Tebibyte to Pebibyte

TiB

1 TiB

PiB

0.0009765625 PiB

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Quick Reference Table (Tebibyte to Pebibyte)

Tebibyte (TiB)Pebibyte (PiB)
0.50.00048828125
10.0009765625
20.001953125
40.00390625
80.0078125
160.015625
200.01953125

About Tebibyte (TiB)

A tebibyte (TiB) equals exactly 1,099,511,627,776 bytes (2⁴⁰ bytes) in the IEC binary system. It is 9.95% larger than the decimal terabyte (10¹² bytes). The tebibyte is used for large storage volumes: enterprise SAN (storage area network) arrays, RAID configurations, and NAS devices often display capacity in TiB. A drive labelled "1 TB" by its manufacturer contains approximately 0.909 TiB. The ~10% gap at this scale is significant for data center capacity planning — a server room specified in TB vs TiB could be off by 10% of the total procurement budget.

A 4 TB NAS drive holds approximately 3.64 TiB. Enterprise SAN systems are commonly sized in multiples of TiB.

About Pebibyte (PiB)

A pebibyte (PiB) equals exactly 1,125,899,906,842,624 bytes (2⁵⁰ bytes) in the IEC binary system. It is 12.59% larger than the decimal petabyte (10¹⁵ bytes). The pebibyte is the storage unit for hyperscale data centers, supercomputer storage systems, and large backup infrastructure. Organisations at petabyte scale — cloud providers, scientific research institutions, video platforms — track capacity in PiB for precise binary accounting. The 12.6% difference from the decimal PB means that a 10 PiB storage cluster differs from a 10 PB cluster by over 1.26 PB of actual bytes.

The Large Hadron Collider at CERN stores approximately 15 PB per year, or about 13.3 PiB. Large cloud object stores are sized and priced in PiB.


Tebibyte – Frequently Asked Questions

TB (terabyte) = 10¹² bytes = 1,000,000,000,000 bytes (SI decimal). TiB (tebibyte) = 2⁴⁰ bytes = 1,099,511,627,776 bytes (IEC binary). TiB is 9.95% larger. The practical consequence: a 1 TB hard drive (decimal) holds 0.9095 TiB. This 10% gap is the primary reason drive capacity appears lower in the OS than on the box.

ZFS and Btrfs are copy-on-write filesystems designed for TiB-scale pools with built-in features that traditional filesystems lack. ZFS supports inline deduplication — a 10 TiB pool with 40% duplicate data might show 6 TiB of logical usage but only consume 3.6 TiB physically. Btrfs offers transparent compression (zstd), where a 4 TiB dataset of compressible log files might occupy only 1–2 TiB on disk. Both support snapshots that initially consume zero extra space, growing only as data diverges. These features make "used space in TiB" surprisingly complex to report accurately.

Yes. Linux tools (df -h, lsblk) display storage in IEC binary units: KiB, MiB, GiB, TiB. df -h output showing "1.8T" for a 2 TB drive is reporting 1.8 TiB. Modern Linux distributions correctly label these as TiB in technical contexts. This is one of the areas where Linux is more technically precise than Windows or consumer storage labels.

RAID arrays lose capacity to redundancy: RAID 1 mirrors two drives (50% efficiency); RAID 5 loses one drive worth of capacity; RAID 6 loses two drives. A 4-drive RAID 5 array of 2 TB drives has 3 × 2 TB = 6 TB raw usable (decimal), ≈ 5.46 TiB, minus filesystem overhead. Enterprise storage also reserves space for spares, snapshots, and wear levelling, further reducing usable TiB.

No. A tebibyte (TiB) = 2⁴⁰ bytes = 1,099,511,627,776 bytes — about 1.1 trillion bytes. Exactly one trillion bytes = 10¹² bytes = 1 terabyte (TB, decimal). The tebibyte is approximately 10% larger than a trillion bytes. "Terabyte" is often casually used to mean "1 trillion bytes"; "tebibyte" is the precise binary equivalent at 1,024 gibibytes.

Pebibyte – Frequently Asked Questions

PB (petabyte) = 10¹⁵ bytes = 1,000,000,000,000,000 bytes (SI decimal). PiB (pebibyte) = 2⁵⁰ bytes = 1,125,899,906,842,624 bytes (IEC binary). PiB is 12.59% larger. For a data center purchasing 100 PiB of raw storage, the SI vs IEC confusion would represent approximately 12.59 PB of missing or unexpected capacity.

Cloud providers (AWS, Azure, GCP) operate at exabyte scale but provision and bill individual customers at PiB scale for enterprise storage. Scientific computing facilities like CERN, the Square Kilometer Array telescope project, and US national laboratories store tens to hundreds of PiB. Large video platforms (Netflix, YouTube) store hundreds of PiB of encoded video content.

Using 20 TB drives (a 2024 high-density consumer drive): 1 PiB = 1,125,899,906,842,624 bytes ÷ 20,000,000,000,000 bytes/drive ≈ 56.3 drives. So roughly 57 × 20 TB drives to fill 1 PiB. In a data center using 60-drive storage shelves, one shelf of 60 × 20 TB drives provides about 1.07 PiB of raw capacity.

Magnetic tape (LTO technology) remains the dominant medium for cold storage at PiB scale due to economics and durability. An LTO-9 cartridge holds 18 TB (uncompressed) and costs roughly $100 — about $5.50 per TB, versus $15–20 per TB for HDDs. Tape also consumes zero power when idle, unlike spinning disks. The IBM TS4500 tape library can hold over 40 PiB in a single rack. Major users include CERN, national archives, and film studios — Netflix stores its master copies on tape. Tape's main downside is sequential access: retrieving a specific file can take minutes versus milliseconds for disk.

CERN's Worldwide LHC Computing Grid stores approximately 300–400 PB (petabytes, decimal) of data across distributed sites, with the main Tier-0 facility at CERN holding about 100 PB on disk and 200 PB on tape. The LHC generates roughly 15 PB of data per year from collision events. Future upgrades (High-Luminosity LHC) are projected to increase this to 50–100 PB per year.

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