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| United States Patent | 4101976 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4101976.html |
| Inventor(s) | Castro; George (San Jose, CA);
Haarer; Dietrich (San Jose, CA);
MacFarlane; Roger Morton (Palo Alto, CA);
Trommsdorff; Hans Peter (St. Martin d'Uriage, FR) |
| Abstract | An optical data storage system and method that utilizes the frequency
dimension to increase the storage capacity significantly. The system
includes a storage material, for example, in the form of a block, adapted
to undergo a photo induced reaction upon exposure to light and which
exhibits inhomogeneous absorption line broadening. Data bits are stored by
selective photo induced reactions induced by a narrow band laser at
specific frequencies within the broad inhomogeneous line. The lifetime of
these photo induced data bits is of the order of years so as to provide a
non-volatile storage system. In a preferred embodiment, a material is
selected so that the photo induced reaction can be made reversible thereby
permitting, when desired, the erasing of the data bits. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4101976 |
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Frequency selective optical data storage system |
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| Publication Date |
July 18, 1978 |
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| Filing Date |
February 14, 1977 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A frequency selective optical data storage system comprising:
a material, said material exhibiting inhomogeneous absorption line
broadening and capable of storing at least two data bits in the frequency
dimension, said material adapted to undergo a photo-induced reaction
resulting in information stored in the non-volatile ground state of the
material upon exposure to a light source having a wavelength bandwidth
narrower than the inhomogeneous line width, and
a first laser adapted to write non-volatile information on said material
with a wavelength narrower than and within the broad inhomogeneous
absorption line.
2. A system as described in claim 1 wherein said material undergoes a
reversible photoinduced reaction.
3. A system as described in claim 1 wherein said material undergoes an
irreversible photoinduced reaction.
4. A system as described in claim 1 wherein said material undergoes a
photochemical reaction.
5. A system as described in claim 1 wherein said material undergoes a
photochromic reaction.
6. A system as described in claim 1 wherein said first laser is adapted to
read said information.
7. A system as described in claim 1 wherein said laser is adapted to scan
said material.
8. A system as described in claim 1 including a second laser adapted to
read said information.
9. A three-dimensional optical data storage system comprising:
a layer of material having an inhomogeneous absorption line broadening and
capable of storing at least two data bits in the frequency dimension, said
material adapted to undergo a photo-induced reaction upon exposure to a
light source having a wavelength bandwidth narrower than the inhomogeneous
line width whereby said material is converted to a new structural
configuration in the ground state, and
a first laser adapted to form a hole in a narrow band mode with a
wavelength narrower than and in said inhomogeneous absorption line wherein
non-volatile information is formed in the frequency dimension of said
system.
10. A four-dimensional holographic memory system comprising:
a block of material having an inhomogeneous absorption line broadening and
capable of storing at least two data bits in the frequency dimension, said
material adapted to undergo a photo-induced reaction upon exposure to a
light source having a wavelength bandwidth narrower than the inhomogeneous
line width whereby said material is converted to a new structural
configuration in the non-volatile ground state, and
a first laser adapted to form a hole in a narrow band mode with a
wavelength narrower than and in said inhomogeneous absorption line of said
block wherein non-volatile information is formed in the frequency
dimension of said system.
11. A method of storing data in an optical storage system comprising the
steps of:
providing a material exhibiting inhomogeneous absorption line broadening
and capable of storing at least two data bits in the frequency dimension,
said material adapted to undergo a photo-induced reaction resulting in
information stored in the non-volatile ground state of the material upon
exposure to a light source having a wavelength bandwidth narrower than the
inhomogeneous line width, and
exposing said material to light at a specific frequency with a wavelength
narrower than and within the inhomogeneous line width whereby a reaction
occurs in said material to form a hole in the frequency dimension which
represents a data bit, said material adapted so that said hole remains
upon the removal of said light.
12. A method as described in claim 11 whereby a laser is used to expose
said material to light.
13. A method as described in claim 12 whereby said laser scans the broad
inhomogeneous line to expose said material to light at a plurality of
specific frequencies to form a plurality of data bits. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to optical data storage systems, and more
particularly to storage systems including the frequency dimension.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF PRIOR ART
The patent to Szabo, U.S. Pat. No. 3,896,420 describes an optical data
storage system that utilizes the frequency dimension to increase the
storage capacity significantly. The Szabo system includes a block of
material which can undergo optical saturation and which exhibits
inhomogeneous absorption line broadening. Examples of materials that may
be used in this system are chromium doped ruby; chromium doped magnesium
oxide, O.sub.2, S.sub.2, Se.sub.2 and SeS in KI; etc. Data bits are stored
by selective optical saturation caused by a narrow band high intensity
laser, i.e. hole burning, at specific frequencies within the broad
inhomogeneous line. The optical saturation is a physical phenonemom which
only occurs at high light intensities and which involves the excited
states of identical atoms which are in a slightly different environment.
Szabo's optically saturated data bits remain as long as the block is
exposed to the intense broad band laser. As soon as the intense light from
the broad band laser is turned off or removed, the lifetime of the data
bits in the material is of the order of 10.sup.-2 seconds. Since the data
are lost when the power or light is turned off, the system would be
classified as a volatile storage system.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is a primary object of this invention to provide an improved optical
data storage system.
It is still another object of this invention to provide a frequency
selective optical memory device.
It is yet still another object of this invention to provide a non-volatile
storage system.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a reversible storage
system.
It is another object of this invention to provide an improved
three-dimensional data storage system.
It is another further object of this invention to provide a fourth
dimension to a three-dimensional holographic memory.
It is still another further object of this invention to provide an improved
method of storing data.
These and other objects are accomplished by an optical data storage system
and method that utilizes the frequency dimension. The system includes a
storage material, for example, in the form of a block, adapted to undergo
a photo induced reaction upon exposure to light and which exhibits
inhomogeneous absorption line broadening. The material undergoes a
photochromic reaction or a photochemical reaction. Examples of such
materials are the freebase porphyrin (H.sub.2 P) and tetrazine. Data bits
are stored by selective photo induced reactions induced by a narrow band
laser at specific frequencies within the broad inhomogeneous line. The
lifetime of these photo induced data bits is of the order of years so as
to provide a non-volatile storage system. In a preferred embodiment, a
material is selected so that the photo induced reaction can be made
reversible thereby permitting, when desired, the erasing of the data bits.
Other objects of this invention will be apparent from the following
detailed description, reference being made to the accompanying drawing
wherein the specific embodiment of the invention is shown.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a schematic view of the data storage system including means for
writing and reading.
FIG. 2 illustrates an example of a laser output at three specific
frequencies.
FIG. 3 illustrates the inhomogeneous absorption of the material before
exposure to the laser frequencies illustrated in FIG. 2.
FIG. 4 illustrates the absorption of the material after exposure to the
laser frequencies set forth in FIG. 2.
FIG. 5 illustrates the detector output obtained by scanning the laser over
the frequency range AB.
DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENT
An optical data storage system suitable for storing data in the frequency
dimension to provide a third dimension is shown in FIG. 1. The system 10
includes a laser 12 having a scanner 14 associated thereto which permits
the frequency of the laser to be varied as is standard in the art. The
light from the laser 12 is passed through a shutter 16 which enables light
at selected frequencies to pass therethrough. A specific example of the
laser frequencies coming out of the shutter 16 which are at point 18 are
illustrated in FIG. 2 where frequencies M, N, and P are shown. The filter
20 and the detector 24 are not used during the write cycle and will be
hereinafter fully described during the description covering the read
function of the system.
The laser 12 has to be frequency stabilized, tunable over the frequency
range of the inhomogeneous line width, and operate in a narrow band mode.
The laser can be focused down to a dimension of the order of 1 micron.
Dimensions of this size yield spot densities of 10.sup.8 /cm.sup.2. The
spatial deflection of the laser (not shown) is accomplished with optical
means well known in the art.
The storage material 22 is a layer or block of material which is adapted to
undergo a photo-induced reaction upon exposure to light. The photo-induced
reaction would be a photo-chemical reaction or a photochromic reaction,
i.e., a light induced change in the materials optical properties. The
material involves a reaction of the atoms, molecules or molecular
aggregates which may be reversible or permanent. The material must also
exhibit an inhomogeneous absorption line broadening in an inhomogeneous
matrix such as shown in FIG. 3. In FIG. 3, a material has an inhomogeneous
absorption line which extends over a frequency range of A to B. An example
of a material which undergoes a reversible photochromic reaction is the
free base porphyrin, H.sub.2 P in a certain matrix. An example of a
material which undergoes an irreversible photochemical reaction is
tetrazine. Other examples of materials are the deuterated porphyrin
analog, D.sub.2 P, phtalocyanine and tetraphenyl porphyrin. Other
materials which exhibit inhomogeneous absorption line broadening in an
inhomogeneous matrix and undergo a photo induced reaction upon exposure to
light may be used in the practice of this invention.
In accordance with this invention, when the laser light having a frequency
M, (shown in FIG. 2), for example, ultraviolet, visible or infrared
radiation, enters the storage material film or block 22 having an
inhomogeneous absorption with the band width AB (shown in FIG. 3), the
laser burns a hole M' as shown in FIG. 4 which corresponds to a data bit.
This phenomena is known as optical photoreactive hole burning and its
mechanism is completely different from the prior art (Szabo) optical
saturation which depends on high intensities. In optical photoreactive
hole burning, certain molecules undergo structural or chemical changes to
yield non-volatile products which have different optical properties than
the starting molecules. This phenomenon occurs at both low and high
intensities; it utilizes the ground state of molecules as opposed to the
optical saturation phenomenon which utilizes excited states. The light
intensity only affects the writing speed. The photochemistry of this type
of hole burning involves only those molecules which absorb at a certain
frequency, in this case, M. The other molecules in the material which
absorb at frequencies other than M are unchanged since they don't
participate in the photoinduced reaction.
After the hole at M frequency has been burned or created, the laser 12 and
the shutter 16 are adjusted so that laser light having frequency N (shown
in FIG. 2) enters the material 22 to burn a hole N' as shown in FIG. 4.
Other molecules in the material which absorb at frequencies other than N
are unchanged since they don't participate in the photoinduced reaction.
Similarly, when the laser light has a frequency P, only those molecules
which absorb at P react to burn a hole P' as shown in FIG. 4.
Once holes or data bits M, N and P have been created, the holes represent a
non-volatile product, i.e., the holes remain unchanged when the light from
the laser has been turned off. The lifetime of the data bits corresponds
to the lifetime of the photoreaction product which is on the order of
years.
The storage feature of this invention lies in the tuning of the frequency
of the laser to burn a number of holes into the inhomogeneous broadened
line AB. The number of bits in the frequency dimension, that is, the
number of holes, is determined by N=1/2.DELTA.W.sub.I /.DELTA.W.sub.H, the
ratio of the inhomogeneous band width to the width of the hole.
.DELTA.W.sub.H is known in the literature to be as narrow as 10 MH.sub.Z
for some systems at low temperatures and .DELTA.W.sub.I is known to be as
broad as 10.sup.3 GH.sub.Z for other systems. A system containing these
two extremes would be able to provide as many as 10.sup.4 to 10.sup.5 bits
in such an absorption band. Since .DELTA.W.sub.H is in most instances much
smaller at low temperatures and since .DELTA.W.sub.I is substantially
temperature independent, the storage capacity of the memory is higher at
low operating temperatures.
Reading the data may be achieved in a number of ways. One approach is shown
in FIG. 1 in which the same laser optics that are used for writing are
also used for reading. However, the intensity of the light from the laser
12 is passed through a filter 20 which reduces the intensity of the light
to prevent further hole burning as was done in the writing process. A
laser's light scans over a frequency range which is greater than A through
B through the filter 20 and the storage material 22 into a detector 24.
Data such as that shown in FIG. 5 is obtained from the detector 24. The
detector output shows peaks at M", N" and P" frequencies where holes had
been previously burned. Peaks M", N" and P" in the detector output
correspond to storage bits of information "1" and zero detector outputs
are bits of information "0".
The reading and the writing of the data bits may be accomplished with the
storage material of this invention by using a different optical element
arrangement than the one shown in FIG. 1 as would be known to one skilled
in the art. For example, an intensity modulator (not shown) may be used to
replace the shutter 16 and the filter 12, thereby performing both the
switching of light function and the dimming (light attenuation) of light
function.
There are alternative ways to read the information by using several excited
states of one molecule. For instance, a particular material would have
both a singlet and triplet excited state. Assuming that only one of the
states is photoreactive, say the singlet, then the information would be
written in the singlet mode and could be non-destructively read in the
triplet mode. Another way would be to use two lasers of different
wavelengths in the writing mode and one laser in the reading mode.
Another approach to reading the information would be based on utilizing the
reflectivity or fluorescence characteristics of the material instead of
the absorption characteristics.
The preceding portion of the specification had described the use of the
frequency dimension with a spatially twodimensional storage system with a
layer of material to yield a three-dimensional optical storage system. The
preceding portion is also applicable to a three-dimensional holographic
storage system as is known in the art with a block of material to yield a
four-dimensional storage system.
Although a preferred embodiment of this invention has been described, it is
understood that numerous variations may be made in accordance with the
principles of this invention.
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Description  |
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