Web Site: ScienceDaily
Magazine
Original Source: National Science Foundation
Date Posted:
2003-02-03
Ultra-high-density
Data Storage May Become Practical With Breakthrough In Nanoscale Magnetic
Sensors
ARLINGTON,
Va. -- A simpler and more reliable
manufacturing method has allowed two materials researchers to produce nanoscale
magnetic sensors that could increase the storage capacity of hard disk drives
by a factor of a thousand. Building on results reported last summer,
the new sensors are up to 100 times more
sensitive than any current alternative technology.
Susan Hua
and Harsh Deep Chopra, both professors at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
report in the February issue of Physical
Review B on their latest experiments with nanoscale sensors that produce, at
room temperature, unusually large electrical resistance changes in the presence
of small magnetic fields. The work is supported by the National
Science Foundation (NSF), an independent federal agency that supports
fundamental research and education across all fields of science and
engineering.
“We
first saw a large effect of over 3,000 percent resistance change in small
magnetic fields last July,” Chopra said. “That was just the tip of
the iceberg. These results point to the beautiful science that remains to be discovered.”
The largest signal they have seen is 33 times larger than the effect they
reported last summer, which corresponds to a 100,000 percent change in
resistance.
As stored “bits” of data get smaller, their
magnetic fields get weaker, which makes individual bits harder to detect and
“read.” Packing more bits onto the surface of a computer disk,
therefore, requires reliable sensors that are smaller, yet more sensitive to
the bit’s magnetic field. Hua and Chopra’s nanoscale
sensor seems to be ideally suited to the task.
For comparison, the technology in today’s hard disk
drives relies on signals as weak as a 20 percent change in resistance. In other
words, if sensor has a baseline signal of 1, an “off” bit causes
Chopra and Hua’s sensors to spike at signal strength of –1,000, and
an “on” bit registers +1,000. Current sensors,
which only work on much larger bit sizes, would swing between an
“off” signal of 0.8 and “on” of 1.2. The larger changes
mean that the new sensors produce much more distinct and reliable signals than
current technologies do, which would enable the bit size to be shrunk
dramatically.
Chopra
and Hua’s sensors have another advantage over other experimental
techniques that are currently being studied: Because of the sensors’ high
sensitivity at room temperature, they would be straightforward to adapt to work
with existing technologies used by the $25 billion hard disk drive industry.
Chopra predicts that their sensors would permit disk capacities on the order of
terabits (trillions of bits) per square inch.
Their success builds on an effect called “ballistic magnetoresistance”
(BMR). “Magnetoresistance” measures the change in electrical
resistance when a device is placed in a magnetic field. Many types of magnetoresistance
are being explored for sensors that might find use in hard disk drives. The magnetoresistance
effect goes “ballistic” when an electron must cross a channel so
narrow that the electron shoots straight through without scattering. In a
normal wire, an electron zigzags its way through the material in a process
called “diffusive” transport.
Chopra and Hua created their ballistic-effect sensors by
forming nanoscale nickel “whiskers” between two larger nickel
electrodes. Their current experiments include confirmation of the structure and
composition of the whiskers with scanning electron microscopy.
The researchers suspect that the ballistic effect stems from
pinch points, or constrictions, in the whiskers produced during manufacturing.
The new manufacturing method, which also allowed them to reliably produce nanosensors
with the desired effect, is therefore a key to Chopra and Hua’s latest
success.
Chopra and Hua modified and adapted a method of producing
controlled nanoscale wires originally developed b y Arizona State
University’s Nongjian Tao, whose work is also supported by NSF.
Tao’s electrodeposition method allowed Chopra and Hua to specify in
advance the resistance they wanted from their nanoscale whiskers. They can now
reproduce their contacts reliably and simply, as opposed to the hit-or-miss
method they had used previously. “We have been consistently able to
produce contacts with BMR effects of several thousand percent,” Chopra
said.
Besides disk drives, these types of sensors may also have
biomedical applications. For example, the sensor’s electrical properties
might be used to detect biomolecules in solution, even in low concentrations,
according to Chopra. By attaching itself to the sensor, each type of biomolecule
would impart its own “fingerprint” by changing the electrical
signal of the nanocontact.
Editor's Note: The original news release
can be found here.
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release
issued for journalists and other members of the public. If you wish to quote
from any part of this story, please credit National Science Foundation as the
original source.