Paper
26 May 1995 Micromechanics applications in data storage
Long-Sheng Fan, H. Jonathon Mamin
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
High rate of areal density growth rate enables the reduction in cost per MB and increasing demand for data storage. Micromechanics is soon likely to be needed to accommodate the increased mechanical position precision needed for reading and writing data. Two examples will be described. A microactuator can be used as the fine actuator of a two-stage actuator servo system for very high bandwidth magnetic head slider positioning. This device is batch-fabricated metal structure using high-aspect-ratio lithography and stencil plating. The fabrication process and characteristics will be described. As a second example, micromachined atomic force microscope (AFM) probes are used to generate and detect fine pits on the surface of a polymer disk. An areal density of 25 Gb/in2 is achieved with a data reading rate of above 1 Mb/s. A very low mass (0.3 ng) silicon nitride AFM probe has been used in this study, and the fabrication and performance are described.
© (1995) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Long-Sheng Fan and H. Jonathon Mamin "Micromechanics applications in data storage", Proc. SPIE 2448, Smart Structures and Materials 1995: Smart Electronics, (26 May 1995); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.210466
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KEYWORDS
Silicon

Data storage

Actuators

Head

Magnetism

Microactuators

Atomic force microscopy

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