Hi Guys, Below is a super cool article about how researchers are making breakthroughs in Future hard drive technology by using lasers as opposed to magnetic fields. The results is HD's that are 100 times faster than today's current standards. (even faster than SSD)
Check it out...
A team of researchers from across Europe and Asia has demonstrated a
way of using laser heat rather than magnetic fields to store data,
potentially increasing the speed of your hard drive by 100 times or
more.
Tom Ostler — a physicist at the University of York, which led the
research project — tells Wired that this would allow your machine to
save files much faster, but also reduce the machine’s power consumption
by avoiding traditional magnetic storage techniques.
This month, Ostler and his colleagues — who span research
institutions in Spain, Switzerland, Ukraine, Russia, Japan and, the
Netherlands — published a paper describing their breakthrough in the
pages of Nature Communications.
Typically, data is written to hard drives using magnetic fields. By
shifting fields, you can write 1′s and 0′s, changing the polarization of
the material where the data is stored. One polarization represents a 1;
another represents a 0.
Heat has long been the enemy of this technique, because it distorts
the fields. But with their paper, Ostler and crew have shown a way using
heat that changes a material’s polarization without using magnetic
fields, storing thousands of gigabytes of data in a single second.
Basically, their laser blasts a 60-femtosecond pulse — that’s 60
quadrillionths of a second — onto a material made primarily of iron and
gadolinium.
The iron and the gadolinium are aligned in “anti-parallel,” meaning
their charges are pointing in opposite directions. But after the laser
pulse, the iron demagnetizes more quickly than the gadolinium, and for
reasons that Ostler’s group is still trying to understand, it always
switches direction when it cools. This is known as a “single switching
event,” one of the fundamental actions of storage.
The whole process, the paper claims, happens in less than 5 picoseconds, or 5 trillionths of a second.
This not the first instance of lasers recording data. Claudiu Daniel
Stanciu, a researcher at Radboud University in the Netherlands,
published his thesis on
laser-induced femtosecond magnetic recording. And TDK, a drive head
manufacturer, unveiled a similar idea in October of last year.
Yes, the technique still needs refining before reaching everyday
machines. “We believe it could go beyond the current state of the art,
as long as we can get the engineering down,” Ostler says, guessing that
it will be about 10 years before the technology hits the commercial
market.
The rub is that writing data is only half the battle. The paper
doesn’t cover reading data, and Ostler admits that there’s still no
faster way of reading data without magnetic fields.
No comments:
Post a Comment