Title :
5 Gb/in2 recording with dual stripe AMR heads and low noise thin film disks
Author :
Hu, Ben H L ; Ju, Kochan ; Han, C.C. ; Chabbra, Dave ; Guo, Yimin ; Horng, Cheng ; Chang, Jeiwei ; Torng, Terry ; Yeh, Gus ; Lal, Brij B. ; Malhotra, Sudhir ; Jiang, Zhaoguo ; Yang, Ming M. ; Sullivan, Mike ; Chao, James
Author_Institution :
Headway Technol. Inc., Milpitas, CA, USA
fDate :
3/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We have demonstrated magnetic recording at an areal density of 5 Gb/in2 using dual stripe magnetoresistive heads (DSMR) on low noise and low-glide height quaternary CoCrTa-based alloy thin film disks. The data rate is 120 Mb/sec with a PR4 channel, and the on-track error rate achieved is around 10-9. The demonstration was accomplished in two cases using two different types of heads. In the first case, it was done with a DSMR head having shield-shield spacing of 0.165 μm and 1 μm stripe height flying at 25 nm, resulting in a linear density of 321.7 KBPI, and a track density of 15.6 KTPI. The second case was performed with DSMR heads having shield-shield spacing of 0.18 μm and 8 μm stripe height flying at proximity height of 12 nm, achieving a 358.75 KBPI and 13.8 KTPI. This is the highest linear density published so far for either GMR or AMR heads. It is the direct consequence of high signal/noise of DSMR heads and proximity recording over low noise, low-glide-height media. To explore the large dynamic range of DSMR heads, this study was also done with a variety of low noise disks with Mrt ranging broadly from 0.45 to 1.0 memu/cm2 and coercivity of 3000 Oe
Keywords :
coercive force; hard discs; magnetic heads; magnetic thin film devices; magnetoresistive devices; partial response channels; 0.165 micron; 0.18 micron; 120 Mbit/s; CoCrTa; PR4 channel; areal density; coercivity; dual stripe AMR heads; linear density; low noise thin film disks; low-glide height; magnetic recording; on-track error rate; proximity height; proximity recording; shield-shield spacing; stripe height; track density; Anisotropic magnetoresistance; Coercive force; Disk recording; Dynamic range; Error analysis; Giant magnetoresistance; Magnetic films; Magnetic heads; Magnetic noise; Magnetic recording;
Journal_Title :
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on