1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to magnetic recording systems, and more particularly to a magnetic recording disk drive having a medium with high thermal stability.
2. Background of the Invention
Magnetic recording disk drives use a thin film inductive write head supported on the end of a rotary actuator arm to record data in the recording layer of a rotating disk. The write head is patterned on the trailing surface of a head carrier, such as a slider with an air-bearing surface (ABS) to allow the slider to ride on a thin film of air above the surface of the rotating disk. The write head is an inductive head with a write pole or poles and a thin film electrical coil. When write current is applied to the coil, the write poles provide a localized magnetic field that magnetizes regions of the recording layer on the disk so that the magnetic moments of the magnetized regions are oriented into one of two distinct directions. The transitions between the magnetized regions represent the two magnetic states or binary data bits. The magnetic moments of the magnetized regions are oriented in the plane of the recording layer in longitudinal or horizontal recording, and perpendicular to the plane in vertical or perpendicular recording.
The magnetic material (or medium) for the recording layer on the disk is chosen to have sufficient coercivity such that the magnetized data bits are written precisely and retain their magnetization state until written over by new data bits. The data bits are written in a sequence of magnetization states to store binary information in the drive and the recorded information is read back with a use of a read head that senses the stray magnetic fields generated from the recorded data bits. Magnetoresistive (MR) read heads include those based on giant magnetoresistance (GMR), such as the spin-valve type of GMR head, and more recently magnetic tunneling, such as the tunneling MR (TMR) head. Both the write and read heads are kept in close proximity to the disk surface by the slider's ABS, which is designed so that the slider “flies” over the disk surface as the disk rotates beneath the slider.
As the areal data density (the number of bits that can be recorded on a unit surface area of the disk) increases, the magnetic grains that make up the data bits become smaller, which increases the possibility that they can be demagnetized simply from thermal instability or agitation within the magnetized bit (the so-called “superparamagnetic” effect). To avoid thermal instabilities of the stored magnetization, a minimal stability ratio of stored magnetic energy per grain, KUV, to thermal energy, kBT, of KUV/kBT>>60 will be required, where KU and V are the magneto-crystalline anisotropy and the magnetic switching volume, respectively, and kB and T are the Boltzman constant and absolute temperature, respectively. Because a minimum number of grains of magnetic material per bit are required to prevent unacceptable media noise, the switching volume V will have to decrease, and accordingly KU will have to increase. However, increasing KU also increases the switching field, H0, which is proportional to the ratio KU/MS, where MS is the saturation magnetization (the magnetic moment per unit volume). (The switching field Ho is the field required to reverse the magnetization direction, which for most magnetic materials is very close to but slightly greater than the coercivity or coercive field HC of the material.) Obviously, H0 cannot exceed the write field capability of the recording head, which is currently about 15 kOe for longitudinal recording, and about 20 kOe for perpendicular recording.
One approach to addressing this problem is thermal-assisted recording using a magnetic recording disk like that described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,834,026 B2. This disk has a bilayer medium of a high-coercivity, high-anisotropy ferromagnetic material like FePt as the storage or recording layer and a material like FeRh or Fe(RhM) (where M is Ir, Pt, Ru, Re or Os) as a “transition” layer that exhibits a transition or switch from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic (AF-F) at a transition temperature less than the Curie temperature of the high-coercivity, high-anisotropy material of the recording layer. The recording layer and the transition layer are ferromagnetically exchange-coupled when the transition layer is in its ferromagnetic state. To write data the bilayer medium is heated above the transition temperature of the transition layer with a separate heat source, such as a laser or electrically-resistive heater. When the transition layer becomes ferromagnetic, the total magnetization of the bilayer is increased, and consequently the switching field required to reverse a magnetized bit is decreased without lowering the anisotropy of the recording layer. The magnetic bit pattern is recorded in both the recording layer and the transition layer. When the media is cooled to below the transition temperature of the transition layer, the transition layer becomes antiferromagnetic and the bit pattern remains in the high-anisotropy recording layer. However, to utilize this type of disk the disk drive requires a separate heat source, such as a laser or an electrically resistive heater, that must be fabricated onto the slider, and additional control circuitry for controlling the timing and duration of the heat pulses. This necessarily increases the cost and complexity of the disk drive.
What is needed is a disk drive with a disk having a high-anisotropy recording layer/AF-F transition layer type of bilayer medium, but that does not require heating the disk.
The invention is a magnetic recording system with a medium that includes a bilayer of a high-anisotropy recording layer and an exchange-coupled antiferromagnetic-to-ferromagnetic (AF-F) transition layer but that does not require heating of the medium. The transition layer has an AF-F transition temperature (TAF-F) that decreases relatively rapidly with increasing applied magnetic field. Thus the transition layer has a transition field HAF-F(T), which is the applied magnetic field that is required to cause a transition of the material from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic at temperature T without the need to heat the layer. In a disk drive implementation of the system, the disk drive has an operating temperature range between a low operating temperature TL and a high operating temperature TH and the transition layer has a TAF-F greater than TH in the absence of a write field HW and a TAF-F less than TL in the presence of HW. At ambient temperature and in the absence of HW, the transition layer is antiferromagnetic and the switching field H0 of the bilayer is just the H0 of the high-anisotropy recording layer, which is typically much higher than HW.
In the presence of the write field HW the transition layer transitions from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic for all disk drive operating temperatures without the need to heat the transition layer. Data can be written to the recording layer in the conventional manner by the mere application of the write field HW without the need to heat the transition layer or recording layer. In the presence of HW, the transition layer becomes ferromagnetic so H0 for the bilayer is reduced below HW to enable writing to the recording layer.
The transition layer may be formed of Fe(RhM), where M is an element selected from V, Mn, Au and Ni.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and advantages of the present invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description taken together with the accompanying figures.
The recording layer 16 may be a material with horizontal magnetic anisotropy for horizontal recording, or a material with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy for perpendicular recording. If the disk is for perpendicular recording then the disk may include a “soft” or relatively low-coercivity magnetically permeable underlayer (SUL) below the transition layer/recording layer bilayer 15 and a nonmagnetic exchange break layer (EBL) between the SUL and the bilayer 15. The SUL serves as a flux return path for the field from the write pole to the return pole of the perpendicular recording head and the EBL breaks the magnetic exchange coupling between the magnetically permeable films of the SUL and the bilayer 15.
The disk substrate 11 may be any commercially available glass substrate, but may also be a conventional aluminum alloy with a NiP surface coating, or an alternative substrate, such as silicon, canasite or silicon-carbide. The overcoat 18 is typically diamond-like amorphous carbon, but may be any conventional disk overcoat or other known protective overcoat, such as silicon nitride (SiN). All of the layers 12, 14, 16 and 18 are deposited on the substrate 11 by conventional thin film deposition techniques, such as RF or DC magnetron sputtering, ion beam deposition, or molecular beam epitaxy.
The transition layer 14 is formed of an antiferromagnetic-to-ferromagnetic (AF-F) transition material that has a transition temperature TAF-F slightly above the highest operating temperature TH of the disk drive. The disk drive design specifications specify an operating range between a low temperature TL and a high temperature TH. Typical values of TL and TH are about 275 K and 330 K, respectively, for disk drives used in typical computer applications. FeRh or Fe(RhM) alloys are (AF-F) transition materials that have this property. They are substantially in the body-centered-cubic (bcc) phase and are substantially chemically-ordered. Thus the transition layer 14 is preferably formed of Fex(Rh100-y)100-x, where the subscripts refer to atomic percent, 0≦y≦15, and the value of x is selected so that the Fe(RhM) (or FeRh if y=0) alloy is substantially in the bcc phase. In the chemically-ordered bcc structure Fe atoms occupy the cube corners and Rh atoms the cube centers. For Fe-rich alloys certain of the Rh atoms are substituted with Fe atoms, and for Rh-rich alloys certain of the Fe atoms are substituted with Rh atoms in the cubic structure. According to the phase diagram FcxRh100-x alloys exhibit a single bcc phase for 48.5≦x≦55, and a two-phase mixture of bcc and face-centered-cubic (fcc) for 33≦x≦48.5. Thus for the present invention it is believed that the FeRh or Fe(RhM) alloy will have a sufficient amount of bcc-phase material to exhibit the required antiferromagnetic-to-ferromagnetic transition if x is approximately in the range of 40≦x≦55. The FeRh or Fe(RhM) alloy becomes substantially chemically-ordered by deposition at an elevated temperature or by post-deposition annealing.
The transition temperature TAF-F of the FeRh alloy can be increased or decreased by substituting a fraction of the Rh atoms with the third element M.
The ferromagnetic recording or storage layer 16 may be a high anisotropy material with a room-temperature coercivity so high that it is incapable of being written to by a conventional write head (i.e., its switching field H0 is higher than the write field HW). The recording layer material may be either a horizontal type recording material or a perpendicular type recording material.
One type of material for recording layer 16 is chemically-ordered FePt or CoPt (or FePd or CoPd) with its c-axis substantially out-of-plane for perpendicular recording or substantially in-plane for horizontal recording. Chemically-ordered alloys of FePt, CoPt, FePd, and CoPd (all ordered in L10) and CoPt3, CoPd3 (both ordered in L12) in their bulk form, are known for their high magneto-crystalline anisotropy and magnetic moment, properties that are desirable for high-density magnetic recording materials. These chemically-ordered films can be made by several known processes. Films having the L10 phase of FePt with the c-axis oriented out-of-plane or perpendicular to the substrate, and thus suitable for perpendicular magnetic recording media, have been grown onto a hot substrate by molecular beam epitaxy and by sputter deposition. They can also be formed by alternating the deposition of films of Fe and Pt, followed by annealing, the latter approach being described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,363,794. Chemically-ordered alloys of FePt and CoPt have also been proposed for horizontal magnetic recording media. For example, equiatomic FePt or CoPt can be sputter deposited as a continuous film and then subjected to a relatively high-temperature post-deposition annealing to achieve the chemical ordering. This approach results in the c-axis being oriented substantially in the plane of the film, so that the films are suitable for horizontal magnetic recording, as described by Coffey et al., “High Anisotropy L10 Thin Films for Longitudinal Recording”, IEEE Transactions on Magnetics, Vol. 31, No. 6, November 1995, pp. 2737-2739. In U.S. Pat. No. 6,086,974, a continuous granular film with grains of a chemically-ordered FePt or CoPt alloy in the tetragonal L10 structure and with the c-axis in the plane for horizontal magnetic recording, is produced by sputtering without annealing. Other high anisotropy materials suitable for the recording layer 16 include pseudo-binary alloys based on the FePt and CoPt L10 phase, i.e., FePt—X and CoPt—X, where the element X may be Ni, Au, Cu, Pd or Ag, as well as granular composite materials such as FePt—C, FePt—ZrO, FePt—MgO, FePt—B2O3 and other similar composites. While these materials in general have similarly high anisotropy as the binary alloy FePt and CoPt, they allow additional control over the magnetic and structural properties of the media. Other materials with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy include Co/Pt, Co/Pd, Fe/Pt and Fe/Pd multilayers. These multilayers provide the advantage that they can be processed at lower temperatures than the L10 phase materials, while offering relatively high magneto-crystalline anisotropy. Current horizontal magnetic recording disks use a recording layer of a granular CoPtCr alloy, such as CoPtCrB or CoPtCrTa. The anisotropy of this horizontal magnetic recording media can be raised to a level suitable for a high KU layer by increasing the Pt content and decreasing the Cr content.
For thin FeRh films the TAF-F decreases in the presence of an applied magnetic field and the gradient of this decrease is relatively large, i.e., approximately −8 Kelvin (K)/Tesla. This behavior is reversible, i.e., after the applied magnetic field is removed, the TAF-F of the thin FeRh film is the same as before the application of the magnetic field. This is reported by the inventors in S. Maat, J.-U. Thiele, and Eric E. Fullerton, “Temperature and field hysteresis of the antiferromagnetic-to-ferromagnetic phase transition in epitaxial FeRh films”, Phys. Rev. B 72, 214432, Dec. 22, 2005.
An extrapolation of the line 110 in
The SUL may be a single layer of magnetically permeable material, as shown in
The EBL is located on top of the SUL. It acts to break the magnetic exchange coupling between the magnetically permeable films of the SUL and the transition layer/recording layer bilayer. The EBL may not be necessary, but if used it can be a nonmagnetic titanium (Ti) layer; a non-electrically-conducting material such as Si, Ge and SiGe alloys; a metal such as Cr, Ru, W, Zr, Nb, Mo, V and Al; a metal alloy such as amorphous CrTi and NiP; an amorphous carbon such as CNx, CHx and C; or oxides, nitrides or carbides of an element selected from the group consisting of Si, Al, Zr, Ti, and B. If an EBL is used, a seed layer to assist the growth of the EBL may be deposited on top of the SUL before deposition of the EBL.
As shown in
The transition layer 14 should have a transition temperature TAF-F above the highest disk drive operating temperature TH. This ensures that when the disk drive temperature is within its design operating temperature range, and in the absence of a write field HW from the write head 20, the transition layer will be in its antiferromagnetic state. The transition layer material is selected so that its TAF-F exceeds the low temperature TL in the operating range by an increment ΔT. The increment ΔT is less than or equal to the amount TAF-F is decreased when the transition layer 14 is exposed to the write field HW from the write head 20. For example, if TL=295 K and TH=305 K, ΔT may be selected to be 15 K, which would result in selection of a transition layer material having TAF-F of 310 K. Then assuming a −8 K/Tesla slope for the AF-F phase diagram for the transition layer material, a write field HW of 2 Tesla (20 kOe) will reduce TAF-F to 294 K, which is below TL. Thus in the presence of the write field HW the transition layer material will transition from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic for all operating temperatures without the need to heat the transition layer.
Thus in the disk drive of this invention data can be written to the recording layer 16 in the conventional manner by the mere application of the write field HW without the need to heat the transition layer 14 or recording layer 16. In the presence of HW, the transition layer 14 is ferromagnetic and the transition layer 14 and recording layer 16 are strongly exchange-coupled ferromagnetically. The switching field is given by the following equation:
H
0≈(KU-RL*tRL)/(MRL*tRL+MTL*tTL), Equation 1
where RL represents recording layer, TL represents the transition layer, M is the moment and t is the thickness.
The recording of a data bit is depicted in
H
0
≈K
U-RL
/M
RL. Equation 2
Thus the thermal stability of the high-anisotropy recording layer 16 at room temperature is greatly enhanced over conventional ferromagnetic layers which have a much lower switching field. The transition layer and recording layer layers need to be strongly ferromagnetically coupled, which is achieved by growing them in direct contact with each other.
While the present invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the preferred embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the disclosed invention is to be considered merely as illustrative and limited in scope only as specified in the appended claims.