A hard disk drive (HDD), hard disk, hard drive or fixed disk[b] is a data storage device used for storing and retrieving digital information using rapidly rotating disks (platters) coated with magnetic material.[2] An HDD retains its data even when powered off. Data is read in a random-access manner, meaning individual blocks of data can be stored or retrieved in any order rather than sequentially. An HDD consists of one or more rigid ("hard") rapidly rotating disks (platters) with magnetic heads arranged on a moving actuator arm to read and write data to the surfaces.
Introduced by IBM in 1956,[3] HDDs became the dominant
secondary storage device for general-purpose computers by the early 1960s.
Continuously improved, HDDs have maintained this position into the modern era
of servers andpersonal computers. More
than 200 companies have produced HDD units, though most current units are
manufactured by Seagate, Toshiba and Western Digital. Worldwide disk storage revenues
were US $32 billion in 2013, down 3% from 2012.[4]
The primary characteristics of an HDD are its capacity and
performance. Capacity is specified in unit prefixescorresponding to powers of
1000: a 1-terabyte (TB) drive has a capacity of 1,000 gigabytes (GB; where 1
gigabyte = 1 billion bytes). Typically, some of an HDD's capacity is
unavailable to the user because it is used by the file system and the computer
operating system, and possibly inbuilt redundancy for error correction and
recovery. Performance is specified by the time required to move the heads to a
track or cylinder (average access time) plus the time it takes for the desired
sector to move under the head (average latency, which is a function of the
physical rotational speed in revolutions per minute), and finally the speed at
which the data is transmitted (data rate).
The two most common form factors for modern HDDs are
3.5-inch, for desktop computers, and 2.5-inch, primarily for laptops. HDDs are
connected to systems by standard interface cables such as SATA (Serial ATA),
USB or SAS (Serial attached SCSI) cables.
As of 2015, the primary competing technology for secondary
storage is flash memory in the form of solid-state drives(SSDs), but HDDs
remain the dominant medium for secondary storage due to advantages in price per
unit of storage and recording capacity.[5][6] However, SSDs are replacing HDDs
where speed, power consumption and durability are more important considerations
History
Main article: History of hard disk drives
Improvement of HDD characteristics over time
Parameter Started
with Developed to Improvement
Capacity
(formatted) 3.75
megabytes[9]
eight terabytes two-million-to-one
Physical volume 68
cubic feet (1.9 m3)[c][3]
2.1 cubic inches(34 cc)[10]
57,000-to-one
Weight 2,000 pounds
(910 kg)[3]
2.2 ounces(62 g)[10]
15,000-to-one
Average access time about
600 milliseconds[3]
a few milliseconds about
200-to-one
Price US$9,200 per
megabyte[11][dubious – discuss]
< $0.05 per gigabyte by 2013[12]
180-million-to-one
Areal density 2,000
bits per square inch[13]
826 gigabits per square inch in 2014[14]
> 400-million-to-one
HDDs were introduced in 1956 as data storage for an IBM
real-time transaction processing computer and were developed for use with
general-purpose mainframe and minicomputers. The first IBM drive, the 350 RAMAC,
was approximately the size of two refrigerators and stored five million six-bit
characters (3.75 megabytes)[9] on a stack of 50 disks.
In 1962 IBM introduced the model 1311 disk drive, which was
about the size of a washing machine and stored two million characters on a
removable disk pack. Users could buy additional packs and interchange them as
needed, much like reels ofmagnetic tape. Later models of removable pack drives,
from IBM and others, became the norm in most computer installations and reached
capacities of 300 megabytes by the early 1980s. Non-removable HDDs were called
"fixed disk" drives.
Some high performance HDDs were manufactured with one head
per track, e.g., IBM 2305 so that no time was lost physically moving the heads
to a track.[15] Known as Fixed-Head or Head-Per-Track disk drives they were
very expensive and are no longer in production.[16]
In 1973, IBM introduced a new type of HDD codenamed
"Winchester". Its primary distinguishing feature was that the disk
heads were not withdrawn completely from the stack of disk platters when the
drive was powered down. Instead, the heads were allowed to "land" on
a special area of the disk surface upon spin-down, "taking off" again
when the disk was later powered on. This greatly reduced the cost of the head
actuator mechanism, but precluded removing just the disks from the drive as was
done with the disk packs of the day. Instead, the first models of
"Winchester technology" drives featured a removable disk module,
which included both the disk pack and the head assembly, leaving the actuator
motor in the drive upon removal. Later "Winchester" drives abandoned
the removable media concept and returned to non-removable platters.
Like the first removable pack drive, the first
"Winchester" drives used platters 14 inches (360 mm) in diameter. A
few years later, designers were exploring the possibility that physically
smaller platters might offer advantages. Drives with non-removable eight-inch
platters appeared, and then drives that used a 5 1/4 in (130 mm) form factor (a
mounting width equivalent to that used by contemporary floppy disk drives). The
latter were primarily intended for the then-fledgling personal computer (PC)
market.
As the 1980s began, HDDs were a rare and very expensive
additional feature in PCs, but by the late 1980s their cost had been reduced to
the point where they were standard on all but the cheapest computers.
Most HDDs in the early 1980s were sold to PC end users as an
external, add-on subsystem. The subsystem was not sold under the drive
manufacturer's name but under the subsystem manufacturer's name such as Corvus
Systems and Tallgrass Technologies, or under the PC system manufacturer's name
such as the Apple ProFile. The IBM PC/XT in 1983 included an internal 10 MB
HDD, and soon thereafter internal HDDs proliferated on personal computers.
External HDDs remained popular for much longer on the Apple
Macintosh. Every Mac made between 1986 and 1998 has a SCSI port on the back,
making external expansion easy; also, "toaster" Compact Macs did not
have easily accessible HDD bays (or, in the case of the Mac Plus, any hard
drive bay at all), so on those models, external SCSI disks were the only
reasonable option.
The 2011 Thailand floods damaged manufacturing plants, and
impacted hard disk drive cost adversely in 2011-2013.[17]
Driven by ever increasing areal density since their
invention, HDDs have continuously improved their characteristics; a few
highlights are listed in the table above. At the same time, market application
expanded from mainframe computers of the late 1950s to most mass storage
applications including computers and consumer applications such as storage of
entertainment content.
Technology
Magnetic recording
See also: Magnetic storage
An HDD records data by magnetizing a thin film of
ferromagnetic material[d] on a disk. Sequential changes in the direction of
magnetization represent binary data bits. The data is read from the disk by
detecting the transitions in magnetization. User data is encoded using an
encoding scheme, such as run-length limited encoding,[e] which determines how
the data is represented by the magnetic transitions.
A typical HDD design consists of a spindle that holds flat
circular disks, also called platters, which hold the recorded data. The
platters are made from a non-magnetic material, usually aluminium alloy, glass,
or ceramic, and are coated with a shallow layer of magnetic material typically
10–20 nm in depth, with an outer layer of carbon for protection.[19][20][21]
For reference, a standard piece of copy paper is 0.07–0.18 millimetres
(70,000–180,000 nm).[22]
The platters in contemporary HDDs are spun at speeds varying
from 4,200 rpm in energy-efficient portable devices, to 15,000 rpm for
high-performance servers.[24]The first HDDs spun at 1,200 rpm[3] and, for many
years, 3,600 rpm was the norm.[25] As of December 2013, the platters in most
consumer-grade HDDs spin at either 5,400 rpm or 7,200 rpm.
Information is written to and read from a platter as it
rotates past devices called read-and-write heads that operate very close (often
tens of nanometers) over the magnetic surface. The read-and-write head is used
to detect and modify the magnetization of the material immediately under it.
In modern drives there is one head for each magnetic platter
surface on the spindle, mounted on a common arm. An actuator arm (or access
arm) moves the heads on an arc (roughly radially) across the platters as they
spin, allowing each head to access almost the entire surface of the platter as
it spins. The arm is moved using a voice coil actuator or in some older designs
a stepper motor. Early hard disk drives wrote data at some constant bits per
second, resulting in all tracks having the same amount of data per track but
modern drives (since the 1990s) use zone bit recording—increasing the write
speed from inner to outer zone and thereby storing more data per track in the
outer zones.
In modern drives, the small size of the magnetic regions
creates the danger that their magnetic state might be lost because of thermal
effects, thermally induced magnetic instability which is commonly known as the
"superparamagnetic limit." To counter this, the platters are coated
with two parallel magnetic layers, separated by a 3-atom layer of the
non-magnetic element ruthenium, and the two layers are magnetized in opposite
orientation, thus reinforcing each other.[26] Another technology used to
overcome thermal effects to allow greater recording densities is perpendicular
recording, first shipped in 2005,[27] and as of 2007 the technology was used in
many HDDs.[28][29][30]
.jpg)
No comments:
Post a Comment