학술논문

Temperature Profile in the Presence of Hotspots in Heat Assisted Magnetic Recording
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics IEEE Trans. Magn. Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on. 48(11):4265-4268 Nov, 2012
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Mathematical model
Heat-assisted magnetic recording
Phonons
Heat transfer
Equations
Materials
Overcoat
Fourier law
graphene
heat assisted magnetic recording (HAMR)
hotspot
lattice Boltzmann method (LBM)
Language
ISSN
0018-9464
1941-0069
Abstract
Recently, the demands for increasing memory capacities in hard disk drives (HDDs) has resulted in state-of-the-art technologies including heat assisted magnetic recording (HAMR) with significantly higher operating temperatures. HAMR results in swift degradation of current lubricant and carbon overcoat (COC) materials, leading to magnetic media corrosion which is detrimental to HDD operation. In addition, the lack of thorough understanding of the temperature profiles arising from the hotspot and energy management throughout these materials also exacerbates the problem. To address this issue, in this paper we will focus on the COC and investigate the transient heat transfer in various examples of nanoscale thin films when a hot spot is created via lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) since traditional conduction models like Fourier law are not accurate due to dominant sub-continuum effects. LBM originates from the Boltzmann transport equations (BTEs) and is computationally efficient due to easy parallelization with convenient handling of complex geometries. Our results of the heat transfer mechanism and temperature profiles show that Fourier equation under-predicts the peak temperature rise at the center of the hot-spot as the system size approaches the nanoscale domain. Applying LBM to a multilayered system, we observe a temperature slip along the interface of two materials indicated by the broken isothermal contours, as the heat is confined to a single layer. Using LBM, we then explore a novel graphene overcoat which has outstanding thermo-mechanical properties, and thereby extremely compatible in HAMR applications.