This application relates to hard disk drives, in particular to the interfacing apparatus with the read-write head and methods of analyzing and responding to data resulting from such interfaces.
Embodiments include a pre-contact signal detector PCSD detecting a signal possessing a frequency band component that can be detected from the read signal rs of the read head 94R, which were found in experiments to be present just before the read-write head makes contact with the rotating disk surface 120-1 it is accessing in a hard disk drive 10, as shown in
Experiments by the inventors showed that just prior to contact between the read-write head 94 and the disk surface 120-1, the head stack assembly 50 causes the slider 90 to develop a vibration that modulates the flying height, also known herein as the vertical position VP, and causes the read head 94-R output, known herein as the read signal rs, to develop a frequency band component on top of the expected read head output. The read head used in the experiments was a tunneling magneto-resistive head. The observed frequency band component was between 100 and 400 kiloherz (KHz). The inventors recognized that detecting this signal would allow predicting contact between the slider and the disk surface, and allow adjustment of the flying height to avoid that contact, thereby improving the reliability of the hard disk drive 10.
The pre-contact signal detector PCSD may include a read signal RS received from a read head 94R as shown in
The pre-contact signal detector PCSD preferably further includes a pre-contact threshold generator PCTG, which generates the pre-contact threshold PCT, as shown in
The pre-contact signal detector PCSD may include a pre-contact filter control generator PCFC as shown in
The read signal rs may be amplified before being used by the pre-contact filter PCF, as shown in the example of
The pre-contact signal detector may be manufactured by providing the pre-contact filter and the pre-contact threshold comparator to create the pre-contact signal detector as a product of this manufacturing process. By way of example, providing the pre-contact filter and the pre-contact threshold comparator may preferably be done using a semiconductor manufacturing process by repeated deposition, etching, doping of various layers of metals and other chemical to create transistors, capacitors, resistors and wiring them together to create the pre-contact signal detector.
The pre-contact signal detector PCSD, may be preferably included in the preamplifier 24, generating the pre-contact detection signal, as shown in
Embodiments further include apparatus in the embedded controller 500 receiving the pre-contact detection signal to create a pre-contact condition 512 recognized by the invention's pre-contact alert circuitry 520. This apparatus has the advantage of predicting contact between the read-write head and the disk surface before it occurs, and consequently, avoiding the potential for damage to the disk surface from that contact. It also has the advantage of placing the pre-contact signal detector close to the read head 94R in the preamplifier, rather than in the embedded circuit, which makes it more sensitive and less prone to transmission noise.
A main flex circuit 200 preferably includes this preamplifier, and the head stack assembly 50 preferably includes this main flex circuit coupling through a flexure finger 20 to the read-write head 94 of the slider 90, providing a read signal rs to the pre-contact signal detector of the preamplifier to create the pre-contact detection signal TD, as shown in
The embedded circuit 500 may include means for receiving 510 the pre-contact detection signal TD to create a pre-contact condition 512 presented to and recognized by a pre-contact alert circuit 520 as shown in
By way of example, an instance of the computer 600 may preferably any combination of the program steps of the program system 800 as shown in
Note that in some embodiments, operation 808 may be used in conjunction with operation 802 to follow the track and insure the flying height, or vertical position VP of the slider 90 over the disk surface 120-1 while following the track 122. Writing and reading the track are both performed while the track is being followed and while essential operations, are considered the primary tasks performed while following the track. The encoding the data as shown by operation 804 does not necessarily occur while following the track, and is often completed before the read-write head 94 is close enough to the track for it to be followed. Similarly, the decoding of the read data as shown by operation 806 may often begin after the reading of the track is completed, and does not require that the track continue to be followed.
The program system 800 may reside in a volatile memory component 604-V and/or preferably in a non-volatile memory component 604-NV of the memory 604, as shown in
The apparatus in the embedded circuit 500 may preferably be implemented on a system on an integrated circuit, which may or may not include the non-volatile memory component 604-NV. The embedded circuit may further include a printed circuit board as shown in
A hard disk drive 10 may preferably includes the head stack assembly 50 coupling with the embedded circuit 500 to provide the pre-contact detection signal TD to the means for receiving 510.
Embodiments also include a method of calibrating an assembled embodiment of the invention's hard disk drive 10 to configure the pre-contact signal detector PCSD as discussed with operation 810 of
The method of calibrating the preamplifier 24 as discussed with operation 812 may further include optimizing an overshoot amplitude, an overshoot duration, and a write current for a specific track zone and a specific temperature range, which is shown as operation 820 in
In certain preferred embodiments, the pre-contact signal detector PCSD includes the components of
Operation 830 supports selecting the center frequency FCenter and bandwidth BW for the pre-contact band-pass filter PCBPF of
Operation 832 supports selecting the pre-contact threshold PCT for the pre-contact threshold comparator PCTC, by first setting the pre-contact band-pass filter PCBPF to the minimum bandwidth BW and the selected frequency Fmax having the maximum RMS filter output. Starting from a maximum or minimum value of the range of the vertical position control state, the range of the pre-contact threshold is examined to count the number of triggering events in a prescribed amount of time at that threshold and vertical control position state as trace 708, leading to a succession of trigger counts N forming the vertical axis versus pre-contact thresholds PCT forming the horizontal axis as shown in
To confirm these settings, operation 834 supports verifying the flying height power curve as shown in
Operation 836 supports determining the pre-contact threshold PCT to warn of impending contact between the read-write head 94 and the disk surface 120-1. The acceptable threshold of TH-OK of operation 834 and
Manufacturing the hard disk drive preferably includes mounting the head stack assembly through its actuator pivot to the disk base to create the hard disk drive. The hard disk drive is a product of this manufacturing process.
As used herein, a head stack includes at least one actuator arm. The head stack may include more than one of these actuator arms, and preferably only these actuator arms. The head stack 54 includes at least one of the actuators coupled to a voice coil 32, as shown in
The head stack assembly 50, includes the head stack 54 coupled to at least one head gimbal assembly 60, further coupling the actuator arm 52 to at least one head gimbal assembly, for each of the actuator arms included in the head stack. At least one actuator arm may couple to two head gimbal assemblies.
The head gimbal assembly 60 may preferably include the slider 90 coupled through a flexure finger 20 to a load beam 30, which couples through a hinge 70 to a base plate 72. The slider includes the read-write head 94, which is embedded in it, forming an air-bearing surface for flying a few nanometers off the disk surface 120-1 during normal access operations of a track 122, which is usually arranged as a concentric circle on the disk surface in the hard disk drive 10 as shown in
The hard disk drive 10 includes the head stack assembly 50 mounted through its actuator pivot 58 to a disk base 14. The hard disk drive preferably includes a voice coil motor 30, which further includes the head stack assembly mounted via its actuator pivot to the disk base with the voice coil 32 positioned to move under/between the fixed magnet 34 in response to a voice coil control signal driven by the embedded circuit 500. The head stack assembly is also positioned so that at least one actuator arm 52 can move at least one head gimbal assembly 60 near a disk surface 120-1 as shown in
A disk surface 120-1 rotates about a spindle 40 to create the rotating disk surface 120-1. The head stack assembly 50 pivots about the actuator pivot 58. The head stack assembly includes the actuator arm 52 coupled with the voice coil 32. When the voice coil is electrically stimulated with a time-varying electrical signal, it inductively interacts with a fixed magnet 34 attached to the voice coil yoke, causing the actuator arm to pivot by lever action through the actuator pivot. Typically, the fixed magnet is composed of two parts, one attached to the voice coil yoke and the other attached to the bottom voice coil yoke. As the actuator arm pivots, the head gimbal assembly 60 is moved across the disk surface 120-1. This provides the coarse positioning of the slider 90, and consequently, the read-write head 100 over a specific track.
The read head 94-R may use a spin valve to drive the read differential signal pair. As used herein, the spin valve employs a magneto-resistive effect to modulate a sensing voltage, or alternatively, a sensing current, which is conducted from one lead, through the magneto-resistive element to the other lead. The magneto-resistive element is located between the first shield and the second shield.
The read head 94-R may use a tunnel valve to drive the read differential signal pair. As used herein, a tunnel valve uses a tunneling effect to modulate the sensing current perpendicular to the first shield and the second shield. Both longitudinally recorded signals and perpendicularly recorded signals can be read by either reader type. Perpendicular versus longitudinal recording relates to the technology of the writer/media pair, not just the reader.
The tunnel valve is used as follows. A pinned magnetic layer is separated from a free ferromagnetic layer by an insulator, and is coupled to a pinning antiferromagnetic layer. The magneto-resistance of the tunnel valve is caused by a change in the tunneling probability, which depends upon the relative magnetic orientation of the two ferromagnetic layers. The sensing current Is, is the result of this tunneling probability. The response of the free ferromagnetic layer to the magnetic field of the bit of the track 122 of the disk surface 120-1, results in a change of electrical resistance through the tunnel valve.
The flexure finger 20 for the slider 90, preferably contains a micro-actuator assembly 80 for mechanically coupling to the slider to aid in positioning the slider to access the data 122 on 120-1 disk surface of the disk 12. The micro-actuator assembly may aid in laterally positioning LP the slider to the disk surface as shown in and/or aid in vertically positioning VP the slider. The flexure finger 20 may further provide the vertical control signal VcAC and preferably the first lateral control signal as the first slider power terminal to the vertical micro-actuator.
The flexure finger 20 preferably includes the lateral control signal 82 and trace paths between the slider for the write differential signal pair. The lateral control signal preferably includes the first lateral control signal and the second lateral control signal, as well as the AC lateral control signal. When the slider does not contain an amplifier 96, the flexure finger further preferably provides trace paths for the read differential signal pair.
The micro-actuator assembly 80 may employ a piezoelectric effect and/or an electrostatic effect to aid in positioning the slider 90. First, examples of micro-actuator assemblies employing the piezoelectric effect will be discussed followed by electrostatic effect examples. The micro-actuator assembly may preferably couple with the head gimbal assembly 60 through the flexure finger 20, as shown in
Examples of micro-actuator assemblies employing the piezoelectric effect are shown in
Examples of the micro-actuator assemblies employing the electrostatic effect are shown in
The first micro-actuator 220 includes the following. A first pivot spring pair 402 and 408 coupling to a first stator 230. A second pivot spring pair 400 and 406 coupling to a second stator 250. A first flexure spring pair 410 and 416, and a second flexure spring pair 412 and 418, coupling to a central movable section 300. A pitch spring pair 420-422 coupling to the central movable section 300. The central movable section 300 includes signal pair paths coupling to the write differential signal pair and either the read differential signal pair or the amplified read signal of the read-write head 94 of the slider 90.
The bonding block 210 may electrically couple the read-write head 90 to the amplified read signal and write differential signal pair, and mechanically couples the central movable section 300 to the slider 90 with read-write head 94 embedded on or near the air bearing surface 92 included in the slider.
The first micro-actuator 220 aids in laterally positioning LP the slider 90, which can be finely controlled to position the read-write head 94 over a small number of tracks 122 on the disk surface 120-1. This lateral motion is a first mechanical degree of freedom, which results from the first stator 230 and the second stator 250 electrostatically interacting with the central movable section 300. The first micro-actuator 220 may act as a lateral comb drive or a transverse comb drive, as is discussed in detail in the incorporated U.S. patent application.
The electrostatic micro-actuator assembly 2000 may further include a second micro-actuator 520 including a third stator 510 and a fourth stator 550. Both the third and the fourth stator electrostatically interact with the central movable section 300. These interactions urge the slider 90 to move in a second mechanical degree of freedom, aiding in the vertically positioning VP to provide flying height control. The second micro-actuator may act as a vertical comb drive or a torsional drive, as is discussed in detail in the incorporated U.S. patent application. The second micro-actuator may also provide motion sensing, which may indicate collision with the disk surface 120-1 being accessed.
The central movable section 300 not only positions the read-write head 10, but may act as the conduit for the write differential signal pair and in certain embodiments, the first slider power signal and the second slider power signal, as well as the read differential signal pair or the amplified read signal. The electrical stimulus of the first micro-actuator 220 is provided through some of its springs.
The central movable section 300 may preferably to be at ground potential, and so does not need wires. The read differential signal pair, the amplified read signal, the write differential signal pair and/or the slider power signals and traces may preferably be routed with flexible traces all the way to the load beam 74 as shown in
The flexure finger 20 may further provide a read trace path rtp for the amplified read signal. The slider 90 may further include a first slider power terminal and a second slider power terminal, both electrically coupled to the amplifier 96 to collectively provide power to generate the amplified read signal. The flexure finger may further include a first power path electrically coupled to the first slider power terminal and/or a second power path electrically coupled to the second slider power terminal, which are collectively used to provide electrical power to generate the amplified read signal.
In certain embodiments, the hard disk drive 10 may preferably include the disk base 14 coupled to the disk cover 17 to enclose a humidity sensor 16 and a temperature sensor 164, as shown in
The hard disk drive 10 with the embedded circuit 500 may preferably control the lateral position LP of the read-write head 94 to follow a track 122 on the rotating disk surface 120-1 in what is sometimes called track following mode by using a position error signal PES derived from the read signal rs received by the preamplifier 24. The position error signal is used as a feedback control by the embedded circuit to keep the read-write head close to the track by controlling the voice coil motor 30. A time varying electrical signal is generated by the embedded circuit to stimulate the voice coil 32, which induces a time varying electromagnetic field that interacts with the fixed magnet 34 to apply a time varying force on the head stack assembly 50, in particular to the head stack 54, which is rigidly coupled to the voice coil and moves through the actuator pivot 58, causing the actuator arm 52 and the head gimbal assembly 60 to swing across the rotating disk surface.
It is common that during track following mode the vertical position Vp of the slider 90 must be stably kept flying at the minimum distance off the rotating disk surface 120-1. This is a situation in which accurate prediction of when contact between the slider and the rotating disk surface is quite useful and at least some of the various aspects and embodiments may be operational to determine the threshold detect TD and/or the pre-contact condition 512 and to affect the vertical position control state 516, which in turn drives the vertical actuator control signal VcAC, which is used by the vertical micro-actuator 98 and/or the micro-actuator assembly 80 to alter the vertical position.
The preceding embodiments provide examples of the invention and are not meant to constrain the scope of the following claims.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/841,857, filed on Sep. 1, 2006, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60841857 | Sep 2006 | US |