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Effective heat dissipation in an adiabatic near-field transducer for HAMR

Zhong, Chuan, Flanigan, Patrick, Abadia, Nicolas ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7355-4245, Bello, Frank, Jennings, Brian D., Atcheson, Gwenael, Li, Jing, Zheng, Jian-Yao, Wang, Jing Jing, Hobbs, Richard, McCloskey, David and Donegan, John F. 2018. Effective heat dissipation in an adiabatic near-field transducer for HAMR. Optics Express 26 (15) , pp. 18842-18854. 10.1364/OE.26.018842

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Abstract

To achieve a feasible heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR) system, a near-field transducer (NFT) is necessary to strongly focus the optical field to a lateral region measuring tens of nanometres in size. An NFT must deliver sufficient power to the recording medium as well as maintain its structural integrity. The self-heating problem in the NFT causes materials failure that leads to the degradation of the hard disk drive performance. The literature reports NFT structures with physical sizes well below 1 micron which were found to be thermo-mechanically unstable at an elevated temperature. In this paper, we demonstrate an adiabatic NFT to address the central challenge of thermal engineering for a HAMR system. The NFT is formed by an isosceles triangular gold taper plasmonic waveguide with a length of 6 µm and a height of 50 nm. Our study shows that in the full optically and thermally optimized system, the NFT efficiently extracts the incident light from the waveguide core and can improve the shape of the heating source profile for data recording. The most important insight of the thermal performance is that the recording medium can be heated up to 866 K with an input power of 8.5 mW which is above the Curie temperature of the FePt film while maintaining the temperature in the NFT at 390 K without a heat spreader. A very good thermal efficiency of 5.91 is achieved also. The proposed structure is easily fabricated and can potentially reduce the NFT deformation at a high recording temperature making it suitable for practical HAMR application.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Physics and Astronomy
Publisher: Optical Society of America
ISSN: 1094-4087
Date of First Compliant Deposit: 9 November 2018
Date of Acceptance: 30 June 2018
Last Modified: 04 May 2023 23:41
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/116637

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