This application is based on Japanese Patent Application No. 2006-068890 filed on Mar. 14, 2006, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a recording head and a recorder, and, for example, to a micro-optical recording head which uses light for information recording and a micro-optical recorder using such a micro-optical recording head, and to an optically assisted magnetic recording head which uses a magnetic field and light for information recording and an optically assisted magnetic recorder using such an optically assisted magnetic recording head.
2. Description of Related Art
In a magnetic recording method, a magnetic bit is remarkably susceptible, at high recording density, to the outside temperature and the like, thus requiring a recording medium having a high coercive force. Use of such a recording medium requires a large magnetic field at recording. The magnetic field generated by the recording head has its upper limit determined by the saturation magnetic flux density, and this value is close to the material limit and thus cannot be expected to increase dramatically. Thus, a method is suggested in which local heating is performed at recording to thereby cause magnetic softening, recording is performed when the coercive force becomes small, then heating is stopped and self-cooling is then attempted to thereby ensure the stability of a recorded magnetic bit. This method is called a heat assisted magnetic recording system.
With the heat assisted magnetic recording method, it is preferable that a recording medium be heated instantaneously. Moreover, contact between a device to be heated and the recording medium are never permitted. Thus, heating is generally performed by use of light absorption, and a method using light for heating is called an optically assisted method. To perform ultra high density recording by the optically assisted method, the required spot diameter is approximately 20 nm, but light cannot be condensed to such a size due to diffraction limitation imposed on a normal optical system. Thus, several methods of heating by using near-field light as non-transmitted light have been proposed (see patent document 1 and the like). In this method, laser light of a suitable wavelength is condensed by an optical system and then irradiated to metal of several tens of nanometers in size (called plasmon probe) to thereby generate near-field light, which is then used as heating means.
[Patent Document 1] JP-A-2005-116155
With a general magnetic recorder (for example, hard disk device), a plurality of recording disks are laid in narrow space with a clearance of 1 mm or below therebetween. Thus, the thickness of a magnetic recording head is limited. The optically assisted magnetic recording head described in patent document 1 and a typical magneto-optic recording head (MO) have a large optical system arranged on the back surface thereof, and thus the magnetic recording head fails to support a magnetic recorder whose magnetic recording head described above is limited in thickness. From this point, very thin light guiding means and condensing means are required for the optically assisted magnetic recording head.
Upon formation of a light spot on the disk by a typical lens or an SIL (solid immersion lens), large NA (numerical aperture) needs to be provided to obtain a small spot size. This means that the angle of rays of light directed to the condensing point is large. An optically assisted section in the optically assisted magnetic recording head needs to exist under the presence of a magnetic recording section and a magnetic reproduction section used in a typical hard disk device; thus, as described above, large NA causes light to interfere with the magnetic recording section and the magnetic reproduction section and also leads to upsizing of the beam diameter and the magnetic recording head.
In view of the circumstance described above, the present invention has been made, and it is an object of the invention to provide a small-size recording head capable of high-density information recording on a small light spot and a recorder using such a recording head.
According to one aspect of the invention, a recorder has: a recording medium for information recording; a light source; an optical system where light from the light source enters; a slider which moves relative to the recording medium while not in contact therewith; and an optical waveguide arranged at position opposing the recording medium in the slider so that light entering from the optical system is irradiated on the recording medium, in which, where mode field diameter of the optical waveguide on a light output side is d and mode field diameter of the optical waveguide on a light input side is D, the mode field diameter is converted by smoothly changing diameter of the optical waveguide to thereby satisfy D>d.
According to another aspect of the invention, a recording head has: a light source; an optical system where light from the light source enters; a slider which moves relative to a recording medium for information recording while not in contact therewith; and an optical waveguide arranged at position opposing the recording medium in the slider so that light entering from the optical system is irradiated on the recording medium, in which, where mode field diameter of the optical waveguide on a light output side is d and mode field diameter of the optical waveguide on a light input side is D, the mode field diameter is converted by smoothly changing diameter of the optical waveguide to thereby satisfy D>d.
According to still another aspect of the invention, a recording head has: an optical system where light for information recording enters; a slider which moves relative to a recording medium for information recording while not in contact therewith; and an optical waveguide arranged at position opposing the recording medium in the slider so that light entering from the optical system is irradiated on the recording medium, in which, where mode field diameter of the optical waveguide on a light output side is d and mode field diameter of the optical waveguide on a light input side is D, the mode field diameter is converted by smoothly changing diameter of the optical waveguide to thereby satisfy D>d.
Hereinafter, an optically assisted magnetic recording head according to the present invention, a magnetic recorder provided therewith, and the like will be described, with reference to the accompanying drawings. Note that the same or corresponding portions among embodiments and the like are provided with the same numerals and thus their overlapping description will be omitted as appropriate.
The magnetic recording head 3 is a micro-optical recording head which uses light for information recording on the disk 2, and includes: a light source section formed of a semiconductor laser, an optical fiber, and the like; an optically assisted section for spot-heating a recording target portion of the disk 2 with near-infrared laser light; an optical system which guides near-infrared laser light from the light source section to the optically assisted section; a magnetic recording section which writes magnetic information to the recording target of the disk 2; and a magnetic reproduction section which reads magnetic information recorded on the disk 2. The semiconductor laser forming the light source section is a near-infrared light source, and laser light of a near-infrared wavelength (1550 nm, 1310 nm, or the like) exiting from the semiconductor laser is guided to a predetermined position by the optical fiber. The near-infrared laser light exiting from the light source section is guided to the optically assisted section by the optical system, passes through an optical waveguide of the optically assisted section, and then exits from the magnetic recording head 3. When the near-infrared laser light exiting from the optically assisted section is irradiated as a micro light spot to the disk 2, the temperature of the irradiated portion of the disk 2 temporarily increases, thereby decreasing the coercive force of the disk 2. To this irradiated portion where the coercive force has decreased, magnetic information is written by the magnetic recording section. The details of this magnetic recording head 3 will be described below.
FIGS. 2 to 5 show optically in cross sections the first to fourth embodiments, respectively, showing detailed optical configuration (optical surface shape, optical path, and the like) of the magnetic recording head 3. Moreover, construction data (Examples 1 to 4) of the first to fourth embodiments will be shown below. In the construction data of each of the embodiments, ri (i=0, 1, 2, 3, . . . ) denotes a radius of curvature (mm) of the i-th surface Si (i=0, 1, 2, 3, . . . ) counted from the light source section side, di (i=0, 1, 2, 3, . . . ) denotes the i-th axial distance (mm) counted from the light source section side, Ni (i=1, 2, . . . ) denotes an refractive index for an applied wavelength of the i-th medium counted from the light source section side, and x-axis slope ai (i=0, 1, 2, 3, . . . ) and y-axis decentering bi (i=0, 1, 2, 3, . . . ) show a slope angle (°) and the amount of decentering (mm), respectively, of the surface Si in a mutually orthogonal xy coordinate system. The light source position corresponds to the exit end surface of the optical fiber 14. NA (numerical aperture) and working wavelength of the light source are also shown.
The first to third embodiments (FIGS. 2 to 4) relate to a magnetic recording head of the type with total reflection conducted in the optical path, and the fourth embodiment (
In the first to fourth embodiments, the magnetic recording section 12B is a magnetic recording element which writes magnetic information to the disk 2, the magnetic reproduction section 12C is a magnetic reproduction element which reads magnetic information recorded in the disk 2, and the optically assisted section 12A is an optically assisted element which spot-heats the recording target portion of the disk 2 with near-infrared laser light. In each of the embodiments, from the inflow side to the outflow side of the recording region of the disk 2, the magnetic reproduction section 12C, the optically assisted section 12A, the magnetic recording section 12B are arranged in this order, although not limited thereto. It is only necessary that the magnetic recording section 12B be located immediately after the outflow side of the optically assisted section 12A. Thus, for example, the optically assisted section 12A, the magnetic recording section 12B, and the magnetic reproduction section 12C may be arranged in this order.
The magnetic recording head 3 of the first and second embodiments is composed of: the light source section including the optical fiber 14; the optical system composed of the ball lens 15 and the micro prism 17 for guiding near-infrared laser light from the optical fiber 14 to the optically assisted section 12A; the silicon bench 13 fitted with the light source section and the optical system; and the slider 11 which moves relative to the disk 2 (
The optical configuration of the first embodiment (
The optical configuration of the second embodiment (
The optical configuration of the third embodiment (
The optical configuration of the fourth embodiment (
Next, the optically assisted section 12A included in the slider 11 of the magnetic recording head 3 of the first to fourth embodiments (FIGS. 2 to 5) will be described, referring to the first to third examples thereof. FIGS. 6 to 8 show the first example of the optically assisted section 12A,
The optically assisted section 12A of the first and second examples has an optical waveguide composed of a core 21a (for example, Si), a sub core 23a (for example, SiON), and a cladding 24a (for example, SiO2). The optically assisted section 12A of the third example has an optical waveguide composed of a core 21a and a cladding 24a. Arranged at or near light exit position of the optical waveguide, as shown in
The spot diameter required for performing super-high-density recording in an optically assisted method is approximately 20 nm. Considering the light utilization efficiency, the mode field diameter (MFD) in the plasmon probe 30 is preferably approximately 0.3 μm. Since it is difficult for light to enter therein without changing the size, it is required to perform size conversion to reduce the spot diameter from approximately 5 μm to several hundreds of nanometers. In the first to third examples of the optically assisted section 12A, forming a spot size converter with at least part of the optical waveguide permits spot size conversion to facilitate light incidence.
The width of the core 21a in the first example is fixed from the light input side to the light output side in the cross section of
If the leading end of the optical waveguide is so formed as to become narrower (or thinner) gradually, when light transmitted through the core of the optical waveguide reaches the core portion of a spot size conversion optical waveguide, the amount of light leaking into the cladding increases whereby light electric field distribution widens, thus resulting in a larger spot size. However, extremely too small width or thickness of the core of the conversion optical waveguide results in condition in which the transmission mode cannot exist as an optical waveguide, that is, cut-off condition. In this condition, the light is coupled together with the optical waveguide composed of the sub core (SiON) and the cladding (SiO2), thus permitting formation of a large light spot. The description has been given referring to the direction in which the small spot widens, and if light in the same form as that of the light spot widened by light reversing property as described above is made incident, the light spot can be reduced. Even with only one thinning direction, the light spot can be increased two-dimensionally.
The width of the core 21a in the third example, as shown in
As described above, to form a light spot on the disk by a typical lens or SIL, large NA needs to be provided to provide a small spot size. This means that the angle of a ray of light traveling toward the condensing point is large, which causes the light to interfere with the magnetic recording section or the magnetic reproduction section and also leads to the upsizing of the beam diameter or the magnetic recording head. On the contrary, in the magnetic recording head 3 described above, the slider 11 has the optical waveguide, so that no problem of interference with the magnetic recording section or the magnetic reproduction section arises in its arrangement. Moreover, increasing the mode field diameter at the top of the slider 11 by the spot size converter formed with at least part of the optical waveguide permits providing a small NA of the upper lens and permits providing a small beam diameter, thus contributing to downsizing of the optical system.
Typically, the length of the optical waveguide section agrees with the slider thickness, but may be around this value with some special configuration. For example, if the slider is formed into a concave shape (or convex shape) for position adjustment and if, on the contrary, the silicon bench is formed into a convex shape (or concave shape), the length of the optical waveguide section does not have to agree with the slider thickness. Moreover, it is preferable that the length of the spot size converter be 0.2 mm or more, because rapid spot size conversion causes light leakage which requires a length of 0.2 mm or more to reduce this excess loss. The length of the spot size converter in the first to third examples corresponds to the length of a portion where the width of the core 21a gradually changes from the light input side to the light output side, and thus corresponds to the length of the sub core 23a in the first and second examples.
Next, a method of fabricating the slider 11 having the optically assisted section 12A of the first example will be described, with reference to a process diagram of
To fabricate the slider 11 having the optically assisted section 12A of the second example, a core 21a is formed in
As described above, it is preferable that the material of the core of the optical waveguide be silicon and that the working wavelength of the optical waveguide be a near-infrared wavelength. Various materials with high refractive index are known, and use of such a material with high refractive index can support various wavelengths from ultraviolet light to visible light and near-infrared light, which permits wide choices for a member forming a laser or an optical system. However, typically, for a material with high refractive index, the etching speed is slow even when processed by a dry etching device, and also it is hard to provide a selection ratio with respect to the resist, thus resulting in difficulty in forming a micro structure with favorable performance. For example, for materials such as GaAs, GaN, and the like, visible light can be used but processing is difficult. Silicon is a typical material for semiconductor processes and its processing method has been already established; thus, it is relatively easily processed. Therefore, it is preferable that silicon be used as a material for the core of the optical waveguide. However, the use of silicon as a material for the core of the optical waveguide disables the use of visible light. Thus, it is preferable that near-infrared light be used as light used for the optical waveguide. That is, use of a light source of a near-infrared wavelength (1550 nm, 1310 nm, or the like) permits use of silicon, which has been used before, as a material for the core, thus advantageously improving the workability.
Silicon is much higher in refractive index than quartz; therefore, the use of silicon as a material for the core of the optical waveguide permits a large refractive index difference Δn between the core and the cladding, so that a micro spot (that is, high energy density) can be provided with simple structure. For example, as described above, forming the core with silicon and the cladding with SiO2 permits a large refractive index difference Δn and also permits the spot diameter as small as 1 μm or less, i.e., approximately 0.5 μm. Note that the spot diameter provided with an optical waveguide with a core formed of quartz is approximately 10 μm.
The refractive index difference Δn between the core and the cladding, where the refractive index (silicon or the like here) of the core is n1 and the refractive index of the cladding (SiO2 or the like here) is n2, is defined by: Δn(%)=(n12−n22)/(2·n12)×100≈(n1−n2)/n1×100.
It is preferable that the refractive index difference Δn between the core and the cladding in the optical waveguide be 20% or more. Use of an optical waveguide with a refractive index difference Δn as high as 20% or more permits providing a micro spot with simple configuration. The beam diameter of a basic mode is 1 μm or less, which requires a refractive index difference Δn of 20% or more. This 1 μm is a beam diameter required for energizing plasmon with high efficiency. The refractive index difference Δn is 50% or less, because Δn only approaches closely 50% with any high refractive index of the core.
Now, experimental results supporting that a refractive index difference Δn of 20% or more is preferable will be described. To determine a desirable value of refractive index difference, writing to a phase-change medium is performed and reviewed. A phase-change medium (GeSbTe) is used as a medium, and an LD (laser diode) light source (of a wavelength of 1.31 μm) with 10 mW is used as a light source. Silicon is used as a material for a waveguide, and the core diameter is changed to 5 μm, 4 μm, 3 μm, 2 μm, 1 μm, and 0.5 μm to fabricate an optical waveguide. At the leading end of the optical waveguide, a plasmon probe of gold is provided. At the experiment, the medium and the plasmon probe are brought to approach each other by using a piezo actuator with a clearance of 20 nm or less provided therebetween. Light is condensed by using an optical system to thereby enter the optical waveguide with diameters corresponding MFDs of respective waveguides to thereby transmit the basic mode. As a result, writing could be performed with a core diameter of 1 μm or less. With a core diameter of 0.5 μm, writing could be performed more favorably. Based on the above, it has been proved that the refractive index difference be preferably 20% or more and more preferably 40% or more.
As described above, silicon is an effective material for the core for a near-infrared wavelength, but when no processing merit is required, use of a different material with high refractive index as a material for the core permits providing effect of a micro spot with wide wavelengths ranging from ultraviolet light to visible light and near-infrared light. Examples of a material other than silicon with high refractive index (wavelength range) include: diamond (all visible range); III-V series semiconductor: AlGaAs (near-infrared, red), GaN (green, blue), GaAsP (red, orange, blue), GaP (red, yellow, and green), InGaN (blue green, blue), AlGaInP (orange, yellow-orange, yellow, green); and II-VI semiconductor: ZnSe (blue). Examples of processing methods for a material with high refractive index other than silicon include: dry etching with O2 gas for diamond; and dry etching processing with an ICP etching device using Cl2 gas or methane hydrogen for GaAs series, GaP series, ZnSe, and GaN series.
As described above, it is preferable to an optical waveguide whose core is formed of silicon or the like as a material with high refractive index, and this core with high refractive index permits providing a small light spot. However, if the optical waveguide is connected to the top of the slider without changing the small spot size (if a spot size converter is not used), an optical system with large NA needs to be used to make light enter the optical waveguide. Therefore, it is required to use, as an optical system, a lens with high accuracy, such as an aspherical lens or the like. Generally, hot forming is applied for fabricating a lens with high accuracy, such as an aspherical lens or the like, but hot forming accompanies a problem involved in fabricating a die, which requires the accuracy and like of a lens surface to be maintained during the forming process. Thus, the size of the lens needs to be relatively large size, with a current lower limit of approximately 1.5 mm in diameter.
As described above, for disk devices such as a hard disk device and the like, a plurality of recording disks are generally used in response to demands for a higher capacity. In this case, it is necessary that the magnetic recording head be thin to such a degree which permits it to enter and move in the clearance. Even when a plurality of disks are not used, a space between the housing wall and the disk is small for a small-size hard disk device or the like, and thus the magnetic recording head also needs to be thin. This space is approximately 1 mm. However, use of the optical waveguide as described above requires an optical system with high NA, which in turn requires the use of a lens with high accuracy, such as an aspherical lens or the like, that is, a lens in a relatively large size, which results in failure to satisfy this demand. The required accuracy in the arrangement of the slider and the optical system depends on the light spot size of the optical waveguide on the light input side; thus, from this viewpoint, it is necessary that the light spot on the light input side be larger than the light spot on the light output side (recording section side).
In the magnetic recording head 3 described above, the spot size converter is used to provide a larger light spot on the light input side than a light spot on the light output side. This permits use of an optical system with small NA, which permits use of a lens (for example, a ball lens, a diffraction lens, or the like) whose configuration is simple and which can be easily downsized, which in turn permits, for the first time, thinning the optical system. The arrangement accuracy required for the slider and the optical system is not strict, which is advantageous for assembly.
Based on the above requirement, it is preferable that where the mode field diameter of the optical waveguide on the light output side is d and the mode field diameter thereof on the light input side is D, the mode field diameter is converted by gradually changing the diameter of the optical waveguide to satisfy D>d. For example, for the first example described above, D is equal to 5 μm and d is equal to 0.3 μm (
It is preferable that the maximum height of the magnetic recording head combining together the optical system and the slider be smaller than space between the disk and the member (for example, case for housing the disk and the slider, the second recording disk). The magnetic recorder 10 shown in
The magnetic recording head 3 described above is an optically assisted magnetic recording head which uses light for information recording into the disk 2, but is not limited to the optically assisted magnetic recording head if it is a micro-optical recording head which uses light for information recording into a recording medium and also which has a slider that moves relative to the recording medium while floating thereon and that has an optical waveguide with a refractive index difference of 20% or more between the core and the cladding. For example, for a recording head which performs recording such as near-field light recording, phase change recording, and the like, the use of an optical waveguide with the features described above can provide the same effect.
Next, referring to the magnetic recording head 3 of the third embodiment (
Positioning of the silicon bench 13 and the slider 11 in the horizontal direction can be achieved with reference to a positioning mark (+) or the like as shown in
The slope adjustment of the silicon bench 13 and the slider 11 can be achieved by utilizing mutual interference using infrared light (slope adjustment 1). For example, infrared light is irradiated from above the silicon bench 13 as shown by an arrow of a solid line in
It is preferable that the silicon bench 13 and the slider 11 are bonded together with an adhesive. Examples of the adhesive include: a heat-hardening adhesive (liquid type, sheet type), a twp-part adhesive (liquid type, and an anaerobic adhesive (liquid type). Examples of the heat-hardening adhesive (liquid type, sheet type) include: (transparent) acrylic resin which transmits the working wavelength, epoxy resin, silicone resin, and thermosetting polyimide. Examples of the two-part adhesive (liquid type) include: (transparent) acrylic resin which transmits the working wavelength, epoxy resin, and urethane resin. Examples of the anaerobic adhesive (liquid type) include: those which are not cured while in contact with air but cured when separated from air; and (transparent) acrylic resin (LOCTITE (trade name) and the like) which transmits the working wavelength.
UV hardening resin used for bonding an optical component is usually not preferable since UV does not transmit through silicon and a slider material. Upon UV irradiation from the side, the UV does not reach a bonded layer if it is thin, which is not preferable. Those of the type in which both base materials are linked and bonded together by volatilization of a solvent are not preferable, because their bonding layer is thin to a degree that makes it impossible for the solvent to be volatilized. Cyanoacrylate adhesive (instant adhesive) which is solidificated in response to moisture in the air or on the body surface is not preferable because the moisture cannot penetrates through the adhesive surface. A substrate direct joining method may be used for bonding the silicon bench 13 and the slider 11 together. In this method, two types of substrates made of different materials are directly pressed into contact with each other at their surfaces and then subjected to heating or the like to thereby join the atomic orders together. This method has advantage that it does not require an intermediate substance such as solder, adhesive bond, or the like.
As can be understood from the description above, the embodiments and the like described above include the following configuration of a recording head, a recorder, and the like. With this configuration, the recording head and the recorder provided therewith can be downsized and a small light spot can be obtained. The small light spot size then permits achieving higher recording density.
(A1) An optically assisted magnetic recorder having: a disk for recording; and a slider which moves relative to the disk while floating thereon (that is, while not in contact therewith) and which has an optical waveguide for writing information to the disk (for example, the optical waveguide is arranged at position opposing the recording medium in the slider); an optical system which makes light enter the optical waveguide; and a member so disposed as to cover a moving path of the slider, in which maximum height of a magnetic recording head combining together the optical system and the slider is smaller than distance between the disk and the member, and in which, where mode field diameter of the optical waveguide on a light output side is d and mode field diameter of the optical waveguide on a light input side is D, the mode field diameter is converted by smoothly changing diameter of the optical waveguide to thereby satisfy D>d.
(A2) The optically assisted magnetic recorder according to the (A1) above, in which the member has a casing for storing the disk and the slider.
(A3) The optically assisted magnetic recorder according to the (A1) or (A2) above, further having, in addition to the disk, a second disk for recording, in which the second disk is the member.
(A4) The optically assisted magnetic recorder according to any one of the (A1) to (A3) above, in which the mode field diameter satisfies 40d>D>d.
(A5) The optically assisted magnetic recorder according to any one of the (A1) to (A4) above, further having a plasmon probe for near-field light generation at or near light exit position of the optical waveguide, in which the plasmon probe is formed of an antenna or an aperture having a vertex of 20 nm or less in radius of curvature.
(A6) The optically assisted magnetic recorder according to any one of the (A1) to (A5) above, further having a light source section which emits light of a near-infrared wavelength, in which a material of a core of the optical waveguide is silicon.
(A7) The optically assisted magnetic recorder according to any one of the (A1) to (A6) above, in which the optical waveguide is formed of: a cladding; and a core and a sub core arranged in the cladding, and in which a cross section perpendicular to a light traveling direction of the core widens in the light traveling direction.
(A8) The optically assisted magnetic recorder according to any one of the (A1) to (A6) above, in which the optical waveguide is formed of: a cladding; and a core and a sub core arranged in the cladding, and in which a cross section perpendicular to a light traveling direction of the core narrows down in the light traveling direction.
According to the present invention, with the configuration in which the mode field diameter is changed by smoothly changing the diameter of the optical waveguide so that the mode field diameter of the optical waveguide on the light output side is smaller than the mode field diameter of the optical waveguide on the light input side, a small light spot can be provided, which in turn permits higher-density magnetic recording.
The use of silicon as a material of the core of the optical waveguide can provide a larger refractive index difference between the core and the cladding, thus providing a micro spot (that is, high energy density) with simple configuration, which makes it easy to manufacture the optical waveguide. The use of a plasmon probe formed of an antenna or an aperture having a vertex of 20 nm or less in radius of curvature permits an even smaller light spot size, which is advantageous for high density recording.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2006-068890 | Mar 2006 | JP | national |