There's a new use in town for helium besides supercooling electromagnets
at the Large Hadron Collider and making your voice sound freakishly
high-pitched: improving the capacity and efficiency of hard drives.
Western Digital on Monday announced that its HGST subsidiary has begun shipping the new 6-terabyte Ultrastar He6 hard drive, a model that seals the spinning disk platters inside a hermetic chamber filled with helium instead of air.
Because helium has just one-seventh the density of air, using it reduces
the turbulence caused by spinning disks and the heads that constantly
move above them to read and write data. That, in turn, means lower power
consumption and less waste heat in the data centers where these drives
are designed to be used. Specifically, WD said the power used per
terabyte drops 49 percent.
The lower turbulence also increases the drive's capacity because more
platters can be squeezed into the 3.5-inch housing. Today's 4-terabyte
models use five platters and top out at 4TB, but the Ultrastar He6 has
seven platters and reaches 6TB of capacity. That's also useful for data
centers where space is at a premium.
Hard drives are under competitive pressure from flash memory, which is
faster and quieter but which costs a lot more per gigabyte.
The helium-based concept will be the basis for new designs that Western
Digital has in the works to keep hard drives in the capacity lead with
better areal density -- in other words, more bits per square inch of
each platter.
"HGST's helium platform will serve as the main platform for new
technologies like shingled magnetic recording (SMR) and heat-assisted
magnetic recording (HAMR) where HGST will continue to push the HDD areal
density envelope," Western Digital said in its announcement. "The
helium platform will also serve as the future building block for new,
growing market segments such as cold storage, a space that HGST plans to
address over the next couple of years."
Source : CNET News
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