Bit Patterned Magnetic Recording: Theory, Media Fabrication, and Recording Performance
Thomas R. Albrecht, Hitesh Arora, Vipin Ayanoor-Vitikkate, Jean-Marc, Beaujour, Daniel Bedau, David Berman, Alexei L. Bogdanov, Yves-Andre Chapuis,, Julia Cushen, Elizabeth E. Dobisz, Gregory Doerk, He Gao, Michael Grobis,, Bruce Gurney, Weldon Hanson, Olav Hellwig

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel fabrication method for bit patterned magnetic media using advanced lithography techniques, achieving feature sizes below 10 nm and demonstrating high-density recording with low error rates, suitable for next-generation hard drives.
Contribution
It introduces a new fabrication process combining multiple lithography methods to create rectangular BPM with sub-10 nm features, improving integration and performance.
Findings
Achieved feature sizes of less than 10 nm.
Demonstrated recording at 1.6 Tb/in^2 with low error rates.
Analyzed advantages of rectangular bitcells for system integration.
Abstract
Bit Patterned Media (BPM) for magnetic recording provide a route to densities and circumvents many of the challenges associated with conventional granular media technology. Instead of recording a bit on an ensemble of random grains, BPM uses an array of lithographically defined isolated magnetic islands, each of which stores one bit. Fabrication of BPM is viewed as the greatest challenge for its commercialization. In this article we describe a BPM fabrication method which combines e-beam lithography, directed self-assembly of block copolymers, self-aligned double patterning, nanoimprint lithography, and ion milling to generate BPM based on CoCrPt alloys. This combination of fabrication technologies achieves feature sizes of , significantly smaller than what conventional semiconductor nanofabrication methods can achieve. In contrast to earlier work which used…
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