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Dive into the research topics where Mark Anthony Gubbins is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark Anthony Gubbins.


IEEE Transactions on Magnetics | 2006

Commercial TMR heads for hard disk drives: characterization and extendibility at 300 gbit/in/sup 2/

Sining Mao; Yonghua Chen; Feng Liu; Xingfu Chen; Bin Xu; Pu-Ling Lu; Mohammed Shariat Ullah Patwari; Haiwen Xi; Clif Chang; Brad Miller; Dave Menard; Bharat B. Pant; Jay Loven; Kristin Joy Duxstad; Shaoping Li; Zhengyong Zhang; A. Johnston; Robert Lamberton; Mark Anthony Gubbins; Tom Mclaughlin; J. Gadbois; Juren Ding; Bill Cross; Song Xue; Pat J. Ryan

Tunneling magnetoresistive (TMR) reading heads at an areal density of 80-100 Gbit/in/sup 2/ in a longitudinal magnetic recording mode have for the first time been commercialized for both laptop and desktop Seagate hard disk drive products. The first generation TMR products utilized a bottom TMR stack and an abutted hard bias design. These TMR heads have demonstrated three times the amplitude of comparable giant magnetoresistive (GMR) devices, resulting in a 0.6 decade bit error rate gain over GMR. This has enabled high component and drive yields. Due to the improved thermal dissipation of current-perpendicular-to-plane geometry, TMR runs cooler and has better lifetime performance, and has demonstrated the similar electrical static discharge robustness as GMR. TMR has demonstrated equivalent or better process and wafer yields compared to GMR. The TMR heads is proven to be a mature and capable reader technology. Using the same TMR head design in conjunction with perpendicular recording, 274 Gbit/in/sup 2/ has been demonstrated. Advanced design can reach 311 Gbit/in/sup 2/.


Applied physics reviews | 2016

A review of high magnetic moment thin films for microscale and nanotechnology applications

Gunther Scheunert; Olle Heinonen; R. Hardeman; Adam Andrzej Lapicki; Mark Anthony Gubbins; R. M. Bowman

The creation of large magnetic fields is a necessary component in many technologies, ranging from magnetic resonance imaging, electric motors and generators, and magnetic hard disk drives in information storage. This is typically done by inserting a ferromagnetic pole piece with a large magnetisation density MS in a solenoid. In addition to large MS, it is usually required or desired that the ferromagnet is magnetically soft and has a Curie temperature well above the operating temperature of the device. A variety of ferromagnetic materials are currently in use, ranging from FeCo alloys in, for example, hard disk drives, to rare earth metals operating at cryogenic temperatures in superconducting solenoids. These latter can exceed the limit on MS for transition metal alloys given by the Slater-Pauling curve. This article reviews different materials and concepts in use or proposed for technological applications that require a large MS, with an emphasis on nanoscale material systems, such as thin and ultra-thin films. Attention is also paid to other requirements or properties, such as the Curie temperature and magnetic softness. In a final summary, we evaluate the actual applicability of the discussed materials for use as pole tips in electromagnets, in particular, in nanoscale magnetic hard disk drive read-write heads; the technological advancement of the latter has been a very strong driving force in the development of the field of nanomagnetism.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Realizing a high magnetic moment in Gd/Cr/FeCo: The role of the rare earth

C. Ward; Gunther Scheunert; William Hendren; R. Hardeman; Mark Anthony Gubbins; R. M. Bowman

The search for materials or systems exhibiting a high magnetic saturation has been of longstanding importance. It has been suggested that increased saturation could be achieved by coupling a transition metal via a spacer to a rare earth. We report Gd/Cr/Fe70Co30 multilayer stacks and find reduced yet modulating magnetic moment as a function of Cr thickness. Through a micro structural analysis, the lowered moment is indicated by the nucleation of the ultrathin Gd films into a face-centered cubic (fcc) phase. We discuss the possible solution in terms of quasi-perfect lattice match seed material to promote growth of hcp Gd.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

Thermally induced adjacent track erasure in exchange spring media

J. Dean; M. A. Bashir; A. Goncharov; G. Hrkac; Simon Bance; T. Schrefl; A. Cazacu; Mark Anthony Gubbins; R. W. Lamberton; Dieter Suess

Repeated writing causes adjacent track erasure. During multiple write cycles, the grains of neighboring tracks are exposed to the write field, which will lower the energy barrier. Grains in an adjacent track are likely to reverse their magnetization when the cumulated field expose time exceeds the transition time. The energy barrier of a grain subject to the write field is computed as a function of distance from the track center. For the same perpendicular writer and the same intergranular exchange field, the number of passes before erasure is orders of magnitudes higher in exchange spring media than in single phase media.


Journal of Physics D | 2014

Influence of strain and polycrystalline ordering on magnetic properties of high moment rare earth metals and alloys

Gunther Scheunert; C. Ward; William Hendren; Adam Andrzej Lapicki; R. Hardeman; M. Mooney; Mark Anthony Gubbins; R. M. Bowman

Despite being the most suitable candidates for solenoid pole pieces in state-of-the-art superconductor-based electromagnets, the intrinsic magnetic properties of heavy rare earth metals and their alloys have gained comparatively little attention. With the potential of integration in micro and nanoscale devices, thin films of Gd, Dy, Tb, DyGd and DyTb were plasma-sputtered and investigated for their in-plane magnetic properties, with an emphasis on magnetization versus temperature profiles. Based on crystal structure analysis of the polycrystalline rare earth films, which consist of a low magnetic moment fcc layer at the seed interface topped with a higher moment hcp layer, an experimental protocol is introduced which allows the direct magnetic analysis of the individual layers. In line with the general trend of heavy lanthanides, the saturation magnetization was found to drop with increasing unit cell size. In situ annealed rare earth films exceeded the saturation magnetization of a high-moment Fe65Co35 reference film in the cryogenic temperature regime, proving their potential for pole piece applications; however as-deposited rare earth films were found completely unsuitable. In agreement with theoretical predictions, sufficiently strained crystal phases of Tb and Dy did not exhibit an incommensurate magnetic order, unlike their single-crystal counterparts which have a helical phase. DyGd and DyTb alloys followed the trends of the elemental rare earth metals in terms of crystal structure and magnetic properties. Inter-rare-earth alloys hence present a desirable blend of saturation magnetization and operating temperature.


Nanophotonics | 2015

Novel droplet near-field transducer for heat-assisted magnetic recording

Jacek Gosciniak; Marcus B. Mooney; Mark Anthony Gubbins; Brian Corbett

Abstract Two main ingredients of plasmonics are surface plasmon polaritons (SPP) and localized surface plasmon resonances (LSPR) as they provide a high degree of concentration of electromagnetic fields in the vicinity of metal surfaces, which is well beyond that allowed by the diffraction limit of optics. Those properties have been used in the new technique of heat assisted magnetic recording (HAMR) to overcome an existing limit of conventional magnetic recording by utilizing a near-field transducer (NFT). The NFT designs are based on excitation of surface plasmons on a metal structure, which re-radiate with a subdiffraction limited light spot confined in the near field. In this paper, we propose a novel “droplet”-shaped NFT, which takes full advantage of a recenltly proposed Mach–Zehnder Interferometer (MZI), a coupling arrangement that allows optimal coupling of light to the transducer. The droplet design ensures better impedance match with the recording media and, consequently, better coupling of power. The droplet design results in very high enhancement of the electric field and allows the confinement of light in a spot size much smaller than the present stateof- the-art lollipop transducer.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Time resolved scanning Kerr microscopy of hard disk writer structures with a multilayered yoke

W. Yu; P. Gangmei; P. S. Keatley; R. J. Hicken; Mark Anthony Gubbins; P. J. Czoschke; Radek Lopusnik

Partially built hard disk writer structures with a multilayered yoke formed from 4 repeats of a NiFe(∼1 nm)/CoFe(50 nm) bilayer were studied by time and vector resolved scanning Kerr microscopy. Dynamic images of the in-plane magnetization suggest an underlying closure domain equilibrium state. This state is found to be modified by application of a bias magnetic field and also during pulse cycling, leading to different magnetization rotation and relaxation behavior within the tip region.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Time- and vector-resolved Kerr microscopy of hard disk writers

P. Gangmei; P. S. Keatley; W. Yu; R. J. Hicken; Mark Anthony Gubbins; P. J. Czoschke; Radek Lopusnik

Time-resolved scanning Kerr microscopy has been used to make wafer level measurements of magnetization dynamics within the yoke and pole piece of partially built hard disk writer structures. Three Cartesian components of the vector magnetization were recorded simultaneously using a quadrant photodiode polarization bridge detector. The rise time, relaxation time, and amplitude of each component has been related to the magnetic ground state, the initial torque, and flux propagation through the yoke and pole piece. Dynamic images reveal “flux-beaming” in which the magnetization component parallel to the symmetry axis of the yoke is largest along that axis.


Nano Research | 2015

In situ electron holography of the dynamic magnetic field emanating from a hard-disk drive writer

Joshua F. Einsle; Christophe Gatel; Aurélien Masseboeuf; Robin Cours; M. A. Bashir; Mark Anthony Gubbins; R. M. Bowman; E. Snoeck

The proliferation of mobile devices in society accessing data via the “cloud” is imposing a dramatic increase in the amount of information to be stored on hard disk drives (HDD) used in servers. Forecasts are that areal densities will need to increase by as much as 35% compound per annum and by 2,020 cloud storage capacity will be around 7 zettabytes corresponding to areal densities of 2 Tb/in2. This requires increased performance from the magnetic pole of the electromagnetic writer in the read/write head in the HDD. Current state-of-art writing is undertaken by morphologically complex magnetic pole of sub 100 nm dimensions, in an environment of engineered magnetic shields and it needs to deliver strong directional magnetic field to areas on the recording media around 50 nm × 13 nm. This points to the need for a method to perform direct quantitative measurements of the magnetic field generated by the write pole at the nanometer scale. Here we report on the complete in situ quantitative mapping of the magnetic field generated by a functioning write pole in operation using electron holography. The results point the way towards a new nanoscale magnetic field source to further develop in situ transmission electron microscopy.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Imaging the equilibrium state and magnetization dynamics of partially built hard disk write heads

R. A. J. Valkass; W. Yu; L. R. Shelford; P. S. Keatley; T. H. J. Loughran; R. J. Hicken; S. A. Cavill; G. van der Laan; S. S. Dhesi; M. A. Bashir; Mark Anthony Gubbins; P. J. Czoschke; Radek Lopusnik

Four different designs of partially built hard disk write heads with a yoke comprising four repeats of NiFe (1 nm)/CoFe (50 nm) were studied by both x-ray photoemission electron microscopy (XPEEM) and time-resolved scanning Kerr microscopy (TRSKM). These techniques were used to investigate the static equilibrium domain configuration and the magnetodynamic response across the entire structure, respectively. Simulations and previous TRSKM studies have made proposals for the equilibrium domain configuration of similar structures, but no direct observation of the equilibrium state of the writers has yet been made. In this study, static XPEEM images of the equilibrium state of writer structures were acquired using x-ray magnetic circular dichroism as the contrast mechanism. These images suggest that the crystalline anisotropy dominates the equilibrium state domain configuration, but competition with shape anisotropy ultimately determines the stability of the equilibrium state. Dynamic TRSKM images were acquire...

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R. M. Bowman

Queen's University Belfast

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Brian Corbett

Tyndall National Institute

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