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TEM of nanodot arrays fabricated by direct laser interferometry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 July 2020
Abstract
Patterned nanostructures and nanodots are attracting increasing interest in the information storage industry. The ultimate recording density of a magnetic medium will have single domain dots aligned in arrays and each dot in such an array acts as a recording bit. The ideal structure is that the dots are magnetic and the surrounding medium is non-magnetic so that each dot can switch magnetization direction freely without the interference from other dots. This paper presents the nanostructure of the nano-dot array investigated by transmission electron microscopy and magnetic force microscopy. The Co:C film was deposited by alternatively sputtering Co target and C target. The as-deposited specimen has an amorphous structure as revealed by electron diffraction in TEM. Such films transform to ferro-magnetic ones after heat treatment [1]. A laser beam of wavelength of 308 nm and a flux of 0.24 J/cm2 was split into two beams of an approximately equal intensity and then recombined, generating an interference pattern and a periodic modulation of the light intensity.
- Type
- Applications of Microscopy: Surfaces/Interfaces
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 2001
References
This research is supported by CMRA and NSF grant 25-0521-0054-001.Google Scholar
1. Yu, M., Liu, Y., and Sellmyer, D. J., J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 85, 4319–4321 (1999).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2. Zheng, M., Yu, M., Liu, Y., Skomski, R., Liou, S. H., and Sellmyer, D. J. et al. sub. to J. Appl.Physics.Google Scholar