Jitter Investigation and Performance Evaluation of a Small-Scale Probe Storage Device Prototype

MEMS-based scanning-probe data storage devices are emerging as potential ultra-high-density, low-access-time, and low-power alternatives to conventional data storage. Thermomechanical probe-based storage on thin polymer films is arguably the most advanced scanning-probe data storage scheme. The performance evaluation of a small-scale storage device prototype based on this concept is presented. The emphasis is on understanding the timing jitter in the read-back signals. Experiments are performed that confirm that the primary source of timing-jitter is the nanometer-scale perturbations of the micro-scanner while positioning the recording medium relative to the read/write transducers. Analytical estimates of these micro-scanner perturbations are obtained. An extensive performance evaluation, using the experimentally identified channel and medium-noise spectral characteristics, is conducted to study the impact of the microscanner perturbations on the performance of the storage device.

[1]  Srinivasa M. Salapaka,et al.  Design methodologies for robust nano-positioning , 2005, IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology.

[2]  H. Rothuizen,et al.  A Vibration Resistant Nanopositioner for Mobile Parallel-Probe Storage Applications , 2007, Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems.

[3]  H. Rothuizen,et al.  "Millipede": a MEMS-based scanning-probe data-storage system , 2002, Digest of the Asia-Pacific Magnetic Recording Conference.

[4]  Haralampos Pozidis,et al.  Signal processing for probe storage , 2005, Proceedings. (ICASSP '05). IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, 2005..

[5]  A. Sebastian,et al.  Control of MEMS-Based Scanning-Probe Data-Storage Devices , 2007, IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology.

[6]  G. Binnig,et al.  A micromechanical thermal displacement sensor with nanometre resolution , 2005 .