Tunnel magnetoresistive element and manufacturing method thereof

Abstract
Stable anti-ferromagnetic exchange coupling can be obtained between a first pinned magnetic layer in a magnetoresistive element and a second pinned magnetic layer through smoothing of a non-magnetic intermediate layer, by smoothing the first pinned magnetic layer. The magnetoresistive element is made by sequentially laminating an underlayer, an anti-ferromagnetic layer, the first pinned magnetic layer, the non-magnetic intermediate layer, the second pinned magnetic layer, a tunnel barrier layer, a free magnetic layer, and a protection layer. The first pinned magnetic layer is smoothed before the non-magnetic intermediate layer is laminated over the first pinned magnetic layer. Stable magnetoresistive characteristics can be obtained, even when thickness is reduced, by smoothing the tunnel barrier layer. In that case, excellent magnetoresistive characteristics can also be obtained even when the tunnel barrier layer requires crystal properties.
Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The present invention will be explained with reference to the accompanying drawings.



FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of a film structure of a conventional tunnel magnetoresistive element.



FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of a tapered shape of the magnetoresistive element of FIG. 1.



FIGS. 3(
a)-3(d) are diagrams showing the magnetoresistive element and manufacturing method thereof in the first embodiment of the present invention.



FIGS. 4(
a)-4(e) are diagrams showing the magnetoresistive element and manufacturing method thereof in the second embodiment of the present invention.



FIG. 5 is a diagram showing a relationship among the inverse sputtering time, TMR ratio (%), and RA (Ωμm2) of the first pinned magnetic layer in the present invention.



FIG. 6 is a diagram showing a relationship between the TMR ratio (%) and the RA (Ωμm2) when the second pinned magnetic layer in the related art is re-sputtered.



FIG. 7(
a) is a diagram of a disk drive having the magnetoresistive element of the present invention, and FIG. 7(b) is a diagram of a head slider having the magnetoresistive element of the present invention.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION


FIGS. 3(
a)-3(d) show the first embodiment of a method of manufacturing magnetoresistive elements of the present invention. FIGS. 3(a)-3(d) are cross-sectional views of the magnetoresistive element. As shown in FIG. 3(a), an underlayer 1 of Ta is formed on a substrate 10 made of Al2O3—TiC, and an anti-ferromagnetic layer 2 of Ir—Mn alloy is formed subsequently. Here, the anti-ferromagnetic layer 2 has surface roughness higher than that of the anti-ferromagnetic layer made of Pt—Mn alloy which is generally used. Accordingly, as shown in FIG. 3(b), the first pinned magnetic layer laminated on the Ir—Mn alloy also has higher surface roughness because of the influence of the Ir—Mn alloy as the underlayer.


Thereafter, the surface of the first pinned magnetic layer is smoothed with the gas cluster ion beam or inverse sputtering method as shown in FIG. 3(c). Next, as shown in FIG. 3(d), a non-magnetic intermediate layer 4 of Ru, a second pinned magnetic layer 5 of Co—Fe alloy, a tunnel barrier layer 6 of MgO, a free magnetic layer 7 of Co—Fe alloy, and a protection layer 8 of Ta are continuously laminated with the sputtering method on the smoothed first pinned magnetic layer 3. Here, it is more desirable that the first pinned magnetic layer 3 be formed with sufficiently larger thickness than the predetermined thickness in order to obtain excellent magnetoresistive characteristics by conducting irradiation of the gas cluster ion beam or inverse sputtering.


When the tunnel magnetoresistive element of the present invention is used in the magnetic head, the tunnel magnetoresistive element is laminated, for example, after an insulating layer made of Al2O3 and a shield layer of NiFe are laminated on Al2O3—TiC of the substrate. This is also true in the second embodiment.


When Al2O3 is used for the tunnel barrier layer, any influence is applied on the magnetoresistive characteristic thereof, even if the second pinned magnetic layer as the underlayer is smoothed with the gas cluster ion beam or inverse sputtering method, because Al2O3 forms an amorphous layer. However, when MgO is used as the tunnel barrier layer, excellent magnetoresistive characteristics cannot be obtained when the second pinned magnetic layer is used as the underlayer and is smoothed with the gas cluster ion beam or inverse sputtering method, because the crystal layer and crystal structure of MgO is important to obtain excellent magnetoresistive characteristics.


However, according to the present invention, since the first pinned magnetic layer is smoothed with the gas cluster ion beam or inverse sputtering method, the MgO layer can be formed continuously as the tunnel barrier layer on the second pinned magnetic layer and thereby obtain excellent magnetoresistive characteristics.



FIG. 5 shows a relationship among the inverse sputtering time of the first pinned magnetic layer, TMR ratio (%) and RA (Ωμm2). The tunnel magnetoresistive film used for the experiment has a structure constituted with a Ta underlayer of 5 nm thickness, an Ru under layer of 2 nm thickness, an IrMn anti-ferromagnetic layer of 10 nm thickness, a CoFe first pinned magnetic layer of 2.5 nm thickness, a non-magnetic layer of Ru of 0.8 nm thickness, a CoFeB a second pinned layer of 3 nm thickness, an MgO tunnel barrier layer of 1 nm thickness, a CoFeB free layer of 3 nm thickness, a Ta protection layer of 5 nm thickness, and an Ru protection layer of 10 nm thickness. The inverse sputtering was conducted within a vacuum chamber under the atmosphere of Ar gas of 10−2 Pa. The data of inverse sputtering time 0 (min) indicates that when the magnetoresistive element is not subjected to inverse sputtering, excellent magnetoresistive characteristic cannot be obtained.


Moreover, particularly when the Ir—Mn alloy is used as the anti-ferromagnetic layer, surface roughness of the anti-ferromagnetic layer influences the non-magnetic intermediate layer when the anti-ferromagnetic layer, first pinned magnetic layer and non-magnetic intermediate layer are formed continuously. However, according to the present invention, since the Ru non-magnetic intermediate layer is also smoothed, excellent anti-ferromagnetic exchange coupling can be attained between the first pinned magnetic layer and the second pinned magnetic layer.


The magnetoresistive element manufactured as explained above, where the first pinned magnetic layer is smoothed, shows excellent magnetoresistive characteristic.


The anti-ferromagnetic layer and non-magnetic intermediate layer can also be smoothed with inverse sputtering. However, in this case, excellent exchange coupling between the anti-ferromagnetic layer and the first pinned magnetic layer and excellent anti-ferromagnetic exchange coupling between the first pinned magnetic layer and the second pinned magnetic layer cannot be obtained.



FIGS. 4(
a)-4(e) show the second embodiment of the manufacturing method of magnetoresistive element of the present invention. As shown in FIG. 4(a), the Ta underlayer 1 is formed on the Al2O3—TiC substrate 10 with the Al2O3—TiC anti-ferromagnetic layer 2 formed thereon. Since surface roughness of the anti-ferromagnetic layer 2 is higher, the surface of the first pinned magnetic layer 3 laminated thereon also has higher roughness, as shown in FIG. 4(b). Therefore, as shown in FIG. 4(c), the surface of the first pinned magnetic layer 3 is smoothed with the gas cluster ion beam or inverse sputtering method. The manufacturing method explained above is identical to that of the first embodiment.


The first pinned magnetic layer 3 can be formed with a thickness less than the predetermined thickness by extending the irradiation time of the gas cluster ion beam or the inverse sputtering time required for smoothing the surface of the first pinned magnetic layer 3 with the gas cluster ion beam or inverse sputtering method. The thickness can be increased up to the predetermined thickness by sputtering the first pinned magnetic layer 3 again, as shown in FIG. 4(d), and thereafter the Ru non-magnetic intermediate layer 4, the Co—Fe alloy second pinned magnetic layer 5, the MgO tunnel barrier layer 6, the Co—Fe alloy free magnetic layer 7, and the Ta protection layer 8 are continuously laminated with the sputtering method, as shown in FIG. 4(e). The first pinned magnetic layer can be smoothed sufficiently by extending the irradiation time of the gas cluster ion beam and the inverse sputtering time.


The magnetoresistive element of the present invention can be used in a hard disk drive, an example of which is shown in FIG. 7(a). A hard disk drive 20 includes at least one rotating disk memory medium 22. The disk 22 is rotated by a spindle motor (not shown). An actuator arm 24 operated by voice coil motor or the like, moves a suspension 26 across the disk 22 in a generally radial manner across the disk 22.


A head slider 28 is located at the distal end of the suspension 26, and includes a read/write element 30. The read head in the read/write element 30 is the magnetoresistive element of the present invention. Information recorded on the disk 22 is read by the magnetoresistive element as the disk rotates and the actuator moves the magnetoresistive element across predetermined tracks on the disk. A control system 32 includes controllers, memory, etc. sufficient to control disk rotation, actuator movement and read/write operations, in response to commands from a host (not shown).


While the principles of the invention have been described above in connection with specific apparatus and applications, it is to be understood that this description is made only by way of example and not as a limitation on the scope of the invention.

Claims
  • 1. A magnetoresistive element comprising an underlayer,an anti-ferromagnetic layer,a first pinned magnetic layer,a non-magnetic intermediate layer,a second pinned magnetic layer,a tunnel barrier layer,a free magnetic layer, anda protection layer sequentially laminated,made by the process of sequentially laminating the layers and smoothing said first pinned magnetic layer before said non-magnetic intermediate layer is laminated over said first pinned magnetic layer.
  • 2. The magnetoresistive element of claim 1, wherein said smoothing process is conducted to provide an average roughness of the center line Ra of 0.3 nm or less.
  • 3. The magnetoresistive element according to claim 1 or 2, wherein said anti-ferromagnetic layer is formed of Ir—Mn alloy.
  • 4. The magnetoresistive element according to claim 3, wherein said tunnel barrier layer is formed of MgO.
  • 5. A method of making a magnetoresistive element, comprising the steps of sequentially laminating an underlayer, an anti-ferromagnetic layer, a first pinned magnetic layer, a non-magnetic intermediate layer, a second pinned magnetic layer, a tunnel barrier layer, a free magnetic layer, and a protection layer, and smoothing said first pinned magnetic layer before lamination of said non-magnetic intermediate layer.
  • 6. The manufacturing method of claim 5, wherein the first pinned magnetic layer is laminated again before lamination of said non-magnetic intermediate layer.
  • 7. The manufacturing method of claim 5 or 6, wherein said smoothing process is conducted by glass cluster ion beam or inverse sputtering method.
  • 8. The manufacturing method of claim 5 or 6, wherein said anti-ferromagnetic layer is formed of Ir—Mn alloy.
  • 9. The manufacturing method of claim 8, wherein said tunnel barrier layer is formed of MgO.
  • 10. A disk drive comprising a rotating disk medium,an actuator for moving a read/write element radially across the disk, anda control system, said read/write element having a magnetoresistive element for reading, the magnetoresistive element including a magnetoresistive element comprisingan underlayer,an anti-ferromagnetic layer,a first pinned magnetic layer,a non-magnetic intermediate layer,a second pinned magnetic layer,a tunnel barrier layer,a free magnetic layer, anda protection layer sequentially laminated,made by the process of sequentially laminating the layers and smoothing said first pinned magnetic layer before said non-magnetic intermediate layer is laminated over said first pinned magnetic layer.
  • 11. The disk drive of claim 10, wherein said smoothing process is conducted to provide an average roughness of the center line Ra of 0.3 nm or less.
  • 12. The disk drive of claim 11, wherein said anti-ferromagnetic layer is formed of Ir—Mn alloy.
  • 13. The disk drive of claim 12, wherein said tunnel barrier layer is formed of MgO.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
2006-244977 Sep 2006 JP national