This application is related to Ser. No. 16/507,177, Filing Date Jul. 10, 2019, which is assigned to a common assignee and herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
This disclosure relates generally to a thin-film magnetic writer used in microwave assisted magnetic recording (MAMR) to write on highly coercive recording disks and particularly to the design of magnetic shields for such a writer.
To further increase the magnetic recording density of a hard disk drive (HDD) system, there have been growing demands for the improvements in the performance of thin film magnetic heads. A perpendicular magnetic recording (PMR) head combining a single pole writer with a tunneling magnetoresistive (TMR) reader provides a high writing field and a large read-back signal, thus a higher areal density can be achieved. Increasing the magnetic recording areal density requires smaller grain size in the magnetic recording media, which in turn reduces storage lifetime due to thermal instabilities. In order to maintain durable storage lifetime, the thermal stability (energy barrier Δ=KV/kbT) has to be increased. In the formula, kbT is the Boltzmann constant, T is the temperature in Kelvin, V is the average grain size of the storage media, K, magnetic anisotropy, is equal to HkMs/2, where Hk is the magnetic anisotropy field and Ms is the saturation magnetization of the magnetic recording media. For smaller grain size media, K has to be increased to maintain the same thermal stability for storage, thus Hk is greatly increased causing the magnetic media to have high coercivity Hc. As a consequence, the magnetic field generated by the magnetic writer main pole as well as the current from the coil around the main pole may not be strong enough to switch the magnetic media bits for data recording.
One way to address this magnetic recording dilemma is by heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR). The purpose of HAMR is to use heat energy to reduce the energy barrier (Δ=KV/kbT) of the grains of the magnetic recording media while writing the data with magnetic recording field. During data writing, a magnetic bit in the media is heated by the application of laser-generated optical energy, in the form of surface-plasmon near-fields, causing the temperature of the magnetic bit to rise. When the temperature of the bit is significantly elevated, it can be reversed in polarity by the applied magnetic field due to a reduction in the energy barrier Δ. Once the bit polarity is changed, both the heating source and the applied field are quickly withdrawn. As the temperature reverts to room temperature, the switched state of the bit is stored in the magnetic recording media.
Another approach to addressing the magnetic recording dilemma, and the subject of this disclosure, is the application of microwave assisted magnetic recording (MAMR). In microwave-assisted magnetic recording (MAMR), the energy barrier that prevents the polarity of a magnetic bit from being reversed is not reduced by optical heating, but rather by supplying it with resonant energy from an external oscillating magnetic field produced by an additional layer (actually, a multi-layered element, but is here simply denoted a layer) called a spin-torque oscillator (STO). Note, the structure and operation of the STO is well known in the art and it will not be discussed further herein. This STO layer is positioned within a gap region that surrounds the main magnetic pole.
The STO is usually aligned with the main pole (MP) cross-track width in order to maximize the performance. A high moment trailing shield (HMTS or, more simply, an HS) is used to attract the MP field back to the trailing side of the MP to improve the bits per inch (BPI) of the recording process. In conventional designs, the high moment trailing shield is much wider than MP in cross-track dimension. At least two problems are related to this prior-art wider width:
1. The wider HMTS has greater protrusion than surrounding shields, exposing the STO to additional reliability concerns.
2. A wider HMTS induces more magnetic charge in the write gap corner, and will cause a stronger stray field.
The prior arts have taken some steps to address these difficulties. However, they do not disclose the approach and method to be described in this disclosure nor do they treat the problem with the same degree of success as is done herein.
It will be an object of the present disclosure to provide a PMR (perpendicular magnetic recording) writer incorporated within a MAMR (microwave assisted magnetic recording) configuration in which a new design for a HMTS (high moment trailing shield) eliminates problems associated with the designs of the prior art.
Specifically, in this new design, the high moment trailing shield has similar cross-track width as MP and STO and has smaller cross-track width than the write gap. The write gap is conformal along the cross-track direction, and outside the width of high moment trailing shield, lower moment shielding material will be used. The down-track thickness of the high moment trailing shield can also be reduced for less protrusion. This new design will have two major benefits:
(1) less HMTS protrusion for better STO reliability, and
(2) reduced adjacent track interference (ATI) due to less magnetic coupling at the write gap cross track edge.
These benefits are the result of several dimensional improvements that the disclosed design provides as compared to the designs of the prior art. Among these improvements are a wider cross-track width for the write gap than PWA (“pole width A”, which is the MP ABS cross-track width at its widest edge) and STO widths, the write gap width ranging from 100 nm to 1 μm. In addition, the disclosed high moment trailing shield (HMTS) has a narrower cross-track width than write gap, being preferably aligned with the STO width, and that width can range from 10 nm to 500 nm. Further, the disclosed high moment trailing shield (HMTS) can be thinner in the down-track direction than prior-art structures, the thickness now ranging from 5 nm to 500 nm.
These advantages are all embodied in the perpendicular magnetic writer (PMR) configured for microwave assisted magnetic recording (MAMR) that is disclosed herein. This writer includes a magnetic main pole (MP) that emerges at an air-bearing surface (ABS) and has a generally trapezoidal ABS face that is wider at a trailing-edge surface than at a leading-edge surface. The trailing-edge and leading-edge surfaces are connected by mirror-image symmetrically formed side edge surfaces to complete the trapezoidal cross-section.
A dielectric layer conformally surrounds the MP and forms a uniform gap between both side edge surfaces of said MP and the leading edge surface of the MP. This dielectric layer has an upper planar surface that is coplanar with the trailing edge surface of the MP and extends symmetrically away from the MP, forming uniform gaps.
A multi-layered spin-torque oscillator (STO) is formed on the trailing edge side of the MP. The STO has the same width as the trailing edge side and is aligned with it. A high-moment trailing shield (HMTS) is formed on the STO, having the same width as the STO and being aligned with it. A write gap (WG) layer of uniform thickness is formed on the upper planar surface of the dielectric layer, the layer extending symmetrically from contiguity with left and write edges of the combined STO and HMTS layers.
Referring first to the schematic ABS view of
In the new design of
To confirm the writing performance of the new writer design, a series of finite-element method (FEM) simulations have been carried out and their results are shown in
The simulation of
The significance of the above figures is as follows. With the same write field, Hy, a smaller EWAC indicates a potententially improved TPI (tracks per inch). The return field represents the strength of the field that passes through the recording media and returns to the trailing shield. A more negative return field indicates a better BPI (bits per inch). It is to be noted that the magnetic material of the high-moment trailing shield (HMTS) typically has a Bs of 24 kG (kiloGauss), but it can range from approximately 18 kG to 24 kG. Ordinary trailing shield material has a Bs of 16 kG, but it may range from approximately 1 kG to 18 kG. We note also that the write gap, WG 40 has a wider cross-track width than the maximum width of the pole, PWA, ranging from 100 nm to 1 μm. The HMTS has a narrower cross-track width than the WG 40, being preferably aligned with the STO width, but can range from approximately 10 nm to 500 nm. The HMTS can have a thinner down-track thickness than the prior-art structure used for comparison purposes, ranging from approximately 5 nm to 500 nm.
Referring next to a simulation that was performed and whose results are shown in
Referring finally to
A member to which the HGA 1200 is mounted to arm 1260 is referred to as head arm assembly 1220. The arm 1260 moves the read/write head 1100 in the cross-track direction (arrow) across the medium 1140 (here, a hard disk). One end of the arm 1260 is mounted to the base plate 1240. A coil 1231 to be a part of a voice coil motor (not shown) is mounted to the other end of the arm 1260. A bearing part 1233 is provided to the intermediate portion of the arm 1260. The arm 1260 is rotatably supported by a shaft 1234 mounted to the bearing part 1233. The arm 1260 and the voice coil motor that drives the arm 1260 configure an actuator.
Referring next to
Referring finally to
As is finally understood by a person skilled in the art, the detailed description given above is illustrative of the present disclosure rather than limiting of the present disclosure. Revisions and modifications may be made to methods, materials, structures and dimensions employed in forming and providing a PMR writer configured for MAMR operation having a high moment trailing shield (HMTS) that is aligned with a spin torque oscillator layer (STO), while still forming and providing such a structure and its method of formation in accord with the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
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