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Read-out characteristics of a triangular aperture mounted optical head slider applied to a polarized light: spatial resolution in the circumferential direction

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Abstract

Optical memory based on the “near-field” principle is considered one of the most promising technological breakthroughs because it has no apparent physical density limit such as that due to the thermal instability encountered in magnetic recording. In light of this, we have demonstrated the superior readout performance of an optical head slider mounted on a triangular aperture with a typical side size of 140 nm irradiated by polarized light. With this scheme, we have indicated a clear signal response corresponding to a 150-nm line-and-space (L/S) pattern. In this paper, we introduce a protruded aperture mounted on a 1.5-mm-long miniaturized optical head slider whose aperture protrudes approximately 25 nm from an air-bearing surface. Utilizing a triangular aperture irradiating polarized violet laser light, we performed a readout experiment at an aperture-to-medium spacing down to approximately 29 nm. A clear readout signal was obtained corresponding to the pattern down to 100-nm line width, in spite of the usage of a fairly large side size of 330 nm. We also evaluated the influence of the incident light’s polarization direction on the readout signals while changing the line width of the L/S patterns from 300 to 100 nm. A polarization direction perpendicular to the bottom side of the aperture provided both higher spatial resolution and better signal contrast. We also observed a “spike phenomenon” when the aperture passed through the boundaries between the metal portion and the space (or line-and-space) portion. We believe this phenomenon is the cause of the enhancement or suppression of specific L/S pattern or period signals.

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Acknowledgments

A part of this research was supported by grants-in-aid for scientific research awarded in 2006 by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan. The authors would like to thank Dr. Koji Uozumi and Mr. Noriyuki Saito, NHK Spring, Ltd., for providing pico-slider suspensions and valuable technical advice concerning their suspension characteristics, and Mr. Tamotsu Kusumi and Mr. Mitsuyoshi Uchishima, Nikon Corp., for their electron beam processing of finer line-and-space patterns with line widths down to 50 nm on thin chromium layered media. The authors would also like to thank Dr. Hisashi Ito, NTT Advanced Technology Corp., for his careful formation of the high-quality thin carbon overcoat on the patterned media. In addition, the authors would like to thank Dr. Takanori Doi, Toda Corporation, for his helpful suggestions, careful formation of the lubricant layer on the patterned media, and testing of the glide heights on these media.

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Correspondence to Toshifumi Ohkubo.

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Ohkubo, T., Park, M., Hirata, M. et al. Read-out characteristics of a triangular aperture mounted optical head slider applied to a polarized light: spatial resolution in the circumferential direction. Microsyst Technol 16, 169–177 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00542-009-0776-7

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00542-009-0776-7

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