Areal Density Limits in HD platters

liquidtech

Member
Feb 17, 2003
83
0
0
It seems as if hard drives may be reaching their capacity peak in the coming years. One of the major drawbacks in capacity seems to be the areal density of the platters. Just like cd burners have reached their end at 52x how far will hard disk drives go? SCI AM density article
 

Mday

Lifer
Oct 14, 1999
18,647
1
81
cd burners and readers reach around 52x because any faster, and material considerations will make the discs fail, and break. most of this has to do with the heat generated, which starts to weaken the the plastic. Combined with the forces on the spinning disc, this will mean plastic or elastic deformation which is quite bad. and any scratches on the disc will make those areas weaker, so further weakening will cause failure.
 

zephyrprime

Diamond Member
Feb 18, 2001
7,512
2
81
Nah, I don't think we'll be hitting limits anytime soon. There are always new things like ballistics mageto resistance and pixie dust that give better areal densities.
 

giocopiano

Member
Feb 7, 2002
120
0
0
I would like to know the impact of higher density on reliability. I would suspect it lessens it as it sounds to me like hard drives are coming under more and more criticism for it these days.
 

everman

Lifer
Nov 5, 2002
11,288
1
0
Originally posted by: zephyrprime
Nah, I don't think we'll be hitting limits anytime soon. There are always new things like ballistics mageto resistance and pixie dust that give better areal densities.

Pixie dust, cheap, soybased, and if used enough your servers will fix themselves.

er well ya, I think we'll see 1Tb drives pretty soon. I think the largest currently are 250g. At the current rate, 1 Tb shouldn't be more than 3-4 yrs off. as long as they still try to keep up with moores law anyway..should be sooner than 3 I think.
 

rimshaker

Senior member
Dec 7, 2001
722
0
0
EMR (Extraordinary Magnetoresistance) technology is coming soon, replacing today's GMR (Giant Magnetoresistance) technology.

In a nutshell at its most fundamental level, GMR recognizes electron spin orientations to differentiate states. Whereas EMR recognizes electrons orbital shapes (remember s, p, d, f, g orbitals?).

EMR pretty much brings areal density up to the terabyte levels along with noticeable performance increases.
 

Shalmanese

Platinum Member
Sep 29, 2000
2,157
0
0
Its all very good saying all this new tech is around the corner but you still can't ignore the fact that HD manufacturers are running on razor thin margins and the majority of people are suffering from a glut of HD space. While hardcore leechers and amatuer movie makers cant get enough HD space, the average computer user is using 40GB to store a couple of word docs and his digital camera photos as well as some email.

Maybe the XP Media Center can change all that but the demand for more storage isn't as strong as the demand for cheaper storage.
 

zephyrprime

Diamond Member
Feb 18, 2001
7,512
2
81
Yeah, I agree with you Shalmanese. We might soon be more limited by a lack of demand rather than a lack of technology.