Manufactured components are lapped to remove excess material to control thickness and other parameters of the fabricated components. Illustrative components include slider bars having a row of transducer heads. The slider bars are lapped to control the taper and bow of the slider bar and thickness of the slider bar. During the lapping process, the bar is supported against an abrasive lapping surface. Relative movement between the slider bar against the abrasive lapping surface removes or abrades a layer of material from the bar. The amount or thickness of the material removed is dependent upon the abrasion of the lapping surface, lapping force and lapping time. Lapping time is increased to increase the thickness of material removed or the lapping time is decreased to reduce the thickness of material removed. For slider bars or components, a pre-set lapping time can be used to control the lapping process and thickness of material removed. Variations in the bar dimensions and parameters can introduce variations in the thickness dimensions of the transducer heads fabricated from the bar using the pre-set lapping time. Embodiments of the present invention provide solutions to these and other problems, and offer other advantages over the prior art.
The application relates to a lapping head including a sensor device in the base structure of the rotating head. For lapping operations, rotation is imparted to the head through a drive motor coupled to the head through a rotating shaft. As disclosed, the sensor device is electrically coupled to one or more electronic components or circuitry through the rotating shaft and a rotating electrical connector coupled to the rotating shaft. In embodiments disclosed, the sensor device is an eddy current sensor configured to measure a gap dimension between a sensor element on the lapping head and a conductive platen to provide an in-situ measurement corresponding to a thickness of the workpiece. As described, embodiments of the lapping head are used to lap slider bars for fabricating transducer heads for data storage devices. The bars are coupled to the lapping head through a carrier and feedback from the sensor device is used to control the lapped thickness or other parameters of the slider bars. Other features and benefits that characterize embodiments of the present invention will be apparent upon reading the following detailed description and review of the associated drawings.
The present application relates to a lapping head 100 for a lapping assembly 102 having a sensor device 104 on the lapping head 100. The head 100 rotates relative to an abrasive lapping surface of an abrasive lapping film 108 on a rotating platen 110. The head 100 includes a base structure 120 coupled to an elongate shaft 122. One or more workpieces 124 are coupled to the base structure 120 through a workpiece carrier 126 to support the workpieces 124 for lapping. The shaft 122 is rotationally coupled to a platform structure 128 through a bearing 129 (illustrated schematically) to rotate the head 100 relative to the abrasive lapping surface or film 108 to abrade or remove material from the one or more workpieces 124. In the embodiment shown in
In the illustrated embodiment, the platform structure 128 is movable along rails 130 via an actuator device 132 to raise and lower the base structure 120 of the head 100 relative to the abrasive lapping surface or film 108 and to bias the head 100 against the abrasive lapping surface or film 108. Illustrative actuator devices 132 are pneumatic or electrical actuator devices. As shown, a motor 140 is coupled to shaft 122 through a gear assembly 142 to rotate the base structure 120 and workpieces 124 relative to the abrasive lapping surface or film 108. As illustrated, the motor 140 is supported on the platform structure 128 and is moveable therewith. In the illustrated embodiment, the assembly also includes a motor 144 to rotate the platen 110 to lap the workpieces 124 via rotation of both the platen 110 and the head structure 100 supporting the workpieces 124. Although not shown, the lapping assembly can include multiple heads biased against the same abrasive lapping surface or film 108 to enhance capacity. Thus, it should be understood that the axis of rotation of the head 100 is not concentric with a rotation axis of the platen 110.
As shown, the sensor device 104 on the rotating head 100 is coupled to electronic components or circuitry 150 through the rotating shaft 122 and a rotating electrical connector 152 coupled to the rotating shaft 122. The rotating electrical connector 152 includes a rotating portion 154 coupled to the shaft 122 and a stationary portion 156 to provide an electrical connection between the sensor device 104 on the rotating head 100 and the stationary electronic components or circuitry 150 supported on the frame of the device or assembly 102. As shown, the base structure 120 of the head is coupled to a proximal end of the shaft 122 proximate to the abrasive lapping surface or film 108. The rotating portion 154 of the rotating electrical connector 152 is coupled to a distal end of the shaft 122 and rotates with the shaft 122.
The sensor device 104 electrically connects to the rotary portion 154 of the connector 152 through leads 158. The stationary portion 156 of connector 152 is coupled to the rotary portion 154 and to the one or more electronic components or circuitry 150 through leads 159 to provide the interface between the sensor device 104 and the one or more electronic components or circuitry 150. Illustratively, the electronic components or circuitry 150 include one or more hardware devices and software configured to process input from the sensor device 104. The electronic components or circuitry 150 also include controller algorithms to operate and control motors 140, 144 and actuator device 132 to start and stop the lapping process. In illustrated embodiments, the one or more hardware devices include memory device, such as flash memory and solid state memory devices and processors for implementing the various controller or measurement algorithms.
For lapping operations, the head and base structure 120 rotate via motor 140 axially displaced from a rotation axis of the shaft 122. As previously described, the base structure 120 is coupled to the proximal end of the shaft 122 of the head 100 and the rotating electrical connector 152 is coupled to the distal end of the shaft 122. The motor 140 is coupled to a body of the shaft 122 between the proximal and distal ends of the shaft 122 through the gear assembly 142 which includes at least one gear 160 coupled to and rotated through the motor 140 and at least one gear 162 coupled to the shaft 122 and rotated by the at least one gear 160 coupled to the motor 140. Gear 160 is axially aligned with a rotation axis of the motor and gear 162 is concentric with the shaft 122. Gear 162 is axially spaced from the output shaft of the motor 140 and is aligned to interface with gear 160 so that gear 160 imparts rotation to gear 162 to rotate the shaft 122.
As previously described, the relative movement of the workpieces 124 and abrasive lapping surface or film 108 abrades material from the workpieces 124 generally at a lapping rate dependent upon the workpiece material, abrasion of the abrasive lapping surface or film 108, lapping time and force from the actuator device 132. For small or miniature components, precise control of the lapped thickness and the lapping process is important to reduce tolerance variations for the fabricated components. In the illustrated embodiment shown in
In the embodiment shown in
The eddy current in the metal platen 110 generates an opposing magnetic field which resists the magnetic field generated in the sensor element 170. The magnitude of the resistance of the opposing magnetic field depends upon the space or gap 168 between the sensor element 170 and a top surface of the platen 110. The interaction of the opposing magnetic field is measured using the output voltage across the sensor element 170 which varies based upon the changing impedance in the sensor element 170 as a result of a change in the gap 168 between the sensor element 170 and the top surface of the conductive platen 110. The output voltage is used by a gap/workpiece thickness measurement algorithm(s) 174 to provide an output measurement corresponding to workpiece thickness to control the lapping process as described. The frequency of the AC current is optimized to reduce interference with noise and vibration frequency of the rotating head 100. The eddy current sensor as described provides an accurate gap measurement despite the presence of non-conductive lubricant and/or debris in the gap between the head 100 and the rotating platen 110. In particular, the eddy current sensor device provides an input signal corresponding to the gap between the sensor element 170 of the device and the top of the platen 110.
The hardware devices and software of the electronics components and circuitry 150 include the measurement algorithm(s) 174 and controller algorithm(s) 176 to process the input from the gap measurement sensor or element 170 (or eddy current sensor) and provide an in-situ and real time workpiece thickness measurement utilizing the measured signal from the sensor element 170. In illustrated embodiments, the algorithms include software instructions stored on the one or more hardware devices and implemented through the processor. The gap measurement is used by the controller algorithm(s) 176 to control the motors 140, 144 and actuator device 132 to increase or decrease the lapping time or duration to control the workpiece thickness. In particular, the controller algorithm(s) 176 use the gap measurement to control the motors 140, 144 and the actuator device 132 to stop the lapping process when a target workpiece thickness is reached.
Embodiments of the lapping head 100 are used to lap components for transducer heads 188 for data storage devices. As shown in
In the embodiment shown, the base plate 230 is connected to the shaft 122 through a gimbal assembly to allow the base structure 120 to pivot to follow the contour of the platen 110. As shown, the gimbal assembly includes a base ring 250 connected to the back surface 234 of the base plate 230 and a first gimbal ring 252 pivotally coupled to the base ring 250 to pivot about first axis 254 through pins 256. A second gimbal ring 260 is pivotally coupled to the first gimbal ring 252 to pivot about a second axis 262 generally perpendicular to the first axis 254. A shaft adapter 266 is coupled to the second gimbal ring 260 to connect the base plate 230 to the rotating shaft 122 through the gimbal assembly. The shaft adapter 266 is removable coupled to the shaft 122 through a collet (not shown) to removably connect the base structure 120 or plate to the rotating shaft 122.
Slider bars 196 are lapped utilizing the lapping head 100 to remove material to control the thickness of the bar 196 and dimensions of the transducer heads 188 fabricated from the bar 196. Thus, the slider bars 196 form the workpieces 124 which are connected to the base structure 120 through carrier 126 shown in
During the lapping process, contact between the workpieces 124 or slider bars 196 and the abrasive lapping surface or film 108 generates heat which can increase the temperature of the sensor device 104 and base structure 120 of the head. The increased temperature can alter the voltage signal in the sensor element 170 of an eddy current sensor or other sensor device and interfere with gap measurement. In the embodiment, illustrated in
The measured thickness removed 288 is determined by the measurement algorithm(s) 174 using the input gap measurements from the gap measurement or eddy current sensor. The measurement algorithm(s) 174 calculate a change in gap (Delta Gap) to provide the measured thickness removed 288 input to the controller algorithm(s) 176. The controller algorithm(s) 176 compares the measured thickness removed 288 to the target removal thickness 286 and when the measure thickness removed 288 is at the target removal thickness 286, the controller algorithm(s) 176 outputs control signals for the motors 140, 144 and actuator device 132 to stop the lapping process.
In the embodiment shown in
It is to be understood that even though numerous characteristics and advantages of various embodiments of the invention have been set forth in the foregoing description, together with details of the structure and function of various embodiments of the invention, this disclosure is illustrative only, and changes may be made in detail, especially in matters of structure and arrangement of parts within the principles of the present invention to the full extent indicated by the broad general meaning of the terms in which the appended claims are expressed. For example, the particular elements may vary depending on the particular application while maintaining substantially the same functionality without departing from the scope and spirit of the present invention. In addition, although the applications of the lapping device and head described herein are directed to lapping slider bars for fabrication of transducer heads, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the teachings of the present application can be applied to other workpieces, without departing from the scope and spirit of the present invention.