This Application is related to U.S. Pat. No. 7,969,685, filing date Aug. 13, 2008, publication date Jun. 28, 2011, which is assigned to the present assignees and is fully incorporated herein by reference.
1. Technical Field
This disclosure relates to thin film magnetic read/write heads and particularly to the design of a DFH (Dynamic Flying Height) slider air bearing surface (ABS) operating in a TAMR (thermally assisted magnetic recording) mode to achieve optimal management of thermal energy transferred to a recording medium.
2. Description
The present disclosure relates to a hard disk drive (HDD) that utilizes DFH (dynamic fly height) to control the distance between a read/write transducer and a magnetic medium and also applies thermally assisted magnetic recording (TAMR) to improve the writeability of that magnetic medium by locally heating (i.e., supplying thermal energy to) the region on which writing is to occur to reduce its coercivity and anisotropy. More specifically, the present disclosure relates to an air bearing surface (ABS) design for a slider that facilitates the management of that TAMR thermal energy and also improves the uniformity of touch-down detection. Although issues arising from the use of thermal energy to heat a magnetic recording medium have been discussed in the following prior arts, none of these teachings approach the issues in the manner to be presented herein. We refer to prior art teachings such as: Suzuki et al (U.S. Pat. No. 8,064,156), Song et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 7,428,124) and (U.S. Pat. No. 7,430,098), Wallash (US Publ. Pat. Appl. 2011/0128644), Hachisuka (U.S. Pat. No. 8,154,826) and (U.S. Pat. No. 8,081,398), Mochizuki (U.S. Pat. No. 8,264,512).
It is a first object of this application to improve the dynamic stability of a TAMR slider.
It is a second object of this application to improve the dynamic stability of a TAMR slider while simultaneously providing improved thermal management.
It is a third object of this application to achieve the first two objects while achieving uniform touch-down detectability and back-off efficiency in all data zones by means of a topography that provides extremely low pressure/stiffness.
It is a fourth object of this application to achieve the first three objects while also providing a slider ABS topography that controls wear and damage due to thermal heating during extended periods of TAMR laser operation.
It is a fifth object of this application to provide flexibility in ABS design by enabling optimization of air-bearing pressure for enhanced thermal management and slider dynamical stability.
These objects will all be achieved by means of an ABS topography design for a slider such as is shown schematically in
The objects, features, and advantages of the present disclosure are understood within the context of the Detailed Description as set forth below. The Detailed Description is itself understood within the context of the accompanying figures, wherein:
a and 4b are each an enlargement of a portion of the schematic planar illustration of the air bearing surface (ABS) structure of the present slider showing the position of a single (4a) heater centrally placed and a total of three heaters (4b), including the single centrally placed heater of (4a) and two additional heaters, which may (or may not) be symmetrically placed adjacent to the write head portion of the slider in the cross-track direction.
a and 5b are schematic graphical representations showing the protrusion of the slider surface in the vicinity of the heaters shown in
In a HDD, the data on a disk is read and written by a magnetic transducer (or read/write head), and each such transducer is embedded within a slider which is mounted on a suspension and flies over the rotating disk on a lubricating layer of air with a passive spacing of around 10 nm. During the read/write process, the active spacing is actually reduced, perhaps to below 1 nm, in order to achieve a higher areal density and disk capacity (eg. 1 Tbpsi). The current process of achieving such low fly heights, which is the so-called fly on demand (FOD) or dynamic fly height (DFH) process, controls magnetic spacing via the local thermal protrusion produced by activation of a heater embedded near the transducer. The absolute spacing between the read/write element and the medium surface is determined by first activating the heater sufficiently to bring the transducer into contact with the rotating medium and then reducing the activation and backing-off (BO) to a desired spacing that ensures reliable magnetic recording.
Many studies have been performed and techniques developed to accurately determine the contact point with the medium. The main difficulty in doing this is to overcome the hydro-dynamic air layer lubrication as the read/write elements are actuated towards the medium. With a decrease in spacing, the air pressure on the slider surface increases, which needs to be managed properly through innovative air-bearing surface designs or heater geometry. It is well known that the low pressure air-bearing designs promote excellent touch down detectability at the cost of poor slider dynamic stability,
In addition, the state-of-the-art TAMR technology utilizes a laser to heat the media and enhance its writeability. The heat generated by the laser can induce serious head-disk interface (HDI) challenges. Air-bearing designs can be studied for better thermal management in TAMR applications through optimizing the pressure as shown in equ. (1) below:
Where qconduction is the heat flux between the ABS of the slider and the medium as a result of the medium temperature being increased. In equ. (1), the terms are defined as follows:
k=heat conduction coefficient of gas between slider and medium
h(x,y)=slider to medium spacing;
P=air-bearing pressure
λ=mean free path
b=(2(2−σT)γ)/(σT(γ+1))PR), where:
σT=thermal accommodation coefficient, γ=specific heat ratio and PR=Prandtl Number.
In order to better understand the effect of pressure on thermal management (as indicated in equ. (1)) and touch down detection, three ABS designs have been fabricated and tested.
Upon testing these three designs, it was found that the slider of
This disclosure, therefore, provides a TAMR slider for a HDD, supplemented with multiple heater elements for DFH operation and aerodynamic stability during HDD operation. The ABS topography of the slider combines excellent wear and damage prevention for the read/write element together with extremely low pressure/stiffness of the air-bearing layer. The low pressure/stiffness enhances touch down detection and the back-off process, which has a beneficial effect on wear and damage, while the heater arrangement provides controlled slider surface protrusion relatively far away from the read/write head itself for excellent dynamic stability (fly height, pitch and roll stability across the entire disk) during the remainder of HDD operation while the slider is flying above the rotating medium. Note that the stiffness matrix of
Referring to schematic ABS planar diagram of
Referring now to
Below the heater can be seen a portion (schematically illustrated) of the energizing coil (60) that produces the magnetic write field. Portions of the shields and coil insulation material are also shown schematically.
In
In the present slider, this multiple heater arrangement, as compared with the single heater, will provide additional air-bearing pressure by creating slider surface protrusions relatively far from either side of the read/write head and thereby enhance dynamic stability.
Referring next to
The protrusion profile in
Referring next to
Note that the entries in the matrices indicate changes in the load, pitch torque and roll torque when a unit of FH (fly height), pitch or roll is changed. The larger the absolute value of the entry, the greater is the associated stability. Note also that “ambient” refers to atmospheric pressure and “all spacings” refers to thermally induced spacings resulting from changes in DFH power from no power to full operational power.
As is understood by a person skilled in the art, the preferred embodiments of the present disclosure are illustrative of the present disclosure rather than being limiting of the present disclosure. Revisions and modifications may be made to methods, processes, materials, structures, and dimensions through which is formed a DFH type TAMR slider having enhanced touch down detectability and back off efficiency resulting from an extremely low pressure/stiffness ABS topography, while also having enhanced dynamic stability during HDD operation resulting from slider surface protrusion produced by multiple heaters disposed about the read/write head in the cross-track direction, while still providing such a DFH type TAMR slider, formed in accord with the present disclosure as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7428124 | Song et al. | Sep 2008 | B1 |
7430098 | Song et al. | Sep 2008 | B1 |
7724461 | McFadyen et al. | May 2010 | B1 |
7969685 | Shen et al. | Jun 2011 | B2 |
7995425 | Schreck et al. | Aug 2011 | B2 |
8064156 | Suzuki et al. | Nov 2011 | B1 |
8081398 | Hachisuka | Dec 2011 | B2 |
8154826 | Hachisuka | Apr 2012 | B2 |
8264512 | Mochizuki | Sep 2012 | B2 |
20110128644 | Wallash | Jun 2011 | A1 |