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Did You Know?

. . . that nickel is essential for accurate, efficient data storage? It's a Natural Nickel Fact



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Did You Know?


Nickel Magazine, November, 2005 -- If you were to look at the surface of your CDs and DVDs under a microscope, you would see billions of tiny pits that are just a few micrometres across. This is how digital data is stored.

To manufacture millions of identical polycarbonate discs containing your favourite music or movies requires a miracle of modern technology. To perform this miracle, a physical mold, or stamper is needed.

A typical injection molding machine can churn out one finished CD or DVD, faithfully replicating minute surface details, every four seconds.

This means the stampers must be made of a material that can withstand the mechanical stresses and strains of this repetitive, high-speed manufacturing process.

That material is nickel. Its unique properties allow excellent pit definition and therefore better reproduction of original data. Nickel is added to the surface of molds in a process called electroforming.

 



Following, is a link to a technical paper published by the Nickel Institute, that provides in-depth information on the role of nickel in data storage:

Electroforming: A Unique Metal Fabrication Process


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