Patterned media
Patterned media is a potential future hard disk drive technology to record data in magnetic islands, as opposed to current hard disk drive technology where each bit is stored in within a continuous magnetic film. The islands would be patterned from a precursor magnetic film using nanolithography. It is one of the proposed technologies to succeed perpendicular recording due to the greater storage densities it would enable. BPM was introduced by Toshiba in 2010.
Comparison with existing HDD technology
In existing hard disk drives, data is stored in a thin magnetic film. This film is deposited so that it consists of isolated grains of material of around diameter. One bit of data consists of around that are magnetized in the same direction. One method of increasing storage density has been to reduce the average grain volume. However, the energy barrier for thermal switching is proportional to the grain volume. With existing materials, further reductions in the grain volume would result in data loss occurring spontaneously due to superparamagnetism.In patterned media, the thin magnetic film is first deposited so there is strong exchange coupling between the grains. Using nanolithography, it is then patterned into magnetic islands. The strong exchange coupling means that the energy barrier is now proportional to the island volume, rather than the volume of individual grains within the island. Therefore, storage density increases can be achieved by patterning islands of increasingly small diameter, whilst maintaining thermal stability. Patterned media is predicted to enable areal densities up to as opposed to the limit that exists with current HDD technology.
Differences in read/write head control strategies
In existing HDDs data bits are ideally written on concentric circular tracks. This process is different in bit patterned media recording where datashould be written on tracks with predetermined shapes, which are created by lithography on the disk. The trajectories that are required to be followed by the servo system in patterned media recording are characterized by a set of "servo tracks" existing on the disk. Deviation of a servo track from an ideal circular shape is called "repeatable runout". Therefore, the servo controller in bit patterned media recording has to follow the RRO which is unknown in the time of design, and as a result the servo control methodologies used for conventional drives cannot be applied. Patterned media recording has some specific challenges in terms of servo control design:
- RRO profile is unknown.
- RRO frequency spectrum can spread beyond the bandwidth of the servo system; therefore, it will be amplified by the feedback controller.
- RRO spectrum contains many harmonics of the spindle frequency that should be attenuated. This increases the computational burden in the controller.
- RRO profile is changing from track to track.
Methods of patterned media fabrication