The present invention relates to techniques and equipment for laying down track exposure patterns, for example, tracks of servo patterns to be formed on a surface of a magnetic disk of a hard disk drive, using an electron beam recorder or other beam recording device that produces such track exposure patterns.
A magnetic disk drive, such as a hard disk drive, stores data on one or more disks coated with a magnetic medium. For read/write purposes, the surface of the magnetic medium carries a number of generally parallel data tracks, which on a disk type medium, are arranged concentrically with one another about the center of the disk.
An actuator arm positions a transducer, or “head”, over a desired track, and the head writes data to the track or reads data from the track. As the disk rotates, the actuator arm moves the head in a radial direction across the data tracks under control of a closed-loop servo system, based on position information or “servo data”, which is stored within dedicated servo fields of the magnetic medium of the disk. The servo fields can be interleaved with data sectors on the disk surface or can be located on a separate disk surface that is dedicated to storing servo information. As the head passes over the servo fields, it generates a read back signal that identifies the location of the head relative to the center line of the desired track. Based on this location, the servo system moves the actuator arm to adjust the head's position so that it moves towards a position over the desired track and/or a desired location within the track of current interest.
One requirement in the manufacture of such a hard disk drive relates to the formation of the servo patterns on the magnetic disk, which must be in concentric circular patterns. Systems for forming the servo tracks on magnetic disks have used both stepped translation mechanisms with laser beams and continuous translation mechanisms with electron beams.
When an electron beam is used to write an exposure pattern that has a radial width that is significantly wider than the beam width, multiple exposure passes are needed, each offset from the other by a radial distance, to create the pattern. This has the disadvantage of requiring a relatively long time to write a single track, and consequently, an entire disk. For example, refer to the schematic depiction of the writing of track exposure patterns on a disk in
The exposure pattern 12 is written on the disk 10 of
In step S16, it is determined whether the entire track exposure pattern 12 has been written. In the example given above, only two passes are needed to completely write the entire track exposure pattern 12. However, it is possible that additional passes are needed to write a single track exposure pattern. In such cases, (“No”), the process loops back to step S12 and additional offsets and exposures are performed to write the entire track.
In step S18, it is determined, after an entire track exposure pattern has been written, whether this is the last track exposure pattern that should be written on the disk 10. If it is determined that the last track written is not the last track to be written on the disk 10, i.e., additional tracks need to be written, in step S20 the beam is offset a radial distance so that a new track exposure pattern may be formed.
As stated earlier, the problem with such a methodology, normally required by systems in which the radial width of the exposure pattern is significantly wider than that of the beam width, is the relatively long time required to write a single track exposure pattern using the multiple exposure passes.
There is a need for a method that reduces the time required to write track exposure patterns on a disk recording medium.
This and other needs are meet by embodiments of the present invention which provide a method of writing patterns on a disk recording medium, comprising the steps of rotating the disk recording medium a single rotation only, radially deflecting a recording beam across a first set of multiple tracks during the single rotation of the disk recording medium, and modulating the recording beam during the single rotation of the disk recording medium and the radial deflection of the recording beam. These steps thereby form a set of multiple exposure track patterns on the disk recording medium during the single rotation of the disk recording medium.
By the radial deflection of the recording beam across a set of multiple tracks, and modulating this recording beam during the radial deflection, a set of multiple track exposure patterns can be formed on the disk recording medium during a single rotation. This provides a significant reduction in the amount of time needed to record a pattern, since several tracks may be written in a single pass.
The earlier stated needs are met by other embodiments of the present invention which provide an electron beam recording system for forming exposure patterns on disk recording medium. The system comprises an electron beam column for generating a modulated electron beam. The electron beam column includes deflection plates for controlling deflection of the electron beam in response to a deflection signal, and blanking plates for modulating the electron beam in response to a modulation signal. A turntable is provided for rotating the disk recording medium while applying the electron beam to a surface of the disk recording medium. A signal generator is provided for supplying the deflection signal to the deflection plates and the modulation signal to the blanking plates. The electron beam has a beam width narrower than a width of a single track exposure pattern. The signal generator supplies the deflection signal such that the electron beam is radially deflected to write the entire track exposure pattern during a single rotation of the disk recording medium.
The earlier stated needs are also met by other embodiments of the present invention which provide a recording system for recording patterns in a disk recording medium. The system comprises a turntable on which the disk recording medium is rotated, and means for writing multiple radial locations on the disk recording medium during a single rotation of the turntable.
The foregoing and other features, advantages and aspects of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of the present invention when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The concepts disclosed herein address and solve problems related to writing track exposure patterns that are wider than the width of a recording beam used to write the track exposure patterns. These and other problems are solved, in part, by performing a single rotation of a turntable on which a disk recording medium is mounted, and modulating a beam synchronously with radial deflection of the recording beam. In this manner, multiple tracks can be exposed with a single pass of the electron beam over the track. This significantly reduces the amount of time needed to record a pattern by writing several tracks per pass.
In the embodiment of the invention depicted in
The shapes of and voltages applied to the column elements serve to focus and shape the stream of electrons into an electron beam of a desired shape and having a desired energy level for a particular application, for example, for forming servo patterns of particular size and depth in the surface of the disk 21. The drawing in
Of note for purposes of the present subject matter, the beam position is controlled by application of a voltage to the deflection plates 49 in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. Without deflection, for example, at the start of a disk rotation, the beam travels in a perpendicular fashion as shown in 55, from the E-beam column 33 to the resist surface on the disk 21. Applying a deflection voltage to the plates 49 causes deflection of the beam. The polarity of the voltage determines the direction of the deflection. The amplitude of the voltage controls the magnitude of angular deflection of the beam and thus the linear displacement of the beam at a given distance from the column, for example, at the distance to the resist layer on the surface of the disk 21. A deflected beam output is represented by the dotted line 57 in
The electron beam recording system 30 includes a format signal generator 61, for generating various signals used by the electron beam column 33 to modulate the beam and format the patterns being exposed on the disk 21. The format signal generator 61 essentially comprises circuitry forming one or more signal generators, for producing the various signals applied to the components of the electron beam recording system 30 to produce the desired beam.
As shown in
In
In the present invention, the format signal generator 61 provides for a controlled modulation signal and the deflection signal to write both of the track exposure patterns 72, 74 in a single rotation of the disk recording medium 70 by the turntable 31. The turntable rotational control 63 works with the format signal generator 61 to form a single rotation of a disk during the formatting of the multiple exposure track patterns 72, 74. It should be noted that only two track exposure patterns 72, 74 are depicted in
The beam is modulated in step S32 in synchronization with the deflection of the beam in step S34. The combination of beam modulation and synchronization with beam deflection allows a multiple of tracks (or track exposure patterns) to be written or exposed in a single pass of the disk recording medium 21. This methodology significantly reduces the amount of time needed to record a pattern by writing several tracks per pass. However, only two tracks 72, 74 are depicted in
After the disk recording medium 21 has been rotated a single rotation, and the first and second track exposure patterns 72, 74 written in their entirety employing the radial deflection of the recording beam and synchronous modulation of the recording beam, it is then determined whether any more sets of multiple track exposure patterns need to be written, in step S38. If there are more sets of multiple track exposure patterns to be written, the recording beam is positioned over the next set of tracks, in step S40. Otherwise, the process ends as the disk recording medium 70 has been completely written with the desired amount of track exposure patterns.
The beam recording column 33, along with the format signal generator 61 and turntable rotational control 63, may be considered to form means for writing multiple radial locations on the disk recording medium during a single rotation of the turntable. This means for writing also include means for modulating the electron recording beam and means for radially deflecting the electron recording beam. Further, the means for modulating and the means for radially deflecting include the format signal generator, blanking plates controlled by a modulation signal generated by the format signal generator, and deflection plates controlled by a deflection signal generated by the format signal generator.
The present invention thus provides for improved production speed for creating disk recording media in an efficient and rapid manner.
Although the present invention has been described and illustrated in detail, it is to be clearly understood that the same is by way of illustration and example only and is not to be taken by way of limitation, the scope of the present invention being limited only by the terms of the appended claims.