Dorothea Wiesmann, Abu Sebastian
MEMS 2006
Micro - electro - mechanical - system (MEMS) - based scanning-probe data-storage devices are emerging as potential ultra-high-density, low-access-time, and low-power alternative to conventional data storage. Nanoscale accuracy and short latency in the navigation of the probes are the primary control challenges in probe-storage applications. This paper focuses on the control design to address these challenges in a probe-based storage prototype using a micro-scanner as the nanopositioner for the storage medium. Experimental results demonstrate remarkably short seek times on the order of 1 ms for the worst-case seek operations. Moreover, a thermal-sensor-based approach is compared with a two-sensor-control configuration employing both the global-position information from the thermal sensors and the medium-derived position information. Drift and low-frequency noise can affect the performance of the thermal-sensor-based control scheme over long periods of operation. This is addressed by the second scheme, a novel control architecture based on the H∞ control framework that uses the best measurement in each of the frequency regions. © 2007 IEEE.
Dorothea Wiesmann, Abu Sebastian
MEMS 2006
Angeliki Pantazi, Mark Lantz
MECH 2013
Giovanni Cherubini, Angeliki Pantazi, et al.
AIM 2013
Samuele Ruffino, Kumudu Geethan Karunaratne, et al.
DATE 2024