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Tuesday, September 11, 2007

A New Way to Read Hard Disks

Researchers believe that the magneto-electric effect might be key to creating the sensors needed for ultra-high-capacity memory.

By Prachi Patel-Predd

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Packing data: Hard disks will soon pack as much as one terabit of data per square inch--five times what disks carry now. Current reading devices will not be able to read the tiny bits, so researchers at the U.K.'s National Physical Laboratory have proposed a design for a new type of read-head sensor that might work.
Credit: University of St. Andrews

Data density on hard disks has roughly doubled every year for the past 30 years, and to keep up, researchers have made smaller and smaller sensors to read the tiny bits stored on a disk. Today's hard disks pack a mind-boggling amount of data--more than 200 gigabits in a square inch. But as the industry gears up for densities of up to one terabit per square inch, the sensors are reaching their physical limits.

Researchers at the National Physical Laboratory, in Teddington, UK, are now proposing a novel sensor design to read the bits on a hard disk. The design, published in the Journal of Applied Physics, is based on a different magnetic effect than current read heads. It could lead to much thinner and smaller read heads that are suitable for data densities as high as one terabit per square inch, says lead researcher Marian Vopsaroiu.

The new sensor would also use slightly less power than current read heads--an especially useful feature for laptops and MP3 players. And it could improve the speed of the reader. "You could read back data ten times faster," Vopsaroiu says. "Instead of one GHz, you can read at five to ten GHz."

Laptops and computers currently use the magneto-resistance effect to read hard-disk data. Hard disks store bits magnetically; depending on the direction of a bit's magnetic field, it can represent a bit 1 or 0. As the read head flies over the disk, the magnetic fields of the bits cause a corresponding resistance change in the read head's sensor. The resistance can't be measured directly, so it's first converted into a voltage using a direct current. (The voltage is equal to the current multiplied by the resistance.) In order for the whole thing to work, a current must run continuously through the sensor.

The new sensor will not need this constant current because it uses the magneto-electric effect. Materials that display this effect have coupled electric and magnetic fields: their electric field changes in response to an external magnetic field, and vice versa. So in the new sensor, a data bit's magnetic field will directly generate a voltage instead of a resistance. "Each time you fly on top of a recorded bit, [it] would induce a pulse voltage which is positive or negative depending on the orientation of a bit," Vopsaroiu says.

The sensor is a stack of seven layers made of materials with different magnetic and electric properties. Together, they interact and display the magneto-electric effect.

Current read-head sensors, by contrast, contain 15 layers, so they have to be thicker. "It is almost impossible to make a 15-to-20-layer stack in a 10-to-15-nanometer space," Vopsaroiu says. His design, he calculates, could lead to sensors thinner than 10 nanometers, with a data density of one terabit per square inch.

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Comments

  • What about writing?
    jfreidin on 09/11/2007 at 9:37 AM
    Posts:
    3
    Thanks for the very interesting article. Just wondering how that 1 Tb/in^2 gets written. Will it use same process in reverse, by applying voltage (current?) to the head, inducing a field over the target area?
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: What about writing?
      briang1621 on 09/12/2007 at 9:52 PM
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      50
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      4/5
      That is a good point jfreidin. Hard drives read and write, I seem to remember Technology Review talking about this technology's discovery before. But I do not remember whether it could also be used to write bits on the disk head. In which case there could be a large disparity in read write rates. As long as something improves I am happy.
         Brian Glassman
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      • Re: What about writing?
        Wouter on 09/17/2007 at 5:47 AM
        Posts:
        1
        Indeed it seems that the importance of writing-density has not been mentioned. The current technology in HDD's is pushing the "Areal Density" (Gb/in^2) forward by increasing the writing-density. The bottlenecks at this moment are the "writing heads" and the "magnetic media". Sofar, with "Perpendicular Recording" HDD-manufacturers are modestly confident that they can support up-to 1Tb/in^2 writing in near future and that the current reading sensors are not the limiting factor. However, the question is correct to ask whether with new writing technologies, the reading sensors will come under scrutiny again. We've seen the move from AMR (anisotropic magnetoresistance) to GMR (giant magnetoresistance), and could expect TMR (tunneling magnetoresistance) in the next few years. Who will say this smaller and faster technique, is not the next technology in line? But as mentioned in the initial article, getting it to work at the (technical &  economical) scale  necessary to be of advantage, a lot of work is needed!
        Rate this comment: 12345
  • [no subject]
    JDZV on 09/19/2007 at 9:55 PM
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    2
    Avg Rating:
    5/5
    this technology is a great advanced. I saw that the people of the world are using more the computers that their pencil and paper.Thats why I think that it could help us a lot in our discovering of our capacities and evolution. Maybe some day we can have that big memory in our USB.
    Rate this comment: 12345
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