Spintronics: Resetting the future of Heat Assisted Magnetic Recording

The nanostructured membrane has a honeycomb pattern with nanoholes of 68 nm in diameter. The nanoholes pin down the magnetic domains.

The nanostructured membrane has a honeycomb pattern with nanoholes of 68 nm in diameter. The nanoholes pin down the magnetic domains. © HZB

A thin film of Dysprosium-Cobalt (green) has been sputtered on top of the membrane, resulting in an array of antidots. The magnetic moments of DyCo<sub>5</sub> are perpendicular to the plane and stable against external magnetic fields. A laser pulse can be used to locally increase the temperature of individual bits.

A thin film of Dysprosium-Cobalt (green) has been sputtered on top of the membrane, resulting in an array of antidots. The magnetic moments of DyCo5 are perpendicular to the plane and stable against external magnetic fields. A laser pulse can be used to locally increase the temperature of individual bits. © HZB

Moderate heating up to 80 &deg;Celsius does tilt the magnetic moment associated to a single bit into the plane. Upon cooling to room temperature, the magnetic moment stays in plane, until it is overwritten by a magnetic writing head.

Moderate heating up to 80 °Celsius does tilt the magnetic moment associated to a single bit into the plane. Upon cooling to room temperature, the magnetic moment stays in plane, until it is overwritten by a magnetic writing head. © HZB

A HZB team has examined thin films of Dysprosium-Cobalt sputtered onto a nanostructured membrane at BESSY II. They showed that new patterns of magnetization could be written in a quick and easy manner after warming the sample to only 80 °Celsius, which is a much lower temperature as compared to conventional Heat Assisted Magnetic Recording systems. This paves the way to fast and energy efficient ultrahigh density data storage. The results are published now in the new journal Physical Review Applied.

To increase data density further in storage media, materials systems with stable magnetic domains on the nanoscale are needed. For overwriting a specific nanoscopic region with new information, a laser is used to heat locally the bit close to the so called Curie-Temperature, typically several hundred degrees Celsius. Upon cooling, the magnetic domain in this region can be reoriented in a small external magnetic field, known as Heat Assisted Magnetic Recording (HAMR). In industry, Iron-Platinum materials are currently used as magnetic media for the development of such HAMR-data storage devices.

Magnetic signals mapped at BESSY II before and after heating

A HZB team has now examined a new storage media system of Dysprosium and Cobalt, which shows key advantages with respect to conventional HAMR materials: A much lower writing temperature, a higher stability of the magnetic bits, and a versatile control of the spin orientation within individual magnetic bits. They achieved this by sputtering a thin film of Dysprosium and Cobalt onto a nanostructured membrane. The membrane was produced by scientific cooperation partners at the Institute of Materials Science of Madrid. The system shows a honeycomb antidot pattern with distances of 105 nanometers between nanoholes, which are 68 nanometers in diameter. These nanoholes act themselves as pinning centers for stabilizing magnetic wall displacements. The magnetic moments of DyCo5 are perpendicular to the plane and stable against external magnetic fields.

Energy efficient process

HZB-physicist Dr. Jaime Sánchez-Barriga and his team could demonstrate that warming the system to only 80 degrees Celsius is sufficient to tilt the magnetic moments in the DyCo5 film parallel to the surface plane. With measurements at the PEEM and XMCD instruments at BESSY II they could map precisely the magnetic signals before, during and after warming. After cooling to room temperature it is then easy to reorient the magnetic domains with a writing head and to encode new information. “This process in DyCo5 is energy efficient and very fast”, states Dr. Florin Radu, co-author of the study. “Our results show that there are alternative candidates for ultrahigh density HAMR storage systems, which need less energy and promise other important advantages as well”, adds Sánchez-Barriga.

Publication: Ferrimagnetic DyCo5 nanostructures for bits in heat-assisted magnetic recording.  A. A. Ünal, S. Valencia, F.  Radu, D. Marchenko, K. J. Merazzo, M. Vázquez, and J. Sánchez-Barriga, Phys. Rev. Applied 5, 064007
Doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.5.064007

arö

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • MAX IV and BESSY II initiate new collaboration to advance materials science
    News
    17.06.2025
    MAX IV and BESSY II initiate new collaboration to advance materials science
    Swedish national synchrotron laboratory MAX IV and Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (HZB) with BESSY II light source jointly announce the signing of a 5-year Cooperation Agreement. The new agreement establishes a framework to strengthen cooperation for operational and technological development in the highlighted fields of accelerator research and development, beamlines and optics, endstations and sample environments as well as digitalisation and data science.
  • Michael Naguib is visiting HZB as a Humboldt Research Awardee
    News
    16.06.2025
    Michael Naguib is visiting HZB as a Humboldt Research Awardee
    Professor Michael Naguib, from Tulane University in the USA, is one of the discoverers of a new class of 2D materials: MXenes are characterised by a puff pastry-like structure and have many applications, such as in the production of green hydrogen or as storage media for electrical energy. During his Humboldt Research Award in 2025, Professor Naguib is working with Prof Volker Presser at the Leibniz Institute for New Materials in Saarbrücken and with Dr Tristan Petit at HZB.
  • AI in Chemistry: Study Highlights Strengths and Weaknesses
    News
    04.06.2025
    AI in Chemistry: Study Highlights Strengths and Weaknesses
    How well does artificial intelligence perform compared to human experts? A research team at HIPOLE Jena set out to answer this question in the field of chemistry. Using a newly developed evaluation method called “ChemBench,” the researchers compared the performance of modern language models such as GPT-4 with that of experienced chemists.