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R&D: Two Strategies to Mitigate Thermally-Induced Material Buildup in HAMR

Study contributes to material buildup management in HAMR head-disk interface.

Tribology Letters has published an article written by Qilong Cheng, Roshan Mathew Tom, and David B. Bogy, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA.

Abstract:Heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR), one of the promising hard disk drive technologies to achieve areal density > 10 Tb/in2, integrates a laser across its head-disk interface to assist data writing. However, the laser brings a disk-to-head material transfer problem due to the temperature difference. The thermally-induced material buildup on the head, also known as smear, has been a crucial reliability issue in HAMR, which needs to be addressed before HAMR hard disk drive’s commercialization. In this paper, two mitigation strategies for the material buildup issue are presented: a mechanical approach and a thermal approach. The mechanical approach utilizes the thermal fly-height control heater protrusions to accomplish light head-disk contact to burnish the buildup away due to frictional interactions. The atomic force microscopy images show that the upstream/downstream buildup can be removed by use of dual heaters respectively only within several revolutions. In the thermal approach, the direction of the temperature difference across the head-disk interface is reversed compared to that during the data writing. The results show that the material buildup breaks down into small dots from traces and is mitigated by 91% after a relatively long duration ∼ 40 min. Additionally, it is found that a pulsed laser operating at a higher frequency can produce less upstream buildup. This study contributes to the material buildup management in the HAMR head-disk interface, and hence, it is important for the next generation HAMR technology.

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