This invention relates to storage devices, and more particularly, this invention relates to probe-based storage devices.
In the field of this invention techniques are known that use nanometer-sharp tips for imaging and investigating the structure of materials down to the atomic scale. Such techniques include scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM), as described in Binnig, G. et al., “7×7 reconstruction on Si(111) resolved in real space,” Phys. Rev. Lett., 50 (1983) 120 (Binnig 1983); and Binnig, G. et al., “Atomic force microscope,” Phys. Rev. Lett., 56 (1986) 930 (Binnig 1986). Both STM and AFM are suitable for the development of ultrahigh-density storage devices, as discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,575,822 issued 11 Mar. 1986 to Quate, which discloses a digital memory in which data is stored by establishing perturbations in the surface of a substrate and thereafter identifying the perturbations by establishing a tunnel electron current between the surface of the substrate and a movable probe. In principle, both STM and AFM are suitable for the development of ultrahigh-density storage devices.
In STM a sharp tip is scanned in close proximity to a surface and a voltage applied between the tip and a sample gives rise to a tunnel current that depends on the tip-sample separation. From a data-storage viewpoint, such a technique may clearly be used to image or sense the deliberate topographic changes on a flat medium that represent the stored information in logical “O”s and “1”s. In order to achieve reasonable stable current, the tip-sample separation must be maintained extremely small and fairly constant. These characteristics impose serious constraints in implementing an active servo control with reasonable speed. The low tunnelling currents and feedback speed limit the data rate to rather low values. For these reasons most of the work in probe-based data storage schemes has focused on AFM implementations.
In AFM, the sharp tip sits at the end of a soft spring cantilever. In this way very small forces may be sensed. The tip may touch the surface of the medium, without necessarily destroying the tip or the surface of the medium. AFM may also operate in a non-contact mode, in which it reacts to forces exerted by the medium. The use of an AFM tip for reading-back and writing topographic features for data storage was demonstrated in Mamin, H. J. et al., “Thermomechanical writing with an atomic force microscope tip” Appl. Phys. Lett., 61, (1992) 1003-1005 (Mamin 1992). In a particular, according to the scheme described in Mamin 1992, reading and writing is performed with a single AFM tip in contact with a rotating polycarbonate or polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) substrate. For performing thermomechanical writing a focused laser beam heats the optically absorbing tip. The heated tip softens the PMMA medium, and the local tip pressure creates an indentation. An external laser readout approach has been adopted for reading back the stored information.
However, in practical applications it is necessary to reduce the form factor so that the dimensions of standard small size memory cards, such as the ones used today with flash memory or the microdrive, may also be used for probe-based storage devices. There are currently various standards on the market for small size memory cards, for example known as secure digital (SD™), COMPACTFLASH™, multimedia memory card (MMC), etc. Other means that allow very large scale integration and miniaturization of the write and read back process are required. Known integrated probe storage devices, which allow for small form factor, rely primarily on thermal writing and thermal, piezoresistive, or piezoelectric sensing. For example, a concept of topographic data storage using an AFM tip in which the tip rides over the surface of the medium, causing deflection of the cantilever as it moves over the indentations representing the logical “O”s and “1”s, is described in Mamin, H. J. et al., “High-Density Data Storage Based on the Atomic Force Microscope”, Proc. IEEE, vol. 87, no. 6, pp. 1014-1027, June 1999 (Mamin 1999); and Mamin, H. J. et al., “Tip-based data storage using micromechanical cantilevers,” Sensors and Actuators A 48 (1995) 215-219 (Mamin 1995). The deflection is then detected via a piezoresistive sensor.
A typical example of such a probe-based storage device that uses thermomechanical writing and thermomechanical or thermal reading by using heater cantilevers is known as the millipede and disclosed in Vettiger et al., “The ‘Millipede’—More than one Thousand Tips for Future AFM Data-Storage,” IBM J. Res. Develop., Vol. 44, No. 3, pp. 323-340 (2000); and E. Eleftheriou et al., “Millipede-a MEMS-based scanning-probe data-storage system,” IEEE Trans. Magn., vol. 39, pp. 938-945 (2003). Such a system is also disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5835477 issued 10 Nov. 1998 to Binnig, G. K. et al. The heater cantilever originally used for writing is given the additional function of a thermal read back sensor by exploiting its temperature dependent resistance. U.S. Pat. No. 6,249,747 issued 19 Jun. 2001 to Binnig, G. K. et al. discloses an AFM probe that encompasses both functions of writing and reading to and from a storage medium. The relative variation of thermal resistance is on the order of 10−5 per nm. Hence, a written “1” typically produces a relative change of the cantilever thermal resistance of the order of ΔR/R=10−4 to 5×10−4. Note that the relative change of the cantilever electrical resistance is of the same order. Thus, one of the most critical issues in detecting the presence or absence of an indentation is the high resolution required to extract the signal that contains the information about the logical bit being “1” or “0”.
Sensitivity, power consumption, and size are critical issues for all aforementioned integrated sensing or read back approaches. For example, in piezoresistive sensing the main issues are the size of the sensor and its sensitivity in terms of the variation of the electrical resistance expressed as ΔR/R. Similarly, in Millipede, the main issues with thermomechanical or thermal sensing are power consumption, sensitivity in terms of variation of the thermal resistance and limitation on the data rate per lever due to the thermal time constant of the lever. Due to limitations regarding the data rate of a single cantilever, massive parallelization is needed to achieve high data rates.
Towards this end, dense 2-D cantilever arrays with integrated write/read functionality were proposed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,835,477. Writing and reading are done by time-multiplexing of the electronic signals that control the access of the cantilevers in one row or column of the 2-D array, as discussed in Vettiger, P. et al., “The Millipede—More than one thousand tips for future AFM data storage,” IBM Journal of Research and Development, vol. 44 NO. 3 May 2000, pp. 323-340. However, this approach has the disadvantages of limitations of single AFM sensors regarding sensitivity, power consumption, and read back data rate associated with previous approaches.
Another approach involves charge sensing. The general concept of charge sensing has found applications in various areas. Applications include subatomic particle detection, human presence detection, material analysis, fingerprint sensors, touch controls, product moisture sensing, etc. Micromachined sensors with integrated capacitive read-out circuitry have been developed for various applications, e.g. for accelerometers, fingerprint-sensors, and chemical sensors, as discussed respectively in Sherman, S. J. et al., “A Low-Cost Monolithic Accelerometer; Product/Technology Update” VLSI Circuits, 1992, Digest of Technical Papers, pp. 34-35; Tartagni, M. et al., “A Fingerprint Sensor Based on the Feedback Capacitive Sensing Scheme”, IEEE J. Solid State Circuits, vol. 33, pp. 133-142, January 1998; and Hagleitner, C. et al., “CMOS Capacitive Chemical Microsystem with Active Temperature Control for Discrimination of Organic Vapours”, Proc. Transducers '99, vol. 2, pp. 1012-1015, 1999.
In U.S. Pat. No. 6,172,506 issued 9 Jan. 2001 to Adderton et al., an AFM device is disclosed for measuring impurity concentration of semiconductors, where an electrically conductive tip operates in a tapping mode while a capacitive sensing circuit measures between the probe tip and the surface of a sample. However, the capacitance between the conductive tip and the surface of the sample is not constant. Additionally, the configuration is extremely difficult to implement in parallel operation which is required in probe-storage applications.
A need therefore exists for a storage device and method wherein the abovementioned disadvantages may be alleviated.
A storage device is provided, comprising of a storage surface having perturbations representative of information stored in the storage device; a lever having at least one tip facing the storage surface and movable substantially parallel thereto; and a variable capacitor having a first plate and a second plate, the first plate being integral to the storage surface and the second plate being integral to the lever, wherein movement of the lever relative to the surface produces variation in the capacitance of the variable capacitor in response to the tip scanning across the perturbations of the surface.
A method of reading information in a storage device is also provided, comprising scanning a tip of a lever across a storage surface of the storage device, the tip facing the storage surface and movable substantially parallel thereto, the storage surface having perturbations representative of information stored in the storage device; and detecting a variation in capacitance with a variable capacitor having a first plate and a second plate, the first plate being integral to the storage surface and the second plate being integral to the lever, wherein movement of the lever relative to the surface produces variation in the capacitance of the variable capacitor in response to the tip.
One storage device and method incorporating the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
An embodiment of the invention applies capacitive read-out to scanning probes, where optical, piezoresistive, or thermal read-out techniques are often used, for example, for sensing or reading back stored information in polymer media using a single sensor (cantilever) or a plurality of sensors (cantilevers) in a 2-D arrangement.
Additionally, for illustrative purpose, a 2D-array AFM probe storage is discussed which is based on a mechanical parallel x/y scanning of either the entire cantilever-array chip or the storage medium. It will be appreciated that the substrate, for example a silicon substrate, may be scanned with the sample, for example a polymer medium, on the substrate with the cantilever array, together with the interconnection to electronics, rigid. For an application such as thermomecanical probe storage the lever, tip, capacitive platform, and substrate may be silicon whereas the medium may be a polymer. In an embodiment, the cantilever may have a conducting platform, or a layer stack of different material, but the rest of the lever may be of any other material, for example silicon-nitride. Additionally, the medium is not required to be a polymer as long as there exists a conducting layer underneath.
Referring to
In another embodiment, the tip is not always in contact with the medium, for example, a writing force may be exerted on the tip via the capacitive platform to contact the tip with the medium during each write pulse. The duration of the force pulse may be chosen to extend slightly beyond the termination of the heating pulse. This writing mode of operation is intermittent-contact mode, which of course may also be used during a read operation.
According to another embodiment a conducting plate is placed firmly on top of the flexible scanning probe cantilever. The conducting plate or electrode fixed above the lever may “travel” with the lever or it may be fixed relative to the conducting substrate. The basic principle of operation is similar to the one described in conjunction with the above embodiment; however, the difference in the distance is between the conducting plate that is fixed to the lever, and the conducting substrate 24, as indicated by d1 and d2, which translates to a capacitance change, as indicated by C1 and C2.
According to another embodiment of the variable capacitor arrangement 30 shown in
Each embodiment discussed may be extended for arrays of probes. The parallel read-out of several probes resolves the data-rate limitations of single scanning-probe-based storage devices. In one embodiment, the cantilevers share the same substrate electrode. This avoids the need for structuring of the substrate electrode. In another embodiment, the top plate or electrode may be attached to the lever anchor and stud structure of the lever, and the plate or electrode may be fixed relative to the substrate over the entire array of levers.
Different approaches to monitor the capacitance change are described in the following description. It will be clearly appreciated that the exemplary embodiments may be modified according to widely accepted circuit design techniques. An embodiment shown in
The configuration shown in
The configurations shown in
When the capacitor formed by the cantilever plus substrate is charged using a constant DC-voltage the current to the capacitor may also be used to monitor the deflection of the cantilever when the tip falls into an indentation 16. This leads to an increase of the capacitance and a current flows, charging the capacitor even more. This current is only different from zero when the cantilever moves up or down with respect to the substrate. With an additional electrode on the backside of the cantilever this force may be balanced by charging this resulting cantilever as well.
An embodiment of the read-out electronics for constant DC-voltage bias as described above is shown in a circuit 90 shown in
It will be understood that the storage device and method described above provides the advantages of improved sensitivity, power consumption, and/or read back data rate. It will be appreciated that specific embodiments of the invention are discussed for illustrative purposes, and various modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03405859.4 | Dec 2003 | EP | regional |