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From Magnetic Recording to Protein Memory
| What |
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|---|---|
| When |
Apr 06, 2009 from 01:00 PM to 02:00 PM |
| Where | 54-134 EIV |
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Sakhrat Khizroev
UC Riverside
Monday, April 6, 2009 at 1:00PM
54-134 Engineering IV Building
Refreshments Served
Abstract:
It is a historical time for the information storage industry. The
roadmaps of leading companies are finally coming to an end. For the
first time, the conventional technology is facing an inevitable end due
to a fundamental limit to the laws of scaling. It is the
superparamagnetic limit which recently forced the industry to abandon
its long-lived mainstream technology of longitudinal magnetic recording
in favor of so called perpendicular recording. Despite the fact that
perpendicular recording offers merely a factor of three to five
improvement in the data density, the multi-billion-dollar industry had
no choice but to adopt this quite incremental solution. A number of
technologies have been proposed to further defer the limit. The two most
popular alternatives are patterned media and heat-assisted magnetic
recording (HAMR). Multilevel 3D magnetic recording is another
alternative that relies on exploiting advantages of a third physical
dimension to increase areal densities and rates. These magnetic
alternatives promise to defer the superparamagnetic limit beyond 10
terabit/in2. However, because of too many open questions associated with
any of the technologies, it may still be premature for a reliable
forecast on how far and how fast any of these alternatives could take
the industry. In other words, the industry still has no consensus on the
technology to pursue in no further than three to five years from today.
Nonetheless, the demand for higher data density of storage and memory
devices is exponentially growing, especially with the emergence of the
Internet, explosive growth of broadband communication, increasingly
complex multi-media mobile devices, and the rapid expansion of on-demand
databases serving multinational businesses. Sooner or later, the
industry will have to adopt a more robust and long-lasting alternative.
Protein-based recording is believed to be a technology that could answer
some of the open questions and be extended to areal densities beyond 10
terabit/in2 and data rates above 2 Gigabit/sec. The concept of optical
protein-based memory has been around since the early 70s. However, still
no commercially available protein-based memory devices exist. In this
colloquium, I will discuss the main challenges associated with practical
implementation of such devices. Furthermore, I will talk about the
feasibility of making the most of the truly unparalleled properties of
photochromic proteins by realizing an optical data storage disk drive
with unmatched features and particularly, record high data densities and
rates.
Biography:
Sakhrat Khizroev received a BS in Quantum Electronics and Applied
Physics from Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT), a MS in
Physics from the University of Miami, and a PhD in Electrical and
Computer Engineering from Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) in 1992,
1994, and 1999, respectively. Before he joined the faculty at the
department of Electrical Engineering of the University of California –
Riverside, he spent over three years with the department of Electrical
and Computer Engineering of Florida International University, Miami,
Florida. In Miami, he founded and directed Center for Nanoscale Magnetic
Devices supported by Motorola, National Science Foundation (NSF), and
Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR). Before coming to the
world of academia, he spent over three years as a Research Staff Member
with Seagate Research and one year as a pre-doctoral intern with IBM
Almaden Research Center. He has over 26 issued and 120 provisional
patents with IBM, Seagate, CMU, FIU, and UCR. He has
authored/co-authored over 90 refereed papers, 5 books and book chapters
in the field of nanomagnetic devices for computing and medicine related
applications. He served as Associate Editor for IEEE Transactions on
Nanotechnology and a guest editor for Nanotechnology and IEEE
Transactions on Magnetics.
