm (4.72 in) in diameter, more storage can be created on multi-layers in depth providing the ternary encoding two-photon sensitive storage. Data storage of up to 1 terabit/in 2  can be achieved with multi-layer spacings of 30 μm. 
     The concept of this invention is a multilayer data storage system of at least approximately five layers based on two-photon induced recording and two-photon fluorescence readout technology that consists of a ternary data-encoding scheme. Using a high numerical aperture (NA) objective lens, spatial resolution on the order of 120 nm is possible. This invention utilizes materials and processes disclosed for Belfield&#39;s previous binary write-once read-many (WORM) three-dimensional (3-D) optical data storage invention for which a U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/306,960 was filed on Nov. 27, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,001,708 issued Feb. 21, 2006 with a common assignee and by reference thereto is fully incorporated herein. In this approach, photoinduced fluorescence changes in a polymeric medium are employed to a WORM data storage medium with two-photon fluorescence readout. Both image writing and reading will be accomplished via near-IR two-photon excitation of polymer films containing a fluorophore and photoacid generator (PAG). Furthermore, rather than using the previously disclosed binary encoding scheme, a ternary encoding scheme will be utilized, increasing the data storage capacity by 50%. 
     Table 1 appearing hereafter summarizes the current state-of-the-art in optical data storage disks (CD-ROM and red DVD), and on a third in development (blue 2-layer DVD. 
     
       
         
               
             
               
               
               
               
               
               
             
               
               
               
               
               
               
             
           
               
                 TABLE 1 
               
             
             
               
                   
               
               
                 Storage Details for State of the Art Optical Storage Disks 
               
               
                 Disk Diameter = 120 mm = 4.72 in. 
               
               
                 DVD Hub = 0.85 in 
               
               
                 CD Hub = 1.81 in; Active Area = 14.0 in 2   
               
               
                 Active Area = 16 in 2 , 2 Layers Thickness = 1 mm. 
               
             
          
           
               
                   
                 Gbytes 
                   
                   
                   
                   
               
               
                   
                 Per 
                 Gbits/ 
                   
                 Bit and Land 
                 Bit and Land 
               
               
                 Format 
                 Format 
                 in 2   
                 Bits/μm 2   
                 Area (μm) 2   
                 Width (μm) 
               
               
                   
               
             
          
           
               
                 CD ROM 
                 0.600 
                 0.344 
                 0.533 
                 1.87 
                 1.370 
               
               
                 1 Layer 
                   
                   
                   
                 μ2 
               
               
                 Red DVD 
                 4.7 
                 2.34 
                 3.63 
                 0.275 
                 0.524 
               
               
                 1 Layer 
               
               
                 DVD 
                 ~10 
                 5.0 
                 7.75 
                 0.129 
                 0.507 
               
               
                 2-Layer 
                 ~5 
                 2.5 
                 3.87 
                 0.258 
                 per layer 
               
               
                   
                 per 
                 per 
                 per 
                 per layer 
               
               
                   
                 layer 
                 layer 
                 layer 
               
               
                   
               
               
                 Gbits/in 2  = [Gbytes/Format] × 8 (bits/byte)/Format area (in 2 ) 
               
               
                 Bits/μm 2  = [Gbits/in 2 ] × 1.55 × 10 −9  (in 2 /μm 2 ) 
               
               
                 Bit and Land Area (μm 2 ) = [1/Bits/μm 2 ] 
               
               
                 Bit and Land width (μm) = Square Root Bit Area 
               
             
          
         
       
     
     Writing and Reading Optical Data 
     The write/read system using the two-photon technology is a five-part process. Part one involves the creation of the data storage medium; Parts two and three entail the data writing process; while Part four and five comprise the data reading process. The process is conducted using a focused near-IR laser beam  22  to write and read data from a multilayered optical disk  14  ( FIG. 2 ). 
     The recording medium is cast from a transparent polymer (polystyrene, PMMA, or polycarbonate) impregnated with a photosensitive Photo-Acid Generator (PAG) (commercially available “onium salt” that is currently used in photolithography) and a reactive dye (RD) (a stable fluorene dye). 
     In Part two, a near infra-red tunable Ti:Sapphire (Clark-MRX or Mira) laser beam  22  is focused into the storage medium  14  with a high intensity, short pulse at 730 nm ( FIG. 3 ). The depth of focus of the lens  32  for the laser beam  22  is able to be adjusted, yield the three-dimensional ability for data storage using this technique. The minimum spot size of the focused laser beam is the “diffraction limit” (DL) of the lens, also called the Rayleigh criterion limit, the “circle of confusion”, or the Airy disk. The DL=(α/NA), where α is the recording wavelength and the NA is the numerical aperture of the focusing lens. It is proposed to utilize an NA=1.4 to produce a smaller DL=approximately 520 nm. The photosensitive PAG molecules and the reactive dye (RD) in medium do not absorb 1-photon 730 nm IR light at modest intensity (I), thus, allowing the approximately 730 nm photons to penetrate into the medium until the strength of the intensity squared (I 2 ) is very high. If ultraviolet light of (approximately 365 nm) was utilized, it would enter the medium, be absorbed by the PAG to make excited PAG+, and also be absorbed by the polymer medium. This would prevent the deep penetration needed for multi-layer storage. The theory and practice of 2-photon absorption is that when the squared intensity (I 2 ) is high enough, the PAG will absorb 2-photons at approximately 730 nm that will have the same energy as 1-photon at approximately 365 nm, and will be excited to PAG+. Because excitation by 2-photon absorption depends on I 2  rather than being linear with (I), the 2-photon excitation is designated a “non-linear optical” (NLO) effect. The sequences of reactions following 2-photon absorption by PAG are shown in Table 2: 
                                         PAG + 730 nm (2-photon)   →   PAG+ [proportional to (I 2 )]       PAG+   →   H +  (acid) + PAG −                 (negative counterion)       RD (Reactive Dye − fluorene) * + H +     →   RD +  (protonated fluorine), the               Fluorescence Emitter (FE)                    
PAG is excited to PAG+. The PAG+ yields a proton (H + ) and donates it to RD, leaving PAG − , which is a stable negative counter-ion. RD becomes RD + , which is the protonated fluorene dye, a Fluorescence Emitter (FE).
 
     The third part ( FIG. 4 ) of the process is the formation of the stable balanced ion pair from the negative counter-ion, PAG − , and the positive RD + . The stable ion pairs make-up the data storage “voxel” (volume pixel) in the medium. At this point of the process, the data has been encoded into the medium. 
     In Part  4  ( FIG. 5 ), the laser beam  22  is retuned for data reading. Readout is performed by stimulating the fluorescence of FE and RD using a 2-photon laser light pulse (approximately ˜10 μs), thus ensuring deep penetration of the light to the desired depth. Since stimulation with approximately 730 nm light would excite more PAG and create more FE during reading, thus convolute the fluorescence readout, an approximately 800 nm light is used. Approximately 800 nm light will cause fluorescence of both FE and RD without exciting more PAG. 
     In Part  5  ( FIG. 6 ), the FE and RD, fluoresces at approximately 650 nm and approximately 530 nm, respectively. These two fluorescent output signals (lasting for ˜5 ns) give a unique advantage in data storage. These signals allow the reading of 3 pieces (ternary) rather than 2 pieces (binary) of information from each bit. This gives us a potential advantage of (3/2) or approximately 50% more data storage from the same number of bits over a binary system. As shown in  FIG. 1 , Channel  2   16  (red from FE) produces “0” and “1”, while Channel  1   18  (green from RD) is taken as a ratio of the intensity of channel  1  to channel  2  to give the third bit noted as “2”. 
     High Density Data Storage 
     The quadratic dependence of two-photon excitation on incident intensity relative to single-photon excitation is illustrated in  FIG. 7 . The more highly localized two-photon excitation can be observed in the focal volume. The lower circle represents the diffraction limit spot made by the entering focused laser light. The cylinder of that diameter, labeled “1-photon (proportional to 1/Area) is the cylindrical volume of the diffraction limit spot in depth that represents the linear absorption intensity of the entering light, and the area-volume of product that would be made by 1-photon absorption of ultraviolet light. The Gaussian curve of  FIG. 7  within the focal cylinder, “2-photon (intensity α 1/area 2 )”, is the distribution of light intensity squared (I 2 ). Since PAG does not absorb 1-photon light at approximately 730 nm, and does not absorb 2-photon light until I 2  reaches a maximum, the focal volume has decreased to the smaller area at the middle of the two cones before 2-photon absorption occurs. The inner “voxel” (volume pixel) that is formed by the diffraction limited laser spot on or in the recording medium, and the sub-diffraction limit areas of the fluorescence emitter (FE) product are formed. Using a high numerical aperture (NA) lens, spatial resolution can be maximized, but the diffraction limit cannot be surpassed except for some modifications of point-spread functions. However, the nonlinear phenomenon of two-photon absorption can be exploited to produce sub-diffraction-limit spatial resolution, on the order of approximately 120 nm using a high NA objective lens. Thus, even if the focal spot size for a given optical system (wavelength and objective lens) is larger than the diffraction limit, the diffraction limit can be exceeded provided that the photochemical processes responsible for the formation of voxels has a threshold response to excitation light intensity. The threshold is the level of light intensity above which the photochemical reactions become irreversible (e.g., permanent modification of fluorescence or refractive index). In this case, the diffraction limit becomes just a measure of focal spot size; it does not put any actual constraint on the voxel size. 
     Recently others reported that they have measured the voxel sizes of 2-photon-created polymer and show voxel cross-section of approximately 120 nm, compared to diffraction limit spots of approximately 500 nm. This threshold performance depends on individual photochemical reactions and will be optimized for the proposed two-photon PAG/fluorophore system. Furthermore, if confocal or adaptive optics are employed, spatial resolution on the order of 100 nm in both axial and lateral dimensions can be expected. If the voxel containing the fluorescent product of the 2-photon reaction remains sub-diffraction limit, and if it can be read out using diffraction limit readout optics, then one can achieve increased data storage by the use of closer packing of data in voxels of about 4-fold in area, which could reduce the number of layers needed for high density data storage by up to 4-fold. 
     The inherent three-dimensional features associated with two-photon absorption provides an excellent basis upon which to combine spatially-resolved, two-photon induced photoacid generation and fluorescence quenching with nondestructive two-photon fluorescence imaging, eliminating the need for a fixing step. A significant advantage of this approach is that solutions for optical storage can take advantage of new spatial and spectral dimensions. In addition, this multilayer approach provides optical memories that use the volume of the medium by recording data as binary (or ternary) planes stacked in 3-D. The use of transparent materials as storage media, allows for a large number of layers that can be used. The data is stored in discrete bits in the plane, but also through the volume. Relative to a one-photon-based process, much higher information densities can be obtained by writing multiple layers of bits; this is due to, first, the excitation light penetrates deeply into the material, and is absorbed only at the focal region, and secondly, Rayleigh scattering is reduced for the longer wavelengths used for two-photon excitation. 
     Two Photon Process Details 
       FIG. 8  illustrates the chemical process yielding image formation within a photosensitive polymeric film containing PAG and an acid-sensitive fluorophore, which allows two-photon induced, dual-channel fluorescence imaging. 
     With the beam focused in the plane of the fluorophore-containing layer, fluorescence intensity is recorded with both channel  1  (green) and channel  2  (red) simultaneously. The contrast in the “green” channel is due to the decrease in fluorescence of fluorene  1  (whose concentration decreases with irradiation). Contrast in the “red” channel is due to the fluorescence of monoprotonated  2  (whose concentration increases with irradiation). 
       FIGS. 9   a  and  9   b  show films exposed using an Air Force image resolution target with images recorded by both channels. The large differences in fluorescence intensity in exposed and unexposed regions can be clearly seen in the graph ( FIG. 9   c ) as well as the reverse parity of the images in the two channels, i.e. “positive” and “negative” image formation from one system. Time-dependent studies were performed by irradiating the films for various times to determine the optimal contrast for each detection channel. 
     Reported Other Approaches to Optical Data Storage 
     Although earlier discussed, it is reiterated that there have been several reported approaches to overcome the limitations associated with surface storage by pits in CD/DVD and magneto-optical disc technology that are currently in development. These other technologies include near-field recording, solid immersion lens frequency/time domain optical storage, spectral hole burning, photon echo memory multilayer storage with transparent materials, two photon and fluorescent memories volume storage, page oriented holographic memories and bit-oriented microholographic discs. The storage potential of these other approaches in comparison to current used technology is summarized in  FIG. 10 . 
     Traditional (CD and DVD) optical data storage discs are encoded with 2-bit (binary) “pits” on the surface, created by laser ablation (burning) of light focused on the disk surface through a DL optical system. The un-pitted area is called the “land area”. In calculations made here, the “bit area” that is calculated includes the bit and land area, and a “bit width”, which includes the pit and land width 
     For readout, the bits are scanned by DL-focused “red” diode laser beam, much as in  FIG. 1 . If the probed bit is transparent, the light goes through the transparent disk, is reflected back from the lower mirror, and returns to the photo-detector as a “1” bit. If the bit is opaque, the detector reads a “0” bit. The reflected signal light is usually collected through the same optics that transmitted the probing spot. The encoding converts 8 bits received to 14 bit words, which insure that the binary code for “1” is separated by no fewer than two binary “0”s. A collection of approximately 8 bits creates one Byte, which is the coding element. 
     The ablation system is a surface process, and therefore multi-layer storage is not an option. A maximum of 2-layers (top and bottom) is possible.
         From Table 1, the CD-ROM stores approximately 0.344 Gb/in2 with pit widths of approximately 1.370 μm.   From Table 1, the red DVD stores approximately 2.34 Gb/in 2  with pit widths of approximately 0.524 nm   From Table 1, the blue DVD stores approximately 5.0 Gb/in 2 , which is twice the storage of the red DVD, but it has 2 layers or the same storage as the red DVD per layer.       

     Accordingly, these disks are near the storage limit using near DL spots created by DL laser ablation and readout. The novel 2-photon-fluorescent memory system of this invention will achieve increased storage assuming DL read-in and read-out, using multi-layers, and 3-bit data encoding versus 2-bit readout. 
     There are two directions that can be taken in order to improve the capacity of 2-D optical storage systems. The first applies to surface storage systems and would be to increase the area storage density by surpassing the limit imposed by the diffraction of light. The second option is to add a third dimension in the spatial, spectral or time domain. This is the approach taken by the other technologies shown in  FIG. 10 . Adding a new dimension increases both the capacity and data transfer rates tremendously. A third dimension can be added by using multiple data layers instead of one. In two-photon technology, for example, hundreds of layers can be assembled using transparent materials as storage media. The data is recorded in binary planes stacked in 3D. On the other hand, in holographic technology information is recorded through volume. Summaries of some of the major alternative approaches that are in various stages of development are shown in the following Table 3. 
     
       
         
               
             
               
               
               
               
             
           
               
                 TABLE 3 
               
             
             
               
                   
               
               
                 Comparison of some of the other 
               
               
                 approaches in optical storage with current 
               
               
                 CV/DVD technology 
               
             
          
           
               
                 Approach 
                 Pro&#39;s 
                 Con&#39;s 
                 Comments 
               
               
                   
               
               
                 Invention 
                 Access to 
                 Requires 
                 Provides one further 
               
               
                 Approach: 
                 multiple data 
                 optimization of 
                 dimension in spatial, 
               
               
                 Two-photon/ 
                 layers 
                 photosensitive 
                 spectral, or time 
               
               
                 fluorescence 
                 Potential for 
                 media 
                 domain 
               
               
                   
                 high aerial 
               
               
                   
                 density 500- 
               
               
                   
                 1000 gb/in 2   
               
               
                 Near field 
                 Potential for 
                 Low optical 
                 Constrained to 2-D 
               
               
                 optical 
                 very high aerial 
                 efficiency 
                 surface limitations 
               
               
                 recording 
                 density (1000 
                 Difficult to 
               
               
                 (NFOR) 
                 Gb/in2) 
                 satisfy high data 
               
               
                   
                   
                 transfer 
               
               
                   
                   
                 requirements 
               
               
                 Solid 
                 Higher 
                 Requires 
                 SIL in combination 
               
               
                 immersion 
                 efficiency than 
                 extremely short 
                 with NFR will enable 
               
               
                 lens (SIL) 
                 NFOR 
                 working 
                 high aerial densities 
               
               
                   
                 Potential for 
                 distance of lens 
               
               
                   
                 high aerial 
                 to recording 
               
               
                   
                 density of 1000 
                 layer 
               
               
                   
                 Gb/in2 
               
               
                 Holographic/ 
                 Potential for 
                 Media 
                 Promising terabyte 
               
               
                 micro- 
                 extremely high 
                 optimization 
                 devices but technical 
               
               
                 holographic 
                 bit density of 
                 required - 
                 hurdles have 
               
               
                   
                 &gt;1000 Gb/in2 
                 problems with 
                 prevented its 
               
               
                   
                 Potential for 
                 shrinkage, 
                 commercialization 
               
               
                   
                 very high- 
                 scattering etc 
               
               
                   
                 speed systems 
                 Reproducibility 
               
               
                   
                   
                 of object beam 
               
               
                   
                   
                 is a problem 
               
               
                   
               
             
          
         
       
     
     Estimation of Number of Layers Needed to Achieve 1.0 Tbit/in 2  Storage Density 
     For the foregoing Table 3, it was first estimated that the approximate number of data storage layers that would be needed to store 1 Tbit/in 2  of data at the storage density of the CD-ROM and the red DVD, and then it was found that one would need about &gt;approximately 1000 layers for the CD-ROM, and about 400 layers for the red or blue DVD. In the subsequent Table 4, it shows the calculation in more detail for various storage densities up to approximately 1.0 Terabit/in 2 , under the following assumptions:
         1. The working area is approximately 14 in 2 , assuming CD-ROM format (DVDs are at approximately 16 in 2 )   2. The bit widths will be approximately &gt;520 nm, to stay above the DL of an approximately 800 nm photon focused with an approximately 1.4 NA lens.   3. The calculated bit widths include the land areas—there may be approximately 2- to approximately 5-fold error in these calculations   4. Assumed a binary (2-bit) readout, but include 3-bit (ternary) readout with (3/2)=1.5 or approximately 50% more bit information than the actual number of bits.   5. No inclusion of the extra storage realized from the small voxel bits of information that may be seen in 2-photon recording, because it is not clear that one can read these small voxels out with a DL 2-photon IR laser.
 
The calculations, using approximately 10 Gbites/in 2  in 1 and 5 layers as an example are:
 
Total Gbites/in 2 =[Total bites/in 2 ]/(1.55×10−9(in 2 ); Total=approximately 10 gb/in 2  
 
Total bits/m 2 =approximately 1.55×10−9×Gbits/in 2  Total=approximately 15.5 bits/in 2  
 
[Gbites/in 2 ]/layer=[Total Gbites/in 2 ]/number of layers approximately 2 Gb/in 2 /layer for 5 layers
 
[bits/in 2 /layer]=Total bits/in 2 /number of layers approximately 3.1 bits/in 2 /layer for 5 layers
 
Bit area(in 2 )=approximately 1/(bits/in 2 ); approximately 0.0645 in 2  for 1 layer, 0.322 in 2  for 5 layers
       

     Table 4 Data Storage (Gbytes) and Data Storage Density (Gbits/in 2 ) 
     Using 2-Photon Recording and Readout in Multiple Layers 20 layers can store up to approximately 75 Gbits/in 2    
     Approximately 50 to approximately 200 layers can store approximately 100 to approximately 750 
     Gbits/in 2   
                                                                                     TABLE 4                       Storage per   Storage Density           Format   Layers   CD Gbytes   Gbites/in 2     Bit Length (μ)                                CD ROM   1   0.600   0.344 Gbi/in 2     1370 nm       Red DVD   1   4.7 GBy    2.34 Gbi/in 2     0.524μ       2-Photon       2-bit Read   5   17.5   10   0.576       3-bit Read   5   26   15   0.576       2-bit Read   10   35   20   0.576       3-bit Read   10   52   30   0.576       2-bit Read   50   175   100   0.576       3-bit Read   50   260   150   0.576            2-bit Read   300   1.22   TByte   700   0.526       3-bit Read   300   1.83   TBit   1.050 Tbit   0.526       2-bit Read   500   1.75   TByte   1.000 Tbit   0.576       3-bit Read   500   2.62   TBit   1.500 Tbit   0.576                    
Approximately 300 to approximately 500 layers are needed to store 700 to 1000 Gbits/in 2    
     While the invention has been described, disclosed, illustrated and shown in various terms of certain embodiments or modifications which it has presumed in practice, the scope of the invention is not intended to be, nor should it be deemed to be, limited thereby and such other modifications or embodiments as may be suggested by the teachings herein are particularly reserved especially as they fall within the breadth and scope of the claims here appended.