Advances in Macromolecular Data Storage
Masud Mansuripur

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel macromolecular data storage method using DNA-like strands within a micro-structured cube, enabling high-density, fast, and parallel data storage and retrieval.
Contribution
It introduces a new data storage approach utilizing macromolecules with multiple bases, combining read/write capabilities with massive parallelism in a micro-fabricated device.
Findings
Stores petabytes of data in a 1 cm3 cube
Reads/writes data at hundreds of megabits/sec
Uses macromolecules with base sequences for data encoding
Abstract
We propose to develop a new method of information storage to replace magnetic hard disk drives and other instruments of secondary/backup data storage. The proposed method stores petabytes of user-data in a sugar cube (1 cm3), and can read/write that information at hundreds of megabits/sec. Digital information is recorded and stored in the form of a long macromolecule consisting of at least two bases, A and B. (This would be similar to DNA strands constructed from the four nucleic acids G,C,A,T.) The macromolecules initially enter the system as blank slates. A macromolecule with, say, 10,000 identical bases in the form of AAAAA....AAA may be used to record a kilobyte block of user-data (including modulation and error-correction coding), although, in this blank state, it can only represent the null sequence 00000....000. Suppose this blank string of A's is dragged before an…
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