Solid state media Solid state drives use flash memory to store
non-volatile media. They are the latest form of mass produced storage and rival
magnetic disk media. Solid state media data is saved to a pool of NAND flash. NAND itself is made up of what are called
floating gate transistors. Unlike the transistor designs used in
DRAM, which must be refreshed multiple times per second, NAND flash is designed to retain its charge state even when not powered up. The highest capacity drives commercially available are the
Nimbus Data Exadrive© DC series drives, these drives come in capacities ranging 16
TB to 100
TB. Nimbus states that for its size the 100TB
SSD has a 6:1 space saving ratio over a nearline HDD
Magnetic disk media Hard disk drives store data in the magnetic polarization of small patches of the surface coating on a disk. The maximum areal density is defined by the size of the magnetic particles in the surface, as well as the size of the "head" used to read and write the data. In 1956 the first hard drive, the
IBM 350, had an areal density of 2,000
bit/
in2. Since then, the increase in density has matched
Moore's Law, reaching 1 Tbit/in2 in 2014. In 2015,
Seagate introduced a hard drive with a density of 1.34 Tbit/in2, more than 600 million times that of the IBM 350. It is expected that current recording technology can "feasibly" scale to at least 5
Tbit/in2 in the near future. {{cite journal|journal=IEEE Transactions on Magnetics|date=July 2002|volume=38|issue=4|pages=1719–1724|author=M. Mallary|display-authors=etal|title= One terabit per square inch perpendicular recording conceptual design|doi=10.1109/tmag.2002.1017762
Optical disc media Optical discs store data in small pits in a plastic surface that is then covered with a thin layer of reflective metal.
Compact discs (CDs) offer a density of about 0.90 Gbit/in2, using pits which are 0.83 micrometers long and 0.5 micrometers wide, arranged in tracks spaced 1.6 micrometers apart.
DVD disks are essentially a higher-density CD, using more of the disk surface, smaller pits (0.64 micrometers), and tighter tracks (0.74 micrometers), offering a density of about 2.2 Gbit/in2. Single-layer
HD DVD and
Blu-ray disks offer densities around 7.5 Gbit/in2 and 12.5 Gbit/in2, respectively. When introduced in 1982 CDs had considerably higher densities than
hard disk drives, but hard disk drives have since advanced much more quickly and eclipsed optical media in both areal density and capacity per device.
Magnetic tape media The first magnetic tape drive, the
Univac Uniservo, recorded at the density of 128 bit/in on a half-inch magnetic tape, resulting in the areal density of 256 bit/in2.{{cite book == Research ==