5D glass storage 'memory crystals' promise up to 13.8 billion years of data storage resilience, which is roughly the age of the universe — crams 360 terabytes into 5-inch glass disc with femtosecond laser

A small glass 5D storage medium is held between two fingers.
(Image credit: SPhotonix)

SPhotonix says it has moved its so-called 5D Memory Crystal technology out of the lab and closer to real-world deployment, outlining plans to pilot glass-based cold storage systems in data centers over the next two years, according to remarks made during an interview with The Register. The UK start-up, spun out of research at the University of Southampton and founded in 2024, made the announcement alongside details of its first round of external funding.

The company’s storage medium is a fused silica glass platter, written using a femtosecond laser that encodes data in nanoscale structures. Information is stored across five dimensions: three spatial coordinates (x, y, z), plus the orientation and intensity of the nanostructures, which are read back optically using polarized light. SPhotonix claims a single 5-inch glass disc can hold up to 360TB of data, with the media designed to be stable for 13.8 billion years — the estimated age of the universe — assuming there are no external mishaps along the way.

Whether SPhotonix’s 5D glass can transition from impressive density demonstrations to competitive system-level performance will determine if it becomes a niche archival medium or a viable storage solution in modern data centers.

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Luke James
Contributor

Luke James is a freelance writer and journalist.  Although his background is in legal, he has a personal interest in all things tech, especially hardware and microelectronics, and anything regulatory. 

  • Gururu
    Can't we just blast data to space and have it bounce around forever (for whenever we need it)?
    Reply
  • rluker5
    I don't know ..
    I've always been disappointed by extra dimensions in movie theaters.
    Reply
  • jsidhenneld
    The problem with this kind of tech always about the Technological Obsolescence
    Reply
  • DougMcC
    Gururu said:
    Can't we just blast data to space and have it bounce around forever (for whenever we need it)?
    The problem with this strategy is that write speeds are absolutely incredible but read speeds are negligible.
    Reply