Heat-assisted magnetic recording

Heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR) is a technology that magnetically records data on high-stability media using laser thermal assistance to first heat the material. HAMR takes advantage of high-stability magnetic compounds such as iron platinum alloy. These materials can store single bits in a much smaller area without being limited by the same superparamagnetic effect that limits the current technology used in hard disk storage. The only catch being that they must be heated to apply the changes in magnetic orientation. HAMR was developed by Fujitsu in 2006 so that it could achieve one terabit per square inch densities.[1]

Contents

History

Physics

The limitation of Perpendicular recording is often characterised by the competing requirements of Readability, Writeability and Stability commonly known as the Magnetic Recording Trilemma. HAMR is one technique proposed to break the trilemma and produce a workable solution. The problem is that to store data reliably for very small bit sizes the magnetic medium must be made of a material with a very high coercivity. At some capacity point the bit size is so small and the coercivity correspondingly so high that the magnetic field used for writing data cannot be made strong enough to permanently affect the data and data can no longer be written to the disk. HAMR solves this problem by temporarily and locally changing the coercivity of the magnetic storage medium by raising the temperature above the Curie temperature. Above the Curie temperature the medium effectively loses coercivity and a realistically achievable magnetic write field can write data to the medium.

Outlook

HAMR could increase the limit of magnetic recording by more than a factor of 100. This could result in storage capacities as great as 50 terabits per square inch.

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.tgdaily.com/content/view/30024/135/ ca. 2006
  2. ^ US patent 2915594, BURNS JR., LESLIE L. & KEIZER, EUGENE O., "Magnetic Recording System", published 1959-12-01, assigned to RADIO CORPORATION OF AMERICA 
  3. ^ Seagate ST-41200N
  4. ^ Kryder, M.H., "Magnetic recording beyond the superparamagnetic limit," Magnetics Conference, 2000. INTERMAG 2000 Digest of Technical Papers. 2000 IEEE International , vol., no., pp. 575, 4-8 April 2005 doi: 10.1109/INTMAG.2000.872350
  5. ^ ca. 2007 - 300 terabit HDDs in the future
  6. ^ ca. 2007 - No 300TB or 37.5TB HDDs in 2010
  7. ^ ca. 2009 - IEEE Spectrum overview article
  8. ^ http://www.simmtester.com/page/news/shownews.asp?title=HDD+company+alliance+to+look+at+new+technology+&num=13200

External links