This invention relates to manipulating sliders in hard disk drives, in particular, to apparatus and methods for bending the slider to create rounded corners of its trailing edge in a hard disk drive during load and unload operations.
The invention includes a method of operating a slider 90 in a hard disk drive 10 by applying at least a first voltage V1 between a first terminal T1 and a second terminal T2, stimulating a bending device BD coupled to the slider, to produce a bending effect acting on the slider, creating a rounding at a first corner AF1 and at a second corner AF2 of the trailing edge TE of the slider, as shown in
The second voltage V2 being smaller in magnitude than the first voltage V1 may refer to any one of the following. The absolute value of the second voltage is less than the absolute value of the first voltage. The absolute value of the second voltage is less than or equal to the absolute value of the first voltage. The second voltage is less than the absolute value of the first voltage. The second voltage is less than or equal to the absolute value of the first voltage.
The invention's bending device BD includes the first terminal T1 and the second terminal T2 electrically coupling to produce the bending effect for acting on the slider and may include at least one of the following. The first terminal electrically coupling to a bending device piezoelectric film BDPZT electrically coupled to the second terminal to expand to produce the bending effect upon stimulation by at least the first voltage V1. The first terminal electrically coupling through a heater Ht to the second terminal to heat a bending layer BL coupled to the slider 90 to produce the bending effect upon stimulation by at least the first voltage. The first terminal electrically coupling through the heater to the second terminal may further include the first terminal electrically coupling through a first heating element H1 to a third terminal T3 electrically coupling through a second heating element H2 to the second terminal.
The bending device piezoelectric film BDPZT includes at least one of lead, zirconium, and tungsten. The bending layer BL includes at least one conductive material and/or a shape memory alloy. The conductive material preferably includes copper and/or silver and/or lead and/or gold. The shape memory alloy preferably includes at least one solid material having at least two solid phases, wherein when the solid material is subjected to changes in temperature or pressure, the solid material tends change thermodynamic state in a manner selected from the group consisting of: from a first of the solid phases to a second of the solid phases; and from the second solid phase to the first solid phase.
As used herein a shape memory alloy of two or more elements will refer to any molecular or crystalline combination of those elements which is a solid possessing the shape memory property of two solid phases in the operating and storage conditions of a hard disk drive.
The shape memory alloy may include at least one member of the titanium nickel shape memory alloy group consisting of: a Titanium Nickel (TiNi) alloy, a Titanium Nickel Iron (Ti—Ni—Fe) alloy, a Titanium Nickel Copper (Ti—Ni—Cu) alloy, a Titanium Nickel Lead (Ti—Ni—Pb) alloy, and a Titanium Nickel Hafnium (Ti—Ni—Hf) alloy.
The invention's slider 90 includes the first terminal T1 and the second terminal T2. Preferably, the slider includes the bending device BD to round the first corner AF1 and the second corner AF2 of the trailing edge TE of the slider. The slider's read head 94-R may employ a spin valve Vspin as shown in
In greater detail, the read-write head 94 preferably includes a read head 94-R driving the read differential signal pair r0 and a write head 94-W receiving a write differential signal pair w0. The slider is used to access the data 122 on the rotating disk surface 120-1 in a hard disk drive 10, as shown in
The invention's slider 90 may includes the read-write head 94 providing the read-differential signal pair r0 to the amplifier 96 to generate the amplified read signal ar0, as shown in
The read head 94-R may use a spin valve Vspin to drive the read differential signal pair as shown in
The read head 94-R may use a tunnel valve Vtunnel to drive the read differential signal pair as shown in
The invention's slider may further include an amplifier 96. The position of the read head 94-R relative to air bearing surface 92 is the typically same for readers using either spin valves or tunneling valves. In most but not all of the embodiments of the invention's slider 90, the amplifier is preferably opposite the air bearing surface 92, as shown in
The amplified read signal ar0 may be implemented as an amplified read signal pair ar0+—as shown in
The invention's slider 90 may further include a first slider power terminal SP1 and a second slider power terminal SP2 collectively used to power the amplifier 96 in generating the amplified read signal arO, as shown in
The air bearing surface 92 may include a leading air bearing surface A4 containing a left air bearing arm A4A and a right air bearing arm A4B, as well as a central island A14 near the trailing edge TE with the first corner AF1 and the second corner AF2, as shown in
The slider 90 may include a vertical micro-actuator 98 for urging the outermost portions of the read-write head 94 closer or farther away from the rotating disk surface 120 as shown in
The invention's flexure finger 20 couples to the slider 90 and includes a first trace path for electrically coupling to the first terminal T1 and/or a second trace path for electrically coupled to the second terminal T2. The flexure finger may preferably further include a micro-actuator assembly 80 for coupling to the slider. The micro-actuator assembly preferably aids the slider in its lateral position LP and/or its vertical position Vp, and may employ a piezoelectric effect as shown in
In Further detail, the flexure finger 20 for the slider 90 including the amplifier 96, providing a read trace path for the amplified read signal ar0, as shown in
As previously stated, the micro-actuator assembly 80 may employ a piezoelectric effect and/or an electrostatic effect to aid in positioning the slider 90. First, examples of micro-actuator assemblies employing the piezoelectric effect will be discussed followed by electrostatic effect examples. In several embodiments of the invention the micro-actuator assembly may preferably couple with the head gimbal assembly 60 through the flexure finger 20. The micro-actuator assembly may further couple through the flexure finger to a load beam 74 to the head gimbal assembly and consequently to the head stack assembly 50.
Examples of micro-actuator assemblies employing the piezoelectric effect are shown in
Examples of the invention using micro-actuator assemblies employing the electrostatic effect are shown in
The first micro-actuator 220 includes the following. A first pivot spring pair 402 and 408 coupling to a first stator 230. A second pivot spring pair 400 and 406 coupling to a second stator 250. A first flexure spring pair 410 and 416, and a second flexure spring pair 412 and 418, coupling to a central movable section 300. A pitch spring pair 420-422 coupling to the central movable section 300. The central movable section 300 includes signal pair paths coupling to the amplified read signal ar0 and the write differential signal pair W0 of the read-write head 94 of the slider 90.
The bonding block 210 preferably electrically couples the read-write head 90 to the amplified read signal ar0 and write differential signal pair W0, and mechanically couples the central movable section 300 to the slider 90 with read-write head 94 embedded on or near the air bearing surface 92 included in the slider.
The first micro-actuator 220 aids in laterally positioning LP the slider 90, which can be finely controlled to position the read-write head 94 over a small number of tracks 122 on the rotating disk surface 120-1. This lateral motion is a first mechanical degree of freedom, which results from the first stator 230 and the second stator 250 electrostatically interacting with the central movable section 300. The first micro-actuator 220 may act as a lateral comb drive or a transverse comb drive, as is discussed in detail in the incorporated United States Patent Application.
The electrostatic micro-actuator assembly 2000 may further include a second micro-actuator 520 including a third stator 510 and a fourth stator 550. Both the third and the fourth stator electrostatically interact with the central movable section 300. These interactions urge the slider 90 to move in a second mechanical degree of freedom, aiding in the vertically positioning VP to provide flying height control. The second micro-actuator may act as a vertical comb drive or a torsional drive, as is discussed in detail in the incorporated United States Patent Application. The second micro-actuator may also provide motion sensing, which may indicate collision with the rotating disk surface 120-1 being accessed.
The central movable section 300 not only positions the read-write head 10, but is the conduit for the amplified read signal ar0, the write differential signal pair W0 and in certain embodiments, the first slider power signal SP1 and the second slider power signal SP2. The electrical stimulus of the first micro-actuator 220 is provided through some of its springs.
The central movable section 300 may preferably to be at ground potential, and so does not need wires. The read differential signal pair r0, write differential signal pair w0 and slider power signals SP1 and SP2 traces may preferably be routed with flexible traces all the way to the load beam 74 as shown in
The invention's head gimbal assembly 60 preferably includes the flexure finger 20 coupling to the slider 90, which preferably includes the first trace path electrically coupled to the first terminal T1 and/or the second trace path electrically coupled to the second terminal T2. The head gimbal assembly may further include the load beam 74 electrically coupling through the flexure finger to the first terminal.
When the slider 90 includes an amplifier 96 and the head gimbal assembly 60 includes the flexure finger 20 coupled with the slider, it further containing the trace path electrically coupled to the amplified read signal ar0, as shown in
The slider 90 may further include a first slider power terminal SP1 and a second slider power terminal SP2, both electrically coupled to the amplifier 96 to collectively provide power to generate the amplified read signal ar0. The flexure finger 20 may further include a first power path SP1P electrically coupled to the first slider power terminal and/or a second power path SP2P electrically coupled to the second slider power terminal SP2, which are collectively used to provide electrical power to generate the amplified read signal.
The head gimbal assembly 60 may further preferably include a micro-actuator assembly 80 mechanically coupling to the slider 90 to aid in positioning the slider to access the data 122 on the rotating disk surface 120-1. The micro-actuator assembly may further include a first micro-actuator power terminal 82P1 and a second micro-actuator power terminal 82P2. The head gimbal assembly may further include the first micro-actuator power terminal electrically coupled to the first power path SP1P and/or the second micro-actuator power terminal electrically coupled to the second power path SP2P. Operating the head gimbal assembly may further preferably include operating the micro-actuator assembly to aid in positioning the slider to read access the data on the rotating disk surface, which includes providing electrical power shared by the micro-actuator assembly and by the amplifier 96 to collectively position the slider and support the amplifier generating the amplified read signal ar0.
The flexure finger 20 may be coupled to the load beam 74 as shown in
The head gimbal assembly 60 typically includes a base plate 72 coupled through a hinge 70 to a load beam 74 shown in an exploded view in
The invention's head stack assembly 50 includes a head stack 54 coupling through an actuator arm 52 to at least one head gimbal assembly 60. The head stack may couple through at least two actuator arms, each of which may couple to at least one head gimbal assembly. The head stack assembly operates as follows. The head stack assembly is prepared to be loaded onto a parking ramp PR by applying at least the first voltage V1 between the first terminal and second terminal T2, stimulating the bending device BD, and rounding the corners AF1 and AF2 of the trailing edge TE of each slider 90 included in the head stack assembly. Similarly, the head stack assembly is prepared to unload from the parking ramp by applying at least the first voltage between the first and second terminal, again rounding the corners.
In greater detail, the head stack assembly 50 contains at least one head gimbal assembly 60 coupled to a head stack 54, as shown in
The slider 90 includes an amplifier 96, it reports the amplified read signal ar0 as the result of the read access. The flexure finger provides the read trace path for the amplified read signal, as shown in
The head stack assembly 50 may include more than one head gimbal assembly 60 coupled to the head stack 54. By way of example,
The head stack assembly 50 may include a main flex circuit 200 coupled with the flexure finger 20, which may further include a preamplifier 24 electrically coupled to the read trace path rtp in the read-write signal bundle rw to create the read signal 25-R based upon the amplified read signal ar0 as a result of the read access to the track 122 on the rotating disk surface 120-1.
The invention's embedded circuit 500 supports the operation of the head stack assembly 50 in the hard disk drive 10 by including the means for preparing to load MPL the head stack assembly onto the parking ramp PR and the means for preparing to unload MPU the head stack assembly from the parking ramp, both by applying at least the first voltage V1 between the first terminal T1 and the second terminal T2 of the bending device BD coupled to the slider 90, for each slider included in the head stack assembly.
At least one of these means MPL and MPU is at least partly implemented by at least one instance of a driver DSh receiving a first signal S1 to provide a shape voltage Vsh of at least the first voltage V1 to the first terminal T1 and the second terminal T2 of the bending devices BD as shown in
The program system may preferably include program steps supporting the operations of the head stack assembly 50 in preparing to load MLP and preparing to unload MLU the head stack assembly by applying a shape voltage Vsh of at least the first voltage V1 to the bending device BD coupled to each slider 90 included in the head stack assembly. The program system may further preferably include at least one of the following program steps: directing a voice coil motor 18 to follow a track 122 on at least one rotating disk surface 120-1, which is usually performed by the servo computer 610, and accessing the track on that disk surface, which is usually performed the embedded computer 502.
The embedded circuit 500 may preferably include the servo controller 600, including a servo computer 610 accessibly coupled 612 to a memory 620. A program system 1000 may direct the servo computer in implementing the method operating the hard disk drive 10. The program system preferably includes at least one program step residing in the memory. The embedded circuit may preferably be implemented with a printed circuit technology. The lateral control signal 82 may preferably be generated by a micro-actuator driver 28. The lateral control signal preferably includes the first lateral control signal 82P1 and the second lateral control signal 82P2, as well as the AC lateral control signal 82AC.
The voice coil driver 30 preferably stimulates the voice coil motor 18 through the voice coil 32 to provide coarse position of the slider 90, in particular, the read head 94-R near the track 122 on the rotating disk surface 120-1.
The invention's hard disk drive 10 preferably includes the head stack assembly 50 electrically coupled to the embedded circuit 500 to provide at least the first voltage V1 between the first terminal T1 and the second terminal T2 of the bending device BD coupled to each slider 90 in the head stack assembly, when preparing to load MPL or preparing to unload MLU the head stack assembly from the parking ramp PR. The parking ramp may be located near the spindle shaft 40 coupling at least one disk 12 to the spindle motor 270 as shown in
The hard disk drive 10, shown in
The hard disk drive 10 may preferably include the servo controller 600, and possibly the embedded circuit 500, coupled to the voice coil motor 18, to provide the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 driving the micro-actuator assembly 80, and the read signal 25-R based upon the amplified read signal ar0 contained in the read-write signal bundle rw from the read-write head 94 to generate the Position Error Signal 260.
The invention includes methods for manufacturing the slider 90, the flexure finger 20, the head gimbal assembly 60, the head stack assembly 50, the embedded circuit 500, and the hard disk drive 10, as well as these items as products of the invention's manufacturing processes.
Manufacturing the invention's slider 90 includes coupling the bending device BD to the slider, further including providing the first terminal T1 and the second terminal T2 for electrical coupling with the slider. Coupling the bending device may further include bonding and/or building and/or depositing the bending device on the slider. The invention includes the slider with the coupled bending device as the product of the invention's manufacturing process. By way of example, the bending device piezoelectric film BDPZT may be deposited as at least one layer of metallic material, with the first terminal T1 and the second terminal T2 formed by etching, masking and further depositing at least one layer of conductive metal, possibly aluminum, copper, silver, and/or gold, or a combination of these metals.
Manufacturing the slider 90 may further include coupling the read-write head 94 to the amplifier 96, which further includes electrically coupling the read differential signal pair to the amplifier. The invention includes the manufacturing process of the slider and the slider as a product of that manufacturing process. The manufacturing further includes providing an air bearing surface 92 near the read head 94-R, and in some embodiments, further providing the vertical micro-actuator 98.
Coupling the read-write head 94 to the amplifier 96 may further include bonding the amplifier to the read head 94-R and/or building the amplifier to the read head. Bonding the amplifier may include gluing, and/or welding, and/or soldering the amplifier to the read head. Building the amplifier may include depositing an insulator to create a signal conditioning base, and/or using a slider substrate as a signal conditioning base, and/or depositing a first semiconductor layer on the signal conditioning base. The building may further include define at least one pattern, at least one etch of the pattern to create at least one layer, for at least one semiconducting material and at least one layer of metal to form at least one transistor circuit embodying the amplifier. The transistors preferably in use at the time of the invention include, but are not limited to, bipolar transistors, Field Effect Transistors (FETs), and amorphous transistors.
Manufacturing flexure finger 20 includes providing the first trace path and/or the second trace path to create the flexure finger. The first trace path TP1 is for electrical coupling to the first terminal, as shown in
Manufacturing the invention's head gimbal assembly 60 includes coupling the flexure finger 20 to the invention's slider 90 to create the head gimbal assembly. Coupling the flexure finger to the slider may further include electrically coupling the first trace path TP1 to the first terminal T1 and/or electrically coupling the second trace path TP2 to the second terminal T2. The invention includes the manufacturing process and the head gimbal assembly as a product of the process.
Manufacturing the head gimbal assembly 60 may further includes electrically coupling the read trace path rtp with the amplified read signal ar0, when the slider 90 includes an amplifier 96. Manufacturing the head gimbal assembly may further include coupling the micro-actuator assembly 80 to the slider. Coupling the micro-actuator assembly to the slider may include electrically coupling the first micro-actuator power terminal 82P1 to the first slider power terminal SP1P and/or electrically coupling the second micro-actuator power terminal 82P2 to the second slider power terminal SP2P.
Manufacturing the invention's head stack assembly 50 includes coupling the head stack 54 through at least one actuator arm 52 to at least one of the invention's head gimbal assembly 60 to at least partly create the head stack assembly. The invention includes the manufacturing process for the head stack assembly and the head stack assembly as a product of the manufacturing process. The step coupling the head gimbal assembly 60 to the head stack 50 may further, preferably include swaging the base plate 72 to the actuator arm 52.
The manufacturing process may further include coupling more than one head gimbal assemblies to the head stack. The manufacturing may further, preferably include coupling the main flex circuit 200 to the flexure finger 20, which further includes electrically coupled the preamplifier 24 to the read trace path rtp to provide the read signal 25-R as a result of the read access of the data 122 on the rotating disk surface 120-1.
Manufacturing the embedded circuit 500 includes providing the means for preparing to load MPL and the means for preparing to unload MPU to create the embedded circuit. The invention includes this manufacturing process, and the embedded circuit as the product of that process. Providing these means may further include any or all of the following. Installing a driver DSh receiving a first signal S1 to provide at least the first voltage V1 between the first terminal T1 and the second terminal T2, for each slider 90 included in the head stack assembly 50, to at least partly create the embedded circuit. Installing a finite state machine FSM for driving the first signal. Installing a computer as shown in
The invention includes manufacturing the hard disk drive 10 includes electrically coupling the head stack assembly 50 to the embedded circuit 500 to provide at least the first voltage V1 across the first terminal T1 and the second terminal T2, for each slider 90 included in the head stack assembly, to create the hard disk drive. The invention includes the hard disk drive as a product of this process.
Manufacturing the hard disk drive 10 may further include electrically coupling the invention's head stack assembly 50 to the embedded circuit 500 to provide the read signal 25-R as the result of the read access of the data 122 on the rotating disk surface 120-1.
Making the hard disk drive 10 may further include coupling the servo controller 600 and/or the embedded circuit 500 to the voice coil motor 18 and providing the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 to drive the micro-actuator assembly 80.
Looking at some of the details of
The read-write head 94 interfaces through a preamplifier 24 on a main flex circuit 200 using a read-write signal bundle rw typically provided by the flexure finger 20, to a channel interface 26 often located within the servo controller 600. The channel interface often provides the Position Error Signal 260 (PES) within the servo controller. It may be preferred that the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 be shared when the hard disk drive includes more than one micro-actuator assembly. It may be further preferred that the lateral control signal 82 be shared. Typically, each read-write head interfaces with the preamplifier using separate read and write signals, typically provided by a separate flexure finger. For example, the second read-write head 94-2 interfaces with the preamplifier via a second flexure finger 20-2, the third read-write head 94-3 via the a third flexure finger 20-3, and the fourth read-write head 94-4 via a fourth flexure finger 20-4.
During normal disk access operations, the embedded circuit 500 and/or the servo controller 600 direct the spindle motor 270 to rotate the spindle shaft 40. This rotating is very stable, providing a nearly constant rotational rate through the spindle shaft to at least one disk 12 and sometimes more than one disk. The rotation of the disk creates the rotating disk surface 120-1, used to access the track 122 while accessing the track. These accesses normally provide for reading the track and/or writing the track.
The preceding embodiments provide examples of the invention and are not meant to constrain the scope of the following claims.