By Duncan Geere
The amount of data storage it’s possible to cram onto the same area of magnetic hard drive platter rises every year – we’re fast approaching multiple terabytes per square centimetre. As it does, a problem arises.
Hard drives are a bit like vinyl records, y’see. Data is stored in the magnetic equivalent of vinyl’s grooves, and can only be read by putting a magnetic drive head directly above that point. As storage gets denser, you need to place the drive head more and more accurately to get to the information you want. How accurately? Right now, to within 25 nanometres. But within a few years the necessary accuracy could increase substantially.
“The actuator mechanism will need to be able to position the recording head with a precision of just one or two nanometers,” explained Jiaping Yang from Singapore’s Agency for Science, Technology and Research.
“The actuator schemes commonly used today can offer a fast response, but will have difficulty achieving the positioning accuracy needed for future high-density drives.”
Conductivity and Expansion
So Yang’s team has been investigating new ways of attaining that accuracy. Top of their list is a comb-like set of silicon teeth, interlaced with polymers that expand and contract …read more
Source:: techradar.com – Computing Components