HAMR NFT materials with improved thermal stability
09805757 · 2017-10-31
Assignee
Inventors
- Tong Zhao (Eden Prairie, MN, US)
- Michael Christopher Kautzky (Eagan, MN, US)
- William Albert Challener (Glenville, NY, US)
- Michael Allen Seigler (Eden Prairie, MN, US)
Cpc classification
G11B13/04
PHYSICS
B82Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T428/11
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
G11B5/314
PHYSICS
G11B5/1278
PHYSICS
International classification
G11B11/00
PHYSICS
G11B13/04
PHYSICS
B82Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A near field transducer includes gold and at least one dopant. The dopant can include at least one of: Cu, Rh, Ru, Ag, Ta, Cr, Al, Zr, V, Pd, Ir, Co, W, Ti, Mg, Fe, or Mo. The dopant concentration may be in a range from 0.5% and 30%. The dopant can be a nanoparticle oxide of V, Zr, Mg, Ca, Al, Ti, Si, Ce, Y, Ta, W, or Th, or a nitride of Ta, Al, Ti, Si, In, Fe, Zr, Cu, W or B.
Claims
1. An apparatus comprising: a near field transducer comprising gold and at least one of: nitride particles, oxide particles, or combinations thereof.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the nitride particles, oxide particles, or combinations thereof are nanoparticles.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the nitride particles, oxide particles, or combinations thereof have a size from 1 to 5 nm.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the near field transducer has a thickness in a range from 10 nm to 300 nm.
5. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the near field transducer has a thickness in a range from 20 nm to 300 nm.
6. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the near field transducer comprises nitride particles selected from Ta, Al, Ti, Si, In, Fe, Zr, Cu, W, or B nitride particles.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the near field transducer comprises oxide particles selected from V, Zr, Mg, Ca, Al, Ti, Si, Ce, Y, Ta, W, or Th oxide particles.
8. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a storage medium and a recording head, the recording head comprising the near field transducer and a waveguide configured to direct light onto the near field transducer; and an arm for positioning the recording head adjacent to the storage medium.
9. An apparatus comprising: a near field transducer comprising gold and oxide particles.
10. The apparatus of claim 9, wherein the oxide particles are nanoparticles.
11. The apparatus of claim 9, wherein the oxide particles have a size from 1 to 5 nm.
12. The apparatus of claim 9, wherein the oxide particles comprises an oxide of at least one of: V, Zr, Mg, Ca, Al, Ti, Si, Ce, Y, Ta, W, or Th.
13. The apparatus of claim 9, wherein the oxide particles comprises one of: V.sub.2O.sub.5, ZrO.sub.2, MgO, CaO, Al.sub.2O.sub.3, TiO.sub.2, SiO.sub.2, CeO.sub.2, Y.sub.2O.sub.3, Ta.sub.2O.sub.5, WO.sub.2, or ThO.sub.2.
14. The apparatus of claim 9, wherein the oxide particles comprise ZrO.sub.2, V.sub.2O.sub.5, or combinations thereof.
15. An apparatus comprising: a near field transducer comprising gold and nitride particles.
16. The apparatus of claim 5, wherein the nitride particles are nanoparticles.
17. The apparatus of claim 15, wherein the nitride particles have a size from 1 to 5 nm.
18. The apparatus of claim 15, wherein the nitride particles comprises nitride particles selected from Ta, Al, Ti, Si, In, Fe, Zr, Cu, W, or B nitride particles.
19. The apparatus of claim 15, wherein the near field transducer has a thickness in a range from 10 nm to 300 nm.
20. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a storage medium and a recording head, the recording head comprising the near field transducer and a waveguide configured to direct light onto the near field transducer; and an arm for positioning the recording head adjacent to the storage medium.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(19) In one aspect, this disclosure provides a near field transducer (NFT) that can be used in a HAMR recording head. The NFT includes materials that show enhanced hardness and higher resistance to stress relaxation and creep properties than pure gold, while still possessing acceptable optical properties. In several examples, such materials include Au with various doping elements or compounds.
(20) This disclosure encompasses NFTs and devices that include such NFTs.
(21) For heat assisted magnetic recording (HAMR), electromagnetic radiation, for example, visible, infrared or ultraviolet light is directed onto a surface of the data storage media to raise the temperature of a localized area of the media to facilitate switching of the magnetization of the area. Recent designs of HAMR recording heads include a thin film waveguide on a slider to guide light toward the storage media and a near field transducer to focus the light to a spot size smaller than the diffraction limit. While
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(23) An insulating material 62 separates the coil turns. In one example, the substrate can be AlTiC, the core layer can be Ta.sub.2O.sub.5, and the cladding layers (and other insulating layers) can be Al.sub.2O.sub.3. A top layer of insulating material 63 can be formed on the top pole. A heat sink 64 is positioned adjacent to the sloped pole piece 58. The heat sink can be comprised of a non-magnetic material, such as for example Au.
(24) As illustrated in
(25) The storage media 16 is positioned adjacent to or under the recording head 30. The waveguide 42 conducts light from a source 78 of electromagnetic radiation, which may be, for example, ultraviolet, infrared, or visible light. The source may be, for example, a laser diode, or other suitable laser light source for directing a light beam 80 toward the waveguide 42. Various techniques that are known for coupling the light beam 80 into the waveguide 42 may be used. Once the light beam 80 is coupled into the waveguide 42, the light propagates through the waveguide 42 toward a truncated end of the waveguide 42 that is formed adjacent the air bearing surface (ABS) of the recording head 30. Light exits the end of the waveguide and heats a portion of the media, as the media moves relative to the recording head as shown by arrow 82. A near-field transducer (NFT) 84 is positioned in or adjacent to the waveguide and at or near the air bearing surface. The heat sink material may be chosen such that it does not interfere with the resonance of the NFT.
(26) Although the example of
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(30) In this disclosure, a set of material properties, namely plastic deformation, stress relaxation, and creep, have been identified as causes of NFT failure. This disclosure describes a set of materials that show enhanced hardness and higher resistance to stress relaxation and creep. At the same time, these materials possess acceptable optical properties for use in NFT's.
(31) Due to the complexity in testing a NFT device during a HAMR operation, it would be desirable to set up selection criteria for NFT materials at the sheet film level. Table I shows the physical properties of different materials. Among the plasmonic materials possible for use in an NFT, gold (Au) has among the lowest hardness and softening temperature. Also grain boundaries of Au are highly mobile and can lead to stress relaxation, creep, and thus plastic mechanical failure.
(32) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE I Materials Properties Thermal Optical @ 830 nm Conductivity CTE Brinell Temperature (° C.) Material n k (n.sup.2 − k.sup.2)/nk (W/mC) (×10.sup.−6/K) Hardness Softening Melting Ag 0.15 5.52 −36.77 418 25 180 960 Au 0.19 5.42 −28.49 310 14.2 20 100 1063 Cu 0.26 5.29 −20.30 380 16.5 35 190 1083 Ta 1.09 3.75 −3.15 545 40 800 2996 Al 2.72 8.29 −2.72 210 27 150 657 Rh 2.78 6.97 −2.11 88 8.5 55 1966 1966 Pd 2.09 5.22 −2.10 70 32 — 1554 Ir 2.65 5.39 −1.54 60 170 — 2450 Co 2.54 4.91 −1.42 69 125 — 1495 Pt 2.93 5.08 −1.16 70 40 540 1773 Fe 2.94 3.41 −0.30 60 67 500 1540 Mo 3.53 3.30 0.13 140 250 900 2620 W 3.48 2.79 0.45 190 350 1000 3390 Ru 4.98 3.88 0.50 110 193 — 2500
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(36) It is known that Au can be hardened through alloying with other metals or through oxide, or nitride, dispersion with nanoparticles. But usually doping degrades the optical property of Au and thus the NFT coupling efficiency. In the following embodiments, Au has been combined with various doping materials that have been carefully selected to not only improve the above mentioned mechanical properties but also keep the optical properties within an acceptable range for NFT operation.
(37) In one embodiment that employs solid solution hardening, Au is co-sputtered with one of the following elements: Cu, Rh, Ru, V or Zr, or an Au alloy is deposited directly from an alloy target, on Si substrates at room temperature. The doping level varies between 0.5% and 30% and the film thickness varies between 150 nm and 300 nm. The Au alloy may include Au and at least one of: Cu, Rh, Ru, Ag, Ta, Cr, Al, Zr, V, Pd, Ir, Co, W, Ti, Mg, Fe and Mo. In other embodiments, the film thickness can be as low as 10 nm.
(38) Hardness of the Au alloy films have been measured by nanoindentation and compared with that from pure Au.
(39) In addition to hardness enhancement, the Au alloy films also show higher stress relaxation temperature.
(40) Furthermore, AuRh films also show increased creep resistance.
(41) NFT materials must also possess optical properties that enable surface Plasmon resonance so that light energy that is incident on the NFT can be transferred to the storage medium. Optical refractive index (n) and extinction coefficient (k) values have been measured on Au films with various doping, as shown in
(42) Another embodiment uses oxide dispersion hardening. In one example, nano-sized (e.g., 1-5 nm) oxide particles were doped into Au films to enhance its mechanical property through oxide dispersion hardening. A dispersion of insoluble particles can harden a material because dislocation migration cannot pass the particles. Dispersion hardening from extremely stable particles, e.g. oxide or nitride particles, is the least sensitive to elevated temperatures compared to other hardening mechanisms. The nitride particles can include for example, Ta, Al, Ti, Si, In, Fe, Zr, Cu, W or B Nitride.
(43) Another advantage here is that the insoluble oxide or nitride particles won't change the electric band structure, and thus the optical n and k, of Au. Au can be reactively sputtered with V or Zr to form V.sub.2O.sub.5 or ZrO.sub.2 nanoparticles embedded in Au matrix. The deposition can be done through either reactive co-sputtering from multiple metal targets or reactive sputtering from an alloy target.
(44) Table II shows the physical properties for Au and Au:ZrO.sub.2. (from Jesse R. Williams, David R. Clarke, “Strengthening gold thin films with zirconia nanoparticles for MEMS electrical contacts”, Acta Materialia 56, 1813 (2008)).
(45) TABLE-US-00002 Summary of measured physical properties Lateral Hardness Resistivity Roughness grain size (GPa) (μΩ cm) (nm) Gold-zirconia 50 nm 5.0 6.2 1.15 as-sputtered Gold-zirconia 50 nm 3.8 4.5 1.26 annealed 500° C. Pure gold as-sputtered 100 nm 2.7 4.0 2.11 Pure gold annealed ~1 μm 2.3 3.4 2.33 500° C.
(46) As summarized in previously published Table II, the micro structure of Au is stabilized by ZrO.sub.2 doping. The average grain size in Au film increased from 100 nm to 1 μm after annealing at 500° C. for 60 hours, while in Au:ZrO films that have been through the same heat treatment, the grain size stay unchanged at 50 nm. As a consequence, the hardness of Au has been enhanced by 85% by introducing ZrO.sub.2 nanoparticles into an Au matrix, in as-grown films. After annealing at 500° C. for 60 hours, the hardness of Au:ZrO.sub.2 is still 65% higher than that of pure Au.
(47) Success in hardening Au with V.sub.2O.sub.5 nanoparticles has been reported by others. The hardness of Au has been enhanced by about 40% by introducing 5% V.sub.2O.sub.5 nanoparticles into Au matrix, as shown in
(48) In other embodiments, the oxide dopant can comprise an oxide of at least one of: Mg, Ca, Al, Ti, Si, Ce, Y, Ta, W or Th. Examples of such oxides include: MgO, CaO, Al.sub.2O.sub.3, TiO.sub.2, SiO.sub.2, CeO.sub.2, Y.sub.2O.sub.3, Ta.sub.2O.sub.5, WO.sub.2 or ThO.sub.2. When selecting an oxide, one might consider the energy needed to de-bond a material; and/or the solubility between the metal element in such particle with Au.
(49) The near field transducers described above can be fabricated using a variety of techniques, including for example: sputtering from an alloy target; co-sputtering from multiple targets; reactive sputtering from an alloy target; reactive co-sputtering from multiple targets; co-evaporation from multiple sources; reactive co-evaporation from multiple sources; and ion beam deposition from an alloy target.
(50) While the disclosure has provided several examples, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes can be made to the disclosed examples, without departing from the scope of the following claims. The implementations described above and other implementations are within the scope of the following claims.