The reliable operation of data storage devices is a top priority, and has been a persistent challenge as the elements of data storage have grown progressively smaller. Experimental data show that major failure modes in reliably interfacing with small areas of data storage are caused by aerodynamic turbulence buffeting the discs and actuator, and by microscopic particles within a data storage device, which may interfere with or damage components such as a media surface or a slider with a read and/or write head suspended adjacent to such a media surface.
As a particular example, aluminum particles on the scale of five to ten microns (i.e. micrometers) and having jagged edges have been found fairly regularly to be interfering with reliable interfacing with data storage media surfaces within data storage devices. Such particles may arise in the manufacturing process. In an illustrative data storage device involving a disc drive, for example, such particles may arise in the area of an actuator mechanism, and in particular in the area of one or more screws used to fasten the actuator mechanism within the disc drive. The generating of such particles may be promoted by repeated fastening and unfastening of such screws. Often, a manufacturing process involves automated quality assurance testing of a newly assembled disc drive, identification of any defective components, and then disassembly of the drive, replacement of the defective component, reassembly, and repetition of the testing, until all components are confirmed to be operating within desirable parameters. For example, one disc in the middle of a disc stack may be found to be defective during quality assurance testing, in which case a disc drive may be re-opened, the actuator assembly unfastened and removed, the discs above the defective disc removed to get to the defective disc, and then the defective disc removed and replaced with another disc, before the remaining discs are put back in place and the actuator mechanism is re-fastened into place. Each repetition of this process may provide additional opportunities for microscopic particles to be generated within the disc drive, which have the potential to interfere later with the reading and/or writing of data within the drive.
The present disclosure provides solutions to these and other problems and offers other advantages over the prior art. The discussion above is merely provided for general background information and is not intended to be used as an aid in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter.
One illustrative aspect of the present disclosure is directed to an actuator assembly that includes a base, an actuator disposed on the base, and a shroud disposed on the base around the actuator. The shroud includes one or more shroud walls disposed between the actuator and a flow channel exterior to the shroud.
An actuator shroud 251 is provided in data storage system 200, as depicted in
Various shielding walls of actuator shroud 251 define an interior of the actuator shroud within which components such as an actuator 216 and voice coil motor 218 may be situated. The shielding walls contribute to configuring actuator shroud 251 to significantly separate the shroud interior, containing the actuator 216, from a remaining interior portion of the data storage system 200 exterior to the shroud, as in the illustrative example of
Actuator shroud 251 also confines the airflow generated by the discs 207, thereby reducing the flow fluctuations at the edges of the discs in the vicinity of actuator shroud 251, which reduces vibration of the discs 207. This reduction in disc vibrations consequently reduces non-repeatable run-out errors of the read and/or write heads on sliders suspended in proximity to the surfaces of discs 207, in this illustrative example.
As yet another advantageous feature, as actuator shroud 251 partially shields both the actuator 216 and the voice coil motor 218, and thereby inhibits the turbulent flow of air impinging on the actuator and the voice coil motor, actuator shroud 251 also reduces mechanical disturbances and vibrations experienced by the actuator 216 and the voice coil motor 218 themselves. These effects promote reliable mechanical precision in the performance of actuator 216 in positioning the read and/or write heads with respect to the surfaces of discs 216, thereby further reducing non-repeatable run-out errors of the read and/or write heads. Each of these advantages may be provided by a wide variety of actuator shrouds that are not limited to the particular characteristics or components of actuator shroud 251, but may include many other configurations.
Data storage system 200 can be configured as a traditional magnetic disc drive, a magneto-optical disc drive or an optical disc drive, for example. An actuator shroud may also be advantageously applied to a wide variety of other types of systems in which an actuator operates in an environment in which hydrodynamic flow or environmental cleanliness affect performance characteristics, for example.
Disc stack 206 includes a plurality of individual discs 207, which are mounted for co-rotation about central axis 209. In the example depicted in
During operation, as discs 207 rotate, the discs drag air (or other fluid) under the respective sliders 210 and along their bearing surfaces in a direction approximately parallel to the tangential velocity of the discs. As the air (or other fluid) passes beneath the bearing surfaces, fluid compression along the flow path causes the fluid pressure between the discs and the bearing surfaces to increase, which creates a hydrodynamic lifting force that counteracts the load force provided by suspensions 212 and causes the sliders 210 to lift and fly above or in close proximity to the disc surfaces. In other examples such as in contact recording, the bearing surfaces remain in contact with the disc surfaces.
The motion of the air (or other fluid) caused by the rotation of disc stack 206 also sets up a cyclic current of air throughout the data storage device 200, which generally tracks with the rotational motion of the discs 207 within the disc stack 206, and also flows turbulently through the remaining free space within the data storage device 200, generally around and between internal components such as actuator 216, voice coil motor 218, and internal circuitry 230, except as restrained by actuator shroud 251. This air current is capable of transporting microscopic debris from those other areas of the disc drive into the disc stack 206, where it could potentially mechanically disturb the surfaces of discs 207, the sliders 210, and/or the interface between the two, except as restrained by actuator shroud 251. Although the data storage device 200 is typically manufactured under cleanroom conditions that inhibit the presence of microscopic debris in a disc drive, the absolute absence of such material is difficult to achieve, and small samples of such debris may be generated during the process of assembling the data storage device 200. Actuator shroud 251 effectively counteracts such debris by inhibiting the pickup and transport of debris particles in the airflow from the vicinity of the actuator to the surfaces of the discs.
Actuator shroud 251 is disposed on base 202 in the vicinity of, and partially surrounding, actuator 216 and voice coil motor 218, which are also disposed on base 202, in the illustrative example of
The shroud walls of actuator shroud 251 include shielding walls 271, 273, 275, and radially curved shroud wall segment 277, each of which has a streamlined exterior surface, in this illustrative example. Shroud wall segment 277 is radially curved in substantial conformity with the radial perimeter of disc stack 206, and disposed substantially adjacent to the disc stack 206, to contribute to separating the flow path that remains within disc stack 206 from the interior of actuator shroud 251. The shroud walls of actuator shroud 251 are further depicted in perspective view in
Several instances of flow path 299 are depicted in
Among the other innovations in
While shroud wall 251 is depicted with certain details in
Data storage device 300 of
The shroud walls of actuator shroud 351 include shielding wall 375 and radially curved shroud wall segment 377, each of which has a streamlined exterior surface, in this illustrative example. Shroud wall segment 377 is radially curved in substantial conformity with the radial perimeter of disc stack 306, and both shielding wall 375 and shroud wall segment 377 are disposed substantially adjacent to the disc stack 306, and contribute to separating the flow path 399 within disc stack 306 from the interior of actuator shroud 351. Shielding walls 375, 377 provided by actuator shroud 351 are thereby disposed between the actuator 316 and flow path 399 exterior to the shroud 351, thereby inhibiting pickup and transport of debris particles in the disc drive, in accordance with another illustrative embodiment.
Actuator shroud 251 further includes support portion 270, which spans between and connects the various shroud walls 271, 273, 275, 277. Support portion 270 partially covers over the top of the actuator and voice coil motor within data storage system 200 in
Actuator shroud 251 also includes fastener well shields 281, 283, through which fastener components may be inserted and joined with base 202 to attach actuator shroud 251 to base 202. These may be the same fastener components that are used to join actuator 216 and/or voice coil motor 218 to base 202. Fastener well shields 281, 283 substantially separate the interiors thereof from the actuator, and from area external to actuator shroud 251, in data storage device 200. Fasteners such as screws may then be inserted through fastener well shields 281, 283 and screwed into base 202, and even repeatedly unscrewed and re-screwed if need be, while any debris generated from such a fastening process that is not cleaned up by other routine cleanroom techniques, tend to be isolated and trapped within the fastener well shields 281, 283 for the performance lifetime of data storage device 200. The same may apply to other fastener mechanisms that may be used, which may include bolts, pins, pegs, clasps, clips, clamps, buckles, rivets, studs, grommets, battens, or any other type of fastener. As with the shroud as a whole, the fastener well shields 281, 283 may therefore also deny the capacity for such debris to be transported at a later time to the area of the discs 207 and to interfere with or damage the surfaces of the discs or the interface between the sliders or other read/write mechanisms and the disc surfaces.
Similarly to actuator shroud 251, actuator shroud 451 also includes shielding walls 471, 473, and 475, radially curved shroud wall segment 477, and fastener well shields 481, 483, as depicted in
The rotation of the disc stack 206 motivates a circulating air flow within data storage system 200, represented in terms of contour lines separating regions of different flow rate These regions are labeled with reference labels that identify quantities that indicate the flow rate within each contoured region. These range from “1”, which indicates between 0 and 1.4 m/s (meters per second) flow rate, while “20” indicates between 26.6 and 28.0 m/s. The region of the disc stack 206 adjacent to its axis of rotation, on the side facing away from the region containing the actuator, contains the highest flow rates, labeled “18”, “19”, and “20”. At the same time, the region surrounding the actuator 216, the voice coil motor 218, and the actuator shroud 251, is dominated by the lowest level of flow rate, indicated with the label “1”, meaning extremely low flow rates, lower than 1.4 and potentially down to simply zero m/s. In effect, actuator shroud 251 turns the vicinity of actuator 216 and voice coil motor 218 into a virtual dead zone in the air flow pattern, while maintaining proper air flow in the vicinity of the discs 107 for suspension of the read and/or write heads adjacent thereto. The bypass flow channel region outside of shielding wall 271 is labeled with “8”, and the bypass flow channel region outside of shielding wall 273 is labeled with “5”, indicating that much higher flow rates are just outside those streamlined barriers, and are similar to what flow rates directly through the immediate vicinity of the actuator 216 and voice coil motor 218 might be, if it were not for the presence of actuator shroud 251.
Tests were also performed within the CFD modeling and with physical prototypes, for the release of microscopic debris in the vicinity of actuator 216 and voice coil motor 218 during operation of the data storage system 200. The modeling and the physical prototypes both confirmed that the pickup and transport of this debris in the air flow were greatly diminished, and for particles of size greater than about twenty microns, debris transport was virtually eliminated.
Actuator shroud 251 therefore provides an effective means to inhibit air flow in the vicinity of actuator 216 and voice coil motor 218; to inhibit the transport of debris from elsewhere within data storage system 200 into disc pack 206 where it might damage or degrade the performance of data storage system 200; and to reduce air flow and turbulence in the vicinities of the disc edges, the actuator, and the voice coil motor, each of which acts to enhance mechanical precision and reduce the risk of read and/or write positioning errors. By constraining air flow along the channel defined by the exterior walls of actuator shroud 251 and internal circuitry 230 on one side and base walls 241, 243 on the other side, this configuration also increases the air flow rate through air flow recirculation filter 291, thereby raising the efficiency with which air flow recirculation filter 291 traps any remaining debris that still might be picked up by the air flow through the bypass flow channel.
While actuator shroud 251 is depicted in a particular illustrative example in
While certain illustrative actuator assemblies, shrouds, and data storage systems incorporating an actuator shroud are described herein and depicted in the accompanying figures, they are intended not to indicate any limitations to the variety of configurations, but rather to provide illustrative examples of the variety and broader meaning encompassed by the claims provided below. It is to be understood that even though numerous characteristics and advantages of various aspects of the present disclosure have been set forth in the foregoing description, together with details of the structure and function of various configurations of the disclosure, this disclosure is illustrative only, and changes may be made in details, including in matters of structure and arrangement of parts within the principles of the present disclosure to the full extent indicated by the broad general meaning of the terms in which the appended claims are expressed. For example, an actuator shroud may be used in association with any technology for the storage and/or manipulation of data, including those involving magnetoresistance, giant magnetoresistance, colossal magnetoresistance, flash memory, optics, magneto-optics, photonics, spintronics, holography, and any other technology. In addition, the present disclosure is not limited to systems for storage or manipulation of data, but may also involve a shroud used in association with any component or device for which a shroud may inhibit hydrodynamic flow and/or passage of material between an interior portion and an exterior portion.