The year-on-year growth in areal recording density maintained now for half a century by
the hard disk industry has required a corresponding reduction in the size of the magnetic
grains comprising the storage media employed. Grain dimensions are now such that the
performance of materials which thus far have served the industry well can no longer be
maintained as further reduction in their volume risks breaching the superparamagnetic limit
with the attendant loss of data integrity. The high magnetocrystalline anisotropy of the
Ll0
phase of PtCo allows particles as small as 4 nm diameter to remain magnetically stable in
the elevated temperature environment typical of disk drive systems. A non-interacting
dispersion of nanomagnetic particles suspended in an inert non-magnetic host such that each
has its anisotropy axis directed perpendicular to the surface of the medium now constitutes
the new ideal for a recording medium. Fabrication by a novel combination of conventional
sputtering and thermal processing technologies of a medium closely approximating this
ideal is demonstrated. An optimized two-stage fabrication process produces a near
mono-dispersion of particles with magnetic activation volumes centred about
5 × 10−26 m−3 and crystallized
in the L10
phase with an orientated tetragonal structure. The characteristics of this medium are
discussed as a function of composition and crystalline structure. In the absence of a
thermally assisted recording head, experiments are conducted on a degraded form of the
medium that is shown to support perpendicular recording at linear densities in excess of
240 kfci (D50 point).
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