The founding fathers of modern hard drive technology have been awarded the
Nobel
Prize for Physics.
The
Royal
Swedish Academy of Sciences said that French-born Albert Fert and
German-born Peter Grünberg both revolutionised the technology commonly found in
music players and laptops today.
Fert
and Grunberg independently discovered
Giant
Magnetoresistance (GMR) in 1988. Very weak magnetic changes give rise to
major differences in electrical resistance in a GMR system.
A system of this kind is the perfect tool for reading data from hard disks
when information registered magnetically has to be converted to electric
current.
Researchers and engineers soon began work to enable the use of the GMR effect
in read-out heads.
The first read-out head based on the GMR effect was launched in 1997 and this
soon became the standard technology. Even the most recent read-out techniques
are further developments of GMR.
A hard disk stores information, such as music, in the form of microscopically
small areas magnetised in different directions. The information is retrieved by
a read-out head that scans the disk and registers the magnetic changes.
The smaller and more compact the hard disk, the smaller and weaker the
individual magnetic areas. More sensitive read-out heads are therefore required
if information is packed more densely on a hard disk.
The GMR effect was discovered thanks to new techniques developed during the
1970s to produce very thin layers of different materials.
If GMR is to work, structures consisting of layers that are only a few atoms
thick have to be produced. For this reason GMR is also considered one of the
first real applications of nanotechnology.
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