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  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 2002  > September  >
Chemistry for Everyone
Products of Chemistry
The Chemistry of Optical Discs
David Birkett
Loctite RD&E, Dublin 24, Ireland

Cover
September 2002
Vol. 79 No. 9
p. 1081

Abstract
The rapid rise of optical data storage is clearly a triumph for physics, engineering, and information technology, but a great deal of chemical innovation has also been necessary to make this revolution possible. This article explores the polymer and material science that has gone into the development of CDs and DVDs in prerecorded, write-once, and erasable formats, and magneto-optical (MO) discs and the related minidiscs. Prerecorded CDs and DVDs, where the data is stored as a series of pits physically stamped into a plastic disc, have required new optically-clear grades of the base plastic, technically sophisticated UV acrylic adhesives and lacquers, and a detailed understanding of the surface energy and the optical and electrochemical properties of metals in very thin layers. The different recordable formats have all needed new chemistry for the recording layer: cyanine and phthalocyanine dyes for write-once discs, low-melting alloys with a glassy state for erasable discs, and magnetic materials with closely defined Curie temperatures and hysteresis for MO and minidiscs. Even newer optical storage formats, including multilayer fluorescent or holographic discs are under development, and these are already demanding critical inputs by chemists.
More Information
*  Citation
Birkett, David. J. Chem. Educ. 2002 79 1081.
*  Keywords
Industrial Chemistry; Photochemistry; Plastics; Polymer Chemistry; UV–Vis Spectroscopy
*  History
Created:
Last Updated:
August 12, 2002
March 16, 2005
  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 2002 > September > Page 1081


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