Fujitsu has developed a hard disk
manufacturing technology that will cram 1.2 Terabytes (TB) of data – or 1,200GB
– on to a standard laptop drive.
Average laptop hard drives currently on sale have capacities of around 160GB.
Even today's high-end laptops have drives of 250GB capacity, a fifth the size of
the drive Fujitsu is proposing.
The achievement involves an improvement in hard disk platter design first
reported in January, which can yield a storage density of 1TB/sq in using
one-dimensionally aligned alumina nano-hole patterns with 25nm pitch.
Now, Fujitsu has successfully created ideally 'ordered' alumina nano-hole
patterns for isolated bit-by-bit recording on a large disk area by establishing
an innovative fabrication process, and confirming the basic read/write
capability in each individual nano-hole of the patterned media using a flying
head on a rotating disk.
Using perpendicular magnetic recording (PMR) processes, the patterned alumina
nano-hole media was fabricated using nano-imprint lithography, anodic oxidation,
and cobalt electro-deposition at a nano-hole density of 100nm pitch – suitable
for reading by currently available head technology.
Applied to a standard 2.5in, two-platter laptop hard drive, the 1TB/sq in
fabrication process would provide a drive of 1.2TB capacity.
"We expect this breakthrough to provide revolutionary changes for various IT
and consumer applications,” said David James, vice president of advanced product
engineering at Fujitsu Computer Products of America.
The work on nano-hole patterned media was developed in
Fujitsu's laboratories
and the
Kanagawa
Academy of Science and Technology (KAST) and funded by the Research
Programme on Development of Innovative Technology of the
Japan Science and
Technology Agency. A detailed write-up has been published in
Applied Physics Letters.
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