A disk drive is an information storage device. A disk drive includes one or more disks clamped to a rotating spindle, and at least one head for reading information representing data from and/or writing data to the surfaces of each disk. More specifically, storing data includes writing information representing data to portions of tracks on a disk. Data retrieval includes reading the information representing data from the portion of the track on which the information representing data was stored. Disk drives also include an actuator utilizing linear or rotary motion for positioning transducing head(s) over selected data tracks on the disk(s). A rotary actuator couples a slider, on which a transducing head is attached or integrally formed, to a pivot point that allows the transducing head to sweep across a surface of a rotating disk. The rotary actuator is driven by a voice coil motor.
Disk drive information storage devices employ a control system for controlling the position the transducing head during read operations, write operations and seeks. The control system includes a servo control system or servo loop. The function of the head positioning servo control system within the disk drive information storage device is two-fold: first, to position the read/write transducing head over a data track with sufficient accuracy to enable reading and writing of that track without error; and, second, to position the write element with sufficient accuracy not to encroach upon adjacent tracks to prevent data erosion from those tracks during writing operations to the track being followed.
A servo control system includes a written pattern on the surface of a disk called a servo pattern. The servo pattern is read by the transducing head. Reading the servo pattern results in positioning data or a servo signal used to determine the position of the transducing head with respect to a track on the disk. In one servo scheme, positioning data can be included in servo wedges, each including servo patterns. Information included in the servo patterns can be used to generate a position error signal (PES) that indicates the deviation of the transducing head from a desired track center. The PES is also used as feedback in the control system to provide a signal to the voice coil motor of the actuator to either maintain the position of the transducing head over a desired track centerline or to reposition the transducing head to a position over the centerline of a desired track.
Attempts have been made to linearize a disk drive PES signal via post-processing of a raw PES signal. A linearized PES is sensitive to the exact amount of distortion in the raw signal. Distortion can be caused by any number of conditions. For example, distortion from the third harmonic of the raw PES can change with the environmental conditions of the disk drive, the age of the transducing head, or with a small change in the fly-height of the transducing head with respect to the surface of the disk. Other conditions can also affect the third harmonic or produce other distortions in the raw PES. For example, environmental conditions, such as temperature, ambient air-pressure, can result in distortion.
The invention is pointed out with particularity in the appended claims. However, a more complete understanding of the present invention may be derived by referring to the detailed description when considered in connection with the figures, wherein like reference numbers refer to similar items throughout the figures and:
The description set out herein illustrates the various embodiments of the invention and such description is not intended to be construed as limiting in any manner.
A rotary actuator 130 is pivotally mounted to the housing base 104 by a bearing 132 and sweeps an arc between an inner diameter (ID) of the disk 120 and a ramp 150 positioned near an outer diameter (OD) of the disk 120. Attached to the housing 104 are upper and lower magnet return plates 110 and at least one magnet that together form the stationary portion of a voice coil motor (VCM) 112. A voice coil 134 is mounted to the rotary actuator 130 and positioned in an air gap of the VCM 112. The rotary actuator 130 pivots about the bearing 132 when current is passed through the voice coil 134 and pivots in an opposite direction when the current is reversed, allowing for control of the position of the actuator 130 and the attached transducing head 146 with respect to the disk 120. The VCM 112 is coupled with a servo system (shown in
Each side of a disk 120 can have an associated head 146, and the heads 146 are collectively coupled to the rotary actuator 130 such that the heads 146 pivot in unison. The invention described herein is equally applicable to devices wherein the individual heads separately move some small distance relative to the actuator. This technology is referred to as dual-stage actuation (DSA).
One type of servo system is an embedded, servo system in which tracks on each disk surface used to store information representing data contain small segments of servo information. The servo information, in some embodiments, is stored in radial servo sectors or servo wedges shown as several harrow, somewhat curved spokes 128 substantially equally spaced around the circumference of the disk 120. It should be noted that in actuality there may be many more servo wedges than as shown in
The disk 120 also includes a plurality of tracks on each disk surface. The plurality of tracks is depicted by two tracks, such as track 129 on the surface of the disk 120. The servo wedges 128 traverse the plurality of tracks, such as track 129, on the disk 120. The plurality of tracks, in some embodiments, may be arranged as a set of substantially concentric circles. Data is stored in fixed sectors along a track between the embedded servo wedges 128. The tracks on the disk 120 each include a plurality of data sectors. More specifically, a data sector is a portion of a track having a fixed block length and a fixed data storage capacity (e.g. 512 bytes of user data per data sector). The tracks toward the inside of the disk 120 are not as long as the tracks toward the periphery of the disk 110. As a result, the tracks toward the inside of the disk 120 can not hold as many data sectors as the tracks toward the periphery of the disk 120. Tracks that are capable of holding the same number of data sectors are grouped into a data zones. Since the density and data rates vary from data zone to data zone, the servo wedges 128 may interrupt and split up at least some of the data sectors. The servo sectors 128 are typically recorded with a servo writing apparatus at the factory (called a servo-writer), but may be written (or partially written) with the disk drive's 100 transducing head 146 in a self-servowriting operation.
In some embodiments, the servo wedge 120 will also include other information such as a wedge number. This can be a single bit to designate an index wedge (wedge #0), or the SAM may be replaced by another pattern (referred to as a servo index mark or SIM), or the wedge may contain a few low-order bits of the wedge number or a complete wedge number.
The magnified portion of
As shown in
The second servo burst 220 includes a first magnetic stripe 221, a second magnetic stripe 222, a third magnetic stripe 223 and a fourth magnetic stripe 224. Again the dark portion of the magnetic stripe, for example, the dark portion of magnetic stripe 221 is magnetized in one direction while the open space between the first stripe 221 and the second stripe 222 of the B burst is magnetized in an opposite direction. Thus, after sufficient filtering, the second servo burst 220 will produce a signal having three approximate sinusoids from the magnetic portions 221, 222, and 223 when the transducing head 146 is passed through the track 251 while over the B burst. The servo information is used to position the transducing head 146 above a particular data track. It is desirable to fly over the center of a track such as the center 250 of data track 251. The difference in phase between the magnetic stripes and more particularly the signals that they produce in both the first phase burst 210 and the second phase burst 220 can be compared to the difference in phase between the signals produced by the first servo burst 210 and the second servo burst 220 when the transducing head 146 is flown or passed over the center line 250 of the track 251. Given a particular track number and determining the phase difference between the signals associated with the first phase servo burst 210 and the second phase servo burst 220, the position of the head can be determined and control circuitry can produce a signal to correct the position of the transducing head 146.
Also shown in
The disk drive 100 not only includes many mechanical features and a disk with a servo pattern thereon, but also includes various electronics for reading signals from the disk 120 and writing information representing data to the disk 120.
The HDA 406 includes one or more disks 120 upon which data and servo information can be written to, or read from, by transducers or transducing heads 146. The voice coil motor (VCM) 112 moves an actuator 130 to position the transducing heads 146 on the disks 110. The motor driver 422 drives the VCM 112 and the spindle motor (SM) 416. More specifically, the microprocessor 410, using the motor driver 422, controls the VCM 112 and the actuator 130 to accurately position the heads 146 over the tracks (described with reference to
The servo demodulator 404 is shown as including a servo phase locked loop (PLL) 426, a servo automatic gain control (AGC) 428, a servo field detector 430 and register space 432. The servo PLL 426, in general, is a control loop that is used to provide frequency and phase control for the one or more timing or clock circuits (not shown in
One or more registers (e.g., in register space 432) can be used to store appropriate servo AGC values (e.g., gain values, filter coefficients, filter accumulation paths, etc.) for when the read/write path 412 is reading servo data, and one or more registers can be used to store appropriate values (e.g., gain values, filter coefficients, filter accumulation paths, etc.) for when the read/write path 412 is reading user data. A control signal can be used to select the appropriate registers according to the current mode of the read/write path 412. The servo AGC value(s) that are stored can be dynamically updated. For example, the stored servo AGC value(s) for use when the read/write path 412 is reading servo data can be updated each time an additional servo wedge 128 is read. In this manner, the servo AGC value(s) determined for a most recently read servo wedge 128 can be the starting servo AGC value(s) when the next servo wedge 128 is read.
The read/write path 412 includes the electronic circuits used in the process of writing and reading information to and from disks 120. The microprocessor 410 can perform servo control algorithms, and thus, may be referred to as a servo controller. Alternatively, a separate microprocessor or digital signal processor (not shown) can perform servo control functions.
During servo reading, magnetic flux transitions sensed by the selected transducing head 146 are may be preamplified before being provided to the VGA 512, which controls amplification of an analog signal stream. The amplified analog signal stream is then provided to the analog filter/equalizer 514, which can be programmed to be optimized for the data transfer rate of the servo information being read by one of heads 146. The equalized analog signal is then subjected to sampling and quantization by the high speed flash AID 516 which generates raw digital samples that are provided to the FIR filter 518. Timing for sampling can be provided by the servo PLL 426, as shown. Alternatively, sampling maybe performed asynchronously, e.g., using an asynchronous clock (in which case, most features of the present invention are still useful). The FIR filter 518 filters and conditions the raw digital samples before passing filtered digital samples to the decoder 520. The decoder 520 decodes the digital sample stream and outputs a binary signal. The servo PLL 426 can also provide other timing signals that are necessary for the path 412 and portions of the servo demodulator 404 to operate properly.
The binary signal output is provided to the servo field detector 430, and more specifically to a SAM detector 532 and a track number detector 534 of the servo field detector 430. The output of the FIR filter 518 is provided to a burst demodulator 536. Alternatively, the output of the flash A/D 516 can be provided to the burst demodulator 536. The SAM detector 532 searches for a SAM using, for example, pattern recognition logic that recognizes the SAM pattern within the binary stream. The SAM detector 532 can allow some fault or error tolerance, so that a SAM pattern will be detected even if one or more of the bits in the binary stream do not exactly match the SAM pattern. As a consequence, should minor errors occur in reading or writing the SAM patterns, it may still be possible to fully demodulate the information contained in the servo wedge 138. The track number detector 534 performs decoding of gray codes (if necessary) and detects track numbers. The burst demodulator 536 measures burst amplitudes and/or phases.
The read channel 413 reads the first servo burst 210 and the second servo burst 220. The servo signals, as read by the transducing head 146, are less than perfect sine waves. The signal stream of sine waves are sent through the VGA 512 and the analog filter/equalizer 514, which is programmed to be optimized for the data transfer rate of the servo information. The signal stream of sine waves are sampled at a selected frequency which corresponds to a sampling time, T. In the example embodiment, the servo signals are sampled at a rate of four samples per sine wave cycle. In the read channel, the flash analog-to-digital (A/D) converter 516 is used to sample the servo signals as read by the transducing head 146 (
A Discrete Fourier series Transform (DFT) is done on the resultant sample series from the transducing head 146 passing over the first servo burst 210 and the second servo burst 220. The end result of the DFT on the resultant sample series includes a real part and an imaginary part. The real part and the imaginary part of the DFT can be used to characterize of the samples in terms of amplitude and phase shift. The real and imaginary parts are combined to determine the amplitude of the signal by squaring both the imaginary part and the real part, summing the two, and then taking the square root of the sum. The phase or angle of the first burst 210 can be determined by computing an arc tangent of the ratio of the real and imaginary parts. Determining the phase shift between the first servo burst 210 and the second servo burst 220 can be accomplished by determining the difference between the angle associated with the first servo burst 210 and the angle associated with the second servo burst 220. Given the phase shift between the first servo burst 210 and the second servo burst 220 and the specific track number 206 (see
In the example embodiment, the sampling rate is four samples per sine wave cycle. According to Nyquist theory, one can reject up to the Nyquist frequency of the signal by doing a DFT on a set of signal samples. The Nyquist frequency is half of the sampling rate. In the example embodiment, the Nyquist frequency is two since the sample rate per sine wave cycle is four. As a result, given a sample rate of four samples per sine wave cycle, the first harmonic can be demodulated and the second harmonic can be rejected. The third harmonic is beyond the Nyquist frequency, based upon the sample rate. Since the third harmonic and other harmonics above the third can not be properly demodulated or rejected, the third harmonic and other harmonics can introduce distortion into the resulting demodulated position.
Even small amounts of distortion in the signal will cause the gain of the PES to vary across the track or with varying radial position of the transducing head 146. In other words, as the phase offset between the first servo burst 210 the second servo burst 220 shifts, the gain also varies.
Thus, if one of the first servo burst 210 or the second servo burst 220 is shifted in phase by 45 degrees with respect to the other servo burst, the increases in the PES-gain contributed by the distortion due to the third harmonic of one of the first burst or the second burst is substantially canceled by the corresponding decreases in the PES-gain of the other of the burst. In one example embodiment, the disk 120 (shown in
The example embodiments include a media 701 includes a plurality of tracks, a first servo burst 710 written with advancing phase as a distance on the media transverse to the plurality of tracks increases, and a second servo burst 720 written with decreasing phase as a distance on the media transverse to the plurality of tracks increases. The phase of one of the first servo burst 710 and the second servo burst 720 is offset from the phase of the other of the first servo burst 710 and second servo burst 720 by an amount sufficient to substantially cancel distortion in a signal produced by the first servo burst 710 with distortion in a signal produced by the second servo burst 720 when the signal from the first servo burst 710 is added to the signal from the second servo burst 720. The signal is not necessarily the signal as read and may be the result after signal processing. In addition the media 120, 820 is not limited to a magnetic disk. The media could be an optical disk, a tape or any other type of media that may need or use servo information as part of a control finisher. In one embodiment, the first servo burst 710 is offset in phase from the second servo burst 720 by writing one of the first servo burst 710 or the second servo burst 720 patterns on the media 701 shifted by a distance 800 on the media related to a portion of a sample time used to sample a servo signal. In one embodiment the amount of phase shift corresponds to about one half of a sample time used to sample the servo burst signal. The distortion, in one embodiment, is related to a harmonic of the signal produced by the first servo burst 710 and a harmonic of the signal produced by the second servo burst 720. In one embodiment, the distortion is related to a third harmonic of the signal produced by the first servo burst 710 and a third harmonic of the signal produced by the second servo burst 720 where the signal from the first servo burst 710 and the signal from the second servo burst 720 is sampled at a rate of four times per sinewave-cycle. In one embodiment, the first servo burst 710 and the second servo bursts 720 are phase bursts and the media is a disk.
The example embodiments include a disk drive 100 includes a disk further including a plurality of tracks 129, a first servo burst 210, 710 written with advancing phase as a radial distance on the disk increases in a direction, and a second servo burst 220, 720 written with decreasing phase as a radial distance on the disk increases, a transducing head 146 for reading information from the disk 120, 701, and a read channel 413. The read channel 413 handles information from the disk 120, 701 including the first servo burst 210, 710 and the second servo burst 220, 720. The disk drive 100 also includes an element for shifting the phase of the signal produced by the first burst pattern 210, 710 with respect to the signal produced by the second burst pattern 220, 720 by an amount sufficient to substantially cancel distortion in a signal produced by the first servo burst 210, 710 with distortion in a signal produced by the second servo burst 220, 720 when the signal from the first servo burst 210, 710 is added to the signal from the second servo burst 220, 720. In one example embodiment, the element for shifting phase is a disk 701 written with the phase of the first servo burst offset 710 from the phase of second servo burst 720. In another embodiment, the element for shifting phase is a delay element in the read channel 413, the delay element shifting the phase of one of the first servo burst 210 and the second servo burst 220 from the phase of the other of the first servo burst 210 and second servo burst 220.
The foregoing description of the specific embodiments reveals the general nature of the invention sufficiently that others can, by applying current knowledge, readily modify and/or adapt it for various applications without departing from the generic concept, and therefore such adaptations and modifications are intended to be comprehended within the meaning and range of equivalents of the disclosed embodiments.
It is to be understood that the phraseology or terminology employed herein is for the purpose of description and not of limitation. Accordingly, the invention is intended to embrace all such alternatives, modifications, equivalents and variations as fall within the spirit and broad scope of the appended claims.
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