The present invention relates to a system for sensing contact between a slider and a rotating disc in a disc drive, and more particularly to an in-situ technique for detecting slider-disc contact in which an electrostatic voltage is applied between the head and the disc to allow detection of contact.
As the density of data recorded on magnetic discs continues to increase, it is becoming necessary for the spacing between the transducing head carried by the slider and the disc to decrease to very small distances. Spacings of well below 10 nano-meters (nm) are required in some applications. In disc drive systems having such small slider-disc spacing, the possibility of contact between the slider and the disc is relatively high, due to factors such as slider manufacturing process limitations and limited air-bearing modeling capabilities. A system for detecting such contacts is useful for a number of diagnostic tests, enabling assessments such as component-level flyability and durability, drive-level reliability, and production-level screening to be made, as well as providing input to fly-height calibration and adaptive-fly-control systems that enable dynamic adjustment of flying height in certain disc drive systems.
Existing methods of detecting contact between a slider and a disc typically involve acoustic emission (AE) monitoring by an external AE sensor such as a piezoelectric element having suitable frequency response and sensitivity. While AE sensors are generally effective to detect high intensity and catastrophic slider-disc contact events, their detection abilities are somewhat limited. The use of an external sensor limits the AE sensor's sensitivity to remotely occurring slider-disc contact events. The physical dimensions of the AE sensor also preclude optimum placement of the sensor in many component-level testing arrangements. Furthermore, the effectiveness of conventional AE sensors may be severely limited by the introduction of polymer-based (“flex”) gimbals, due to the heavy AE attenuation of such gimbals, which act as a high acoustic impedance component between the slider-disc interface and the suspension.
There is a need in the art for an improved apparatus and method for sensing contact between a slider and a disc, both in operative disc drive systems and in testing applications.
The present invention is a method of detecting contact between a transducing head-carrying slider and a rotatable disc. An electrostatic voltage is applied between the slider and the disc, and current flow across an interface between the slider and the disc is monitored. The monitored current flow across the interface between the slider and the disc is analyzed to detect contact between the slider and the disc.
In typical systems such as the one shown in
In order to implement the in-situ head-disc contact system of the present invention, few structural changes need to be made to a typical slider support configuration. A voltage difference must be applied between slider 12 and disc 30 to induce current across the head-disc interface. In typical disc drives, both slider 12 and disc 30 are grounded. Thus, a voltage must be applied to either slider 12 or to disc 30. Typical sliders are already provided with a ground path through which a voltage can be applied, thus requiring no additional structure and making this option attractive. Alternatively, the voltage could be applied to the disc while leaving the slider grounded, which would require some additional structure because of the need for the disc to retain its path to ground. However, the incorporation of this structure is well within the abilities of one skilled in this art.
In one embodiment, first electrode 38 is formed on at least a portion of air-bearing surface 39 of slider 12, and second electrode 40 is formed on a portion of disc 30 that faces first electrode 38. Second electrode 40 has a shape that is defined by the facing shape of first electrode 38 that overlies it. Control signal V is generated by sensing circuitry 32 and is coupled by electrical conductors to first electrode 38 along line 42. First electrode 38 can be a metallization that is insulated from the main body of slider 12 by insulating layer 44. Alternatively, slider 12 itself can be connected to sensing circuitry along line 46 and entire slider 12 can serve as the first electrode. The voltage difference V between the first and second electrodes causes a current to flow therebetween, which will change when slider 12 contacts disc 30 to enable detection of slider-disc contact events.
where Fc is the Coulomb force, E is the applied electrostatic voltage, C is the slider-disc capacitance, and h is the flying height between the slider and the disc. Thus, for the in-situ sensing technique of the present invention to be effective, the voltage applied between the slider and the disc must not be so large that the flying height is significantly affected. The graph of
These results indicate that higher applied voltages result in greater flying height variations. The level of flying height variation that is tolerable will depend on the specific application in which the in-situ head-disc contact detection system of the present invention is employed.
The present invention provides an in-situ sensing system for detecting contact between a slider and a rotating disc. The system is able to detect contact events by applying an electrostatic voltage between the slider and the disc, and sensing the current flowing across the head-disc interface (which will change as the slider contacts the disc). The voltage applied between the slider and the disc is selected so that the Coulomb force of attraction therebetween does not significantly affect the flying height of the slider. This sensing system has excellent sensitivity to light contact and “near-contact” or “near-proximity” phenomena between the slider and the disc, since a change in current flow across the slider-disc interface can occur when slider-disc spacing becomes sufficiently small without continuous or violent contact. The sensing system of the present invention therefore has greater sensitivity that prior AE sensors, and does not suffer from many of the limitations of such sensors. The sensing system of the present invention also has numerous advantages over “readback” type sensing systems, particularly because it does not require the slider to have the read/write transducing elements completed in order to assess the mechanical “flyability” and durability of components and disc drives.
The sensing system of the present invention may be used in a number of disc drive-related applications. It may be employed in a spinstand tester for assessing component-level flyability and durability. It might also be used for drive-level reliability assessment of disc drives, both in their early mechanical phases and in fully functional drives. Screening of head gimbal assemblies (HGAs) in pre-production phases as well as production phases is possible with the present invention, whether the HGA employs a conventional metal gimbal or a “flex” (polymer-based) gimbal. The system of the present invention may also be employed in disc drive systems which adaptively control the flying height of the slider, as a mechanism to ensure that the adjustment of flying height does not result in undesirable levels of slider-disc contact. Those skilled in the art will recognize that still further applications may exist for the system of the present invention due to its versatility and broad level of efficacy.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/119,178 filed Apr. 9, 2002 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,700,724 for “Contact Detection And Calibration For Electrostatic Fly Height Control In A Disc Drive” by J. Riddering and L. Knippenberg. This application claims the benefit of Provisional Application No. 60/418,118 filed Oct. 11, 2002 for “In-Situ Technique For The Monitoring Of Head-Disc Contact In Magnetic Disc Files” by J. Hanchi, L. Fu, R. Rao and L. Knippenberg. The aforementioned U.S. application Ser. No. 10/119,178 and Provisional Application No. 60/418,118 are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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60418118 | Oct 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10119178 | Apr 2002 | US |
Child | 10385579 | US |