DocumentCode
1411650
Title
Digital Applications of Thermoplastic Recording
Author
Reeves, R.G.
Author_Institution
General Engineering Laboratory, General Electric Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
Issue
1
fYear
1963
fDate
5/1/1963 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
62
Lastpage
67
Abstract
Thermoplastic films´ unique combination of thermal, electrical, and optical properties results in a versatile information storage medium which finds both digital and analog applications. As a digital storage medium, thermoplastic is best suited as a file memory where large capacity and rapid read access is a necessity. Reading and writing rates are completely independent. The fabrication of either sequential or random access devices using tapes or plates is possible. These couple high density capability with electron beam agility to provide large capacity storage and outstanding performance with regards to data transfer rates and read access. The recording medium consists of a substrate for mechanical carriage, a conductive film for heat developing, and the thermoplastic film. The recording process consists of writing line charges with a data-modulated electron beam and then developing with heat. The surface grooves which are formed can be read optically with a flying spot scanner. The position feedback Information inherent in the recorded data allows tracking along a single groove regardless of density.
Keywords
Conductive films; Digital recording; Electron beams; Optical coupling; Optical device fabrication; Optical feedback; Optical films; Optical recording; Substrates; Writing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Industrial Electronics [May 1963], IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0099-4553
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TIE.1963.5409076
Filename
5409076
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