The present invention relates to desiccants, and more particularly to a desiccant for use in a magnetic data storage device.
Desiccants have been used for many years to prevent vapors such as water or other vapors from adversely affecting products stored within a container. In many applications simple desiccant structures such as an absorber material (e.g. silica) is held within a simple sealed paper pouch or bag. These desiccants are suitable for use in applications wherein contamination, such as from the absorbent material from the enclosing paper pouch, is not a serious issue. Examples of such commonly known applications include the storage of clothes, toys or even electronic devices in a box or other container during shipping and storage prior to sale.
Such simple desiccant structures have, however, proven entirely inadequate in applications where any debris or contamination is entirely unacceptable. An example of an environment where any sort of contamination cannot be tolerated is the interior of a disk drive device (HDD). As those skilled in the art of HDD construction can appreciate, any contamination within the interior of a disk drive device can lead to catastrophic failure of the device.
Modern disk drive devices include a magnetic read write head, mounted on a slider that flies at an extremely low fly-height over the surface of a magnetic disk. In many instances this fly height can be on the order of few nano-meters and is approaching even smaller dimensions. Therefore, a debris particle of only a few nano-meters in size when present in a disk drive device can cause a magnetic read write head to “crash”, by causing a head to disk contact. This can permanently damage the head and or the disk, rendering the disk drive useless and presenting the possibility of data loss. Therefore, the above described desiccant structure cannot be used in a device such as a disk drive, because particles such as dust from the absorbent may pass through the paper pouch and thereby contaminate the interior of the disk drive device. Furthermore, dust or particles (such as fibers) from the containment pouch itself can contaminate the interior of the disk drive.
On the other hand, vapors such as water vapors cannot be allowed to exist within the disk drive either. The presence of vapors such as water vapor or other vapors (such as from out-gassing of materials used within the disk drive device) can cause serious corrosion of the components within the disk drive (such as the sensitive read and write head formed on the slider).
As a result, some form of vapor absorbing mechanism is needed in the disk drive device. This vapor absorbing mechanism must be designed and constructed so as to ensure that it will not introduce any contamination whatsoever into the disk drive device. Similarly, in the highly competitive, low cost margin industry of data storage manufacture, such a mechanism must also be very inexpensive to manufacture.
The present invention provides a desiccant device that includes a containment structure constructed of a laminate layer, the laminate layer comprising a permeable media layer and a thin monolithic membrane bonded to the permeable media layer. A vapor absorbing material held is held within the containment structure.
The thin monolithic membrane is designed to allow a desired vapor to pass there-through by molecular diffusion, but does not allow the passage of any material by any other mechanism, such as by the permeation of material through small holes or pores. The woven media is preferably a non-woven fabric such as spun bonded polypropylene. The monolithic membrane can be a material such as a thin layer of polymeric material, such as non-expanded polytetratluoroethane (PTFE).
By constructing the containment structure of a monolithic membrane, the device completely eliminates the risk that any contaminants from within the desiccant device will escape to contaminate the electronic device such as the disk drive.
These and other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent upon reading of the following detailed description of preferred embodiments taken in conjunction with the Figures in which like reference numerals indicate like elements throughout.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and advantages of this invention, as well as the preferred mode of use, reference should be made to the following detailed description read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings which are not to scale.
The following description is of the best embodiments presently contemplated for carrying out this invention. This description is made for the purpose of illustrating the general principles of this invention and is not meant to limit the inventive concepts claimed herein.
Desiccants for vapor absorption in certain applications such as the interior of a hard disk drive device (HDD) present significant challenges not present in other common applications in which desiccants are used. While such challenges are not unique to HDD products, the application of a desiccant device within a HDD provides an excellent example for discussing and describing such challenges.
HDD products are extremely susceptible to damage from contamination with the interior of such devices. HDD products generally include a hard magnetic disk which spins with the chamber. A slider (having a read/write head formed thereon) slides on a cushion of moving air adjacent to a surface of the disk. In current HDD devices, the slider flies at a very small fly height, on the order of only a few nanometers. Contamination particles of only a few nanometers can cause a catastrophic failure of the disk drive by causing the slider to crash, permanently damaging the magnetic head and/or disk.
In addition to being sensitive to debris a device such as a HDD must be free of vapor contamination, such water vapor or outgassing from materials within the HDD. Such vapor can cause corrosion of components such as the read and write head on the slider.
Therefore, a HDD device needs some form of desiccant device to remove vapors such as water vapors from the atmosphere within the HDD. However, any such desiccant device must not introduce any physical contamination into the HDD. No fibers or other particles from the containment structure can be tolerated. Similarly, no dust or other particles from the vapor absorbing structure can be tolerated within the HDD.
To this end, the present invention provides a desiccant structure that can remove vapor, such as water or other vapor, from the HDD while ensuring that no physical contamination is introduced into the HDD. While the invention described below has been described as being suitable for use in a HDD device it should be understood that it could also be suitable for use in other devices where vapor must be removed, but in which physical contamination cannot be tolerated.
With reference now to
The nature of the containment structure 304 can be better understood with reference to
The porous media material is a thin layer of largely continuous media that is penetrated by voids through which a fluid may flow under some pressure differential. The porous media is preferably a layer of non-woven fabric, such as (but not limited to) spun bonded polypropylene, which can be purchased under the trade name TYVEK®. The porous media material 102 provides structural strength (such as tensile strength and puncture resistance) to the device.
The other layer 104 is a thin, non-porous, monolithic layer of material formed such that it has no holes, slits or other gaps. It is contrasted with materials such as micro-porous, expanded, needle punched, air-laid non-woven, and other similar materials. In contrast with other materials used for desiccant containers, the layer 104 does not pass liquids or solids there-through by permeation (such as through very small holes). The membrane 104 passes a desired gas or vapor (such as water vapor) only by molecular diffusion. In this manner, no contamination can pass through the laminate layer 304 to contaminate the device (such as a disk drive) in which the desiccant is employed.
The material and thickness of the monolithic membrane layer 104 are chosen to provide a desired amount of molecular diffusion to pass the vapor or gas of interest at a desired rate through the laminate layer 304. For example, the monolithic film can be a thin polymeric film layer. It can be constructed of a material such as non-expanded polytetrafluoroethylene non-expanded (PTFE), although it can be constructed of various other materials as well, so long as the material is thin enough to pass the vapor of interest by molecular diffusion at a desired rate. It should also be pointed out that the non-expanded PTFE is a non-porous material having no voids or holes, whereas expanded PTFE is a material that has been formed with small holes a fluid or vapor there-through.
With reference to
Various heat sealing processes are possible. For example, the heat sealing could be performed so that both layer 102, 104 are melted. On the other hand, the heat sealing can be performed so that only the inner layer 102 is melted, and the outer layer is not. Alternatively, the heat sealing can be performed so that the outer layer 104 is melted, but the inner layer 102 is not, such that the monolithic membrane layer 104 is melted into the porous media 102.
In one embodiment, illustrated in
In
While various embodiments have been described, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example only, and not limitation. Other embodiments falling within the scope of the invention may also become apparent to those skilled in the art. Thus, the breadth and scope of the invention should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the following claims and their equivalents.