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Heating Up Magnetic Memory

Seagate demonstrates a way to extend magnetic storage.

By Katherine Bourzac

Monday, March 23, 2009

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Demand for data storage keeps going up, even while consumers expect the cost per bit to keep going down. However, the magnetic-recording materials used in today's hard disks are reaching their storage limits and will probably max out within five years. To compete with newer technologies such as flash, the companies that make them need something new.

Laser lollipop: The lollipop-shaped device shown in the scanning-electron micrograph at top is an optical antenna made of gold. Measuring 50 nanometers across at its widest part, it is part of a prototype magnetic-storage system being developed by Seagate. When added to the magnetic-data writing head of a hard disk, shown below, it couples laser light to tiny spots on magnetic-storage media.
Credit: Seagate

Now researchers at Seagate have demonstrated the feasibility of a new technology that could extend the capacity of magnetic data recording for many years more. Called heat-assisted magnetic recording, it involves blasting the magnetic regions of a disk with heat to make it possible to use more stable recording media. It should make it possible to record data at densities 50 times greater than will be possible when today's technologies reach their limits.

"Within a few years, the magnetic-recording industry is going to have to find a new way forward," because the materials currently used are nearing their physical limits, says Randall Victora, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Minnesota.

The hard drive inside most computers is made up of one or more spinning disks coated with a magnetically sensitive film consisting of tiny, jagged grains. Data is recorded when a small head moves over the disk, flipping the magnetization of one of these grains so that it either points up or down, for a 1 or a 0.

"As we make the storage density greater, we have to make the grains smaller," says Ed Schlesinger, head of the department of electrical and computer engineering at Carnegie Mellon University, in Pittsburgh. "But you reach a point where the grains get so small, they become unstable," and their magnetic state can be altered by small temperature fluctuations.

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The problem cannot be overcome simply by switching to more stable recording media because today's recording heads can't write to them. So Seagate has been developing magnetic-recording heads that integrate a heating element. Blasting more magnetically stable grains with a short pulse of heat makes it much easier to flip them. When the media cools down again, the data is "frozen."

Heat-assisted magnetic recording still presents a tremendous scientific and engineering challenge, though. The heat is provided by a rapid laser blast that must be focused down to a spot the size of an individual grain--less than 100 nanometers in diameter. This is impossible to do using conventional optics. Instead, it requires a new generation of optics that work in what's known as the near field. The Seagate technology uses optical antennas, which can focus light energy onto areas smaller than any lens-based instrument can.

Comments

  • Technology forecasting
    Two quotes from this article are archetypes of two things that make life challenging for technology forecasters:

    (1) "To compete with newer technologies such as flash, the companies that make them need something new."

    This is a tip o' the hat to the Sailing Ship Effect. It has been observed that old technologies (like sailing ships) respond to competition from new technologies (like steamships), and tend to improve much faster -- and keep themselves alive much longer -- than simple technology superiority would suggest.

    (2) "As we make the storage density greater, we have to make the grains smaller. But you reach a point where the grains get so small, they become unstable, and their magnetic state can be altered by small temperature fluctuations."

    Fundamental limits like these have been called "Bowers Limits", though I am unable to find the reference to Bowers these days. (I first heard the term in the 1960s.) Bowers Limits serve the function of threatening trend lines that have existed for decades. But it is quite amazing how often seemingly insurmountable hurdles wind up hardly putting a blip on a trend line.

    Cheers!
    DaveT

    Rate this comment: 12345

    dtutelman
    03/23/2009
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