Researchers unveil DNA cassette tape with 36-petabyte capacity

In 2025, scientists revived the cassette tape using DNA to store vast amounts of data, far surpassing traditional versions. The innovation, developed in China, can hold every song ever recorded on just 100 meters of tape. Researchers aim to bring the technology to market within five years.

Researchers at the Southern University of Science and Technology in Guangdong, China, have reinvented the cassette tape from the 1960s by replacing iron oxide with synthetic DNA molecules printed onto plastic tape. This DNA-based version achieves a storage capacity of 36 petabytes, equivalent to 36,000 terabyte hard drives. While a standard cassette holds about 12 songs per side, the new tape can accommodate more than 3 billion tracks, assuming 10 megabytes per song, on 100 meters of material.

Xingyu Jiang and his team encode digital information by designing the sequence of DNA bases—A, T, C, and G—to mimic binary 0s and 1s. "We can design its sequence so that the order of the DNA bases (A, T, C, G) represents digital information, just like 0s and 1s in a computer," Jiang explained to New Scientist in September. The tape supports any digital files, including text, images, audio, and video.

The announcement drew widespread interest beyond academia. "One of the most unexpected outcomes was the wide range of reactions—not just from scientists, but from artists, engineers and educators," Jiang noted. "Many people wrote to us saying the work inspired them to think about data, biology and technology in new ways. That was incredibly rewarding."

Future development focuses on a specialized 'head' device, akin to those in magnetic tape drives, to handle reading and writing. "In our system, this ‘head’ precisely positions and presses a selected section of the DNA tape into a small reaction chamber, where chemical or biochemical processes—such as releasing, reading or rewriting DNA—can take place," Jiang described. The project emphasizes reimagining data storage in biological forms, with hopes of commercialization in five years. "For us, the DNA cassette tape project was always about more than just storage capacity. It’s about reimagining how information can live in physical, even biological, forms," he added.

Makala yanayohusiana

Realistic microscopic view of DNA damage and real-time repair in a living cell using a new fluorescent sensor.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Scientists develop live-cell sensor to watch DNA repair in real time

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Researchers at Utrecht University have engineered a fluorescent sensor that lets scientists observe DNA damage and repair in real time inside living cells and even within whole organisms. Built from components of a natural cellular protein, the tool provides continuous views of repair dynamics while minimizing interference with the cell’s own machinery. The work, reported in Nature Communications, could aid cancer research, drug testing and studies of aging.

Building on prior DNA storage innovations like the 2025 DNA cassette tape, scientists have unveiled a rewritable DNA-based hard drive that stores vast data for centuries in tiny volumes. Reported by TechRadar on March 8, 2026, it allows repeated erasing, overwriting, and rewriting—addressing key limitations of earlier concepts.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Researchers at Microsoft have developed a laser-based technology to store data in glass, potentially revolutionizing data centres with durable, sustainable archives. The method encodes information into nanostructures within glass layers, offering stability for over 10,000 years under extreme conditions. This advancement builds on earlier work and aims for scalable, robotic data libraries.

Researchers have developed a genomic mapping technique that reveals how thousands of genes work together to influence disease risk, helping to bridge gaps left by traditional genetic studies. The approach, described in a Nature paper led by Gladstone Institutes and Stanford University scientists, combines large-scale cell experiments with population genetics data to highlight promising targets for future therapies and deepen understanding of conditions such as blood disorders and immune-mediated diseases.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Chinese researchers have achieved a breakthrough in ferroelectric transistors (FeFETs), overcoming long-standing limitations of traditional versions and paving the way for large-scale applications. These transistors function similarly to neurons in the human brain, integrating memory and processing in a single unit to reduce data transfer time.

Physicist Pan Jianwei and his team have demonstrated device-independent quantum key distribution over 100 kilometers using single atoms, helping to close the gap between lab experiments and real-world applications. The breakthrough enhances security through the quantum-mechanical behavior of entangled atoms, protecting quantum communication systems from real-world vulnerabilities even if devices are flawed or tampered with.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Researchers have pushed standard telecom fiber to a record speed of 430 terabits per second, demonstrating potential for ultra-fast downloads. This breakthrough uses existing optic fibre cables and could support future wireless 7G research. The achievement highlights that global fiber networks can handle far higher data throughput than currently utilized.

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