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Imation Previews a New Multi-Channel "Adjacent-Track" Tape Technology

It enables 10,000tpi on conventional MP tapes

Imation Corp. will preview a new multi-channel "adjacent-track" write and read tape technology
that dramatically increases the capacity of conventional data storage tape at the Information Storage
Industry Consortium (INSIC) Tape Program Quarterly Technical Review this week
in San Jose, Calif. 

During the INSIC Technical Review, Imation scientist Denis Langlois will
present results of the company’s technology development program that enables
as many as 10,000 tracks per inch (10 ktpi) on conventional magnetic
particulate (MP) tapes, made using conventional, low-cost substrates (base
films). Langlois’ presentation highlights the new Imation technology that
utilizes a combination of an amplitude-based "servo" pattern that puts the
adjacent tracks on the tape, a unique thin-film head technology for recording,
and an innovative multi-layer magnetoresistive (MR) array for playback. With
nearly 25 years of experience of advanced storage development, Langlois holds
six patents and has an additional seven applications pending. He is part of
the Advanced Tape development group within the Systems Laboratory at Imation.

"Data storage tape systems have increased areal density 100,000 times over
the past half century,
" said Dr. Subodh Kulkarni, vice president, Global
Commercial Business, R&D and Manufacturing, Imation Corp. "Before 1990, the
increase was primarily due to improved linear density. Since then, the
application of track-following servo has enabled track density to make a more
dramatic contribution. To maintain backward compatibility, designers have
kept tape formats similar from generation to generation by using the same
servo format and channel spans on the recording and playback heads. This
design philosophy results in the need to simultaneously write and read sets of
tracks that are spaced apart by significant intervals, which makes the
dimensional stability of the substrate materials very critical as tracks
become narrower. Without a breakthrough approach to how tracks are written on
the tape, conventional, low-cost, substrates are rapidly reaching their
limits. Our new adjacent-track write and read technology is an important
breakthrough that has demonstrated a major advance in capacity and track-
following capability
."

 

Key elements of the new Imation technology include:
  • Enabling as many as 10,000 tracks per inch (10 ktpi) on conventional, low cost substrates such as PET and PEN while practically eliminating dimensional stability concerns in the media
  • An Imation proprietary "sandwich" reader, which uses layers of reading devices to minimize the cross-tape spacing between them
  • An Imation proprietary mixed-frequency redundant amplitude-based servo system that enables a tracking precision of 40 to 50 nm
  • Demonstrated multichannel write and read, with capability to store 1.6TB in a conventional LTO4 cartridge with excellent tracking performance
 

Imation Corp.

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