Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-dnltx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-18T07:20:38.857Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Materials Development for Thermally-Assisted Magnetic Recording Media

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2011

C.F. Brucker
Affiliation:
Seagate Technology, 47050 Kato Road Fremont, CA 94538, U.S.A.
T.W. McDaniel
Affiliation:
Seagate Technology, 47050 Kato Road Fremont, CA 94538, U.S.A.
Get access

Abstract

We have carried out a combined experimental and computer simulation study to specify and identify candidate films to support high areal density, thermally-assisted magnetic recording. The motivation of this work is to utilize the enhanced writability of very high coercivity materials that thermal assistance can provide. Media with high coercivity (and anisotropy Ku) are known to be essential to achieve a sufficiently high ratio of KuV/kBT necessary to maintain magnetic stability at temperature T in media switching units (grains; single domains) of volume V. Nominally, we expect V ∝ D−3/2, where D is the medium bit density per unit area in recording. A micromagnetic recording simulation tool with a capability of representing realistic grain size distributions, temperature-dependent magnetic properties, and spatially-varying imposed temperature distributions was employed to study the interplay of thermal and magnetic field gradients in the recording process. In addition, a simple LLG-based thermomagnetic switching model supplemented the micromagnetics model. We fabricated improved Co/X multilayer media for recording evaluation, and performed standard materials characterization.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2001

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

[1]Weller, Dieter and Moser, Andreas, IEEE Trans. Magn. 35, 4423 (1999).Google Scholar
[2]Charap, S.H., Lu, Pu-Ling, and He, Yanjun, IEEE Trans. Magn. 33, 978 (1997).Google Scholar
[3]Wood, Roger, IEEE Trans. Magn. 36, 36 (2000).10.1109/20.824422Google Scholar
[4]Weller, D., et al, IEEE Trans. Magn. 36, 10 (2000).10.1109/20.824418Google Scholar
[5]Saga, H., et al, Proc. MORIS 1999, J. Magn. Soc. Jpn. 23, Suppl. S1, 225 (1999); H. Nemoto et al, ibid, p.229; H. Katayama, et al, ibid, p.233 (1999); H. Katayama, et al, IEEE Trans. Magn. 36, 195 (2000).Google Scholar
[6]Peng, Wenbin, et al, Intermag Conference 2000, to be published in IEEE Trans. Magn. Google Scholar
[7]Bertram, H.N. and Williams, M., IEEE Trans. Magn. 36, 4 (2000).Google Scholar
[8]McDaniel, T.W., J. Magn. Soc. Jpn. 23, Suppl. No. S1, 251 (1999).Google Scholar
[9]Alex, M., Tselikov, A., McDaniel, T., Deeman, N., Valet, T., and Chen, D., Intermag Conference 2001 paper HC-01, to be published in IEEE Trans. Magn. Google Scholar
[10]Technologies, Euxine, Advanced Recording Model (ARM), Broomfield, CO 80020 USAGoogle Scholar
[11]Ruigrok, Jaap J.M., Proc. MORIS / APDSC 2000, Nagoya, Japan; to be published in J. Magn. Soc. Japan. Google Scholar
[12]Ouchi, Kazuhiro and Honda, Naoki, IEEE Trans. Magn. 36, 16 (2000).Google Scholar
[13]Alex, M., Valet, T., McDaniel, T., and Brucker, C., MORIS / APDSC 2000, Nagoya, Japan; to be published in J. Magn. Soc. Jpn. Google Scholar
[14]Brucker, C., “Magneto-Optical Thin Film Recording Materials in Practice,” Handbook of Magneto- Optical Data Recording, ed. McDaniel, T.W. and Victora, R.H., (Noyes, 1997) pp. 279361.Google Scholar
[15]Klaassen, K.B. and Peppen, J.C.L. van, Intermag Conference 2001 paper EA-06, to be published in IEEE Trans. Magn. Google Scholar