• DocumentCode
    801312
  • Title

    Commercial TMR heads for hard disk drives: characterization and extendibility at 300 gbit/in2

  • Author

    Mao, Sining ; Chen, Yonghua ; Liu, Feng ; Chen, Xingfu ; Xu, Bin ; Lu, Puling ; Patwari, Mohammed ; Xi, Haiwen ; Chang, Clif ; Miller, Brad ; Menard, Dave ; Pant, Bharat ; Loven, Jay ; Duxstad, Kristin ; Li, Shaoping ; Zhang, Zhengyong ; Johnston, Alan ;

  • Author_Institution
    Recording Head Operations, Seagate Technol., Minneapolis, MN, USA
  • Volume
    42
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2006
  • Firstpage
    97
  • Lastpage
    102
  • Abstract
    Tunneling magnetoresistive (TMR) reading heads at an areal density of 80-100 Gbit/in2 in a longitudinal magnetic recording mode have for the first time been commercialized for both laptop and desktop Seagate hard disk drive products. The first generation TMR products utilized a bottom TMR stack and an abutted hard bias design. These TMR heads have demonstrated three times the amplitude of comparable giant magnetoresistive (GMR) devices, resulting in a 0.6 decade bit error rate gain over GMR. This has enabled high component and drive yields. Due to the improved thermal dissipation of current-perpendicular-to-plane geometry, TMR runs cooler and has better lifetime performance, and has demonstrated the similar electrical static discharge robustness as GMR. TMR has demonstrated equivalent or better process and wafer yields compared to GMR. The TMR heads is proven to be a mature and capable reader technology. Using the same TMR head design in conjunction with perpendicular recording, 274 Gbit/in2 has been demonstrated. Advanced design can reach 311 Gbit/in2.
  • Keywords
    disc drives; electrostatic discharge; giant magnetoresistance; hard discs; magnetic heads; perpendicular magnetic recording; tunnelling magnetoresistance; TMR heads; areal density; bit error rate; current-perpendicular-to-plane geometry; electrical static discharge; giant magnetoresistive devices; hard disk drives; magnetic recording; perpendicular recording; signal-to-noise ratio; thermal dissipation; tunneling magnetoresistive heads; Bit error rate; Commercialization; Geometry; Giant magnetoresistance; Hard disks; Magnetic heads; Magnetic recording; Magnetic tunneling; Portable computers; Tunneling magnetoresistance; Areal density; disk drives; electrical static discharge (ESD); longitudinal recording; noise; perpendicular recording; reliability; signal-to-noise ratio (SNR); tunneling magnetoresistive (TMR) heads;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9464
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TMAG.2005.861788
  • Filename
    1580657