This invention relates to hard disk drives, in particular, to methods and apparatus estimating the stroke sensitivity of a micro-actuator inside a hard disk drive, and operating the hard disk drive based upon that stroke sensitivity estimate.
Contemporary hard disk drives include an actuator assembly pivoting through an actuator pivot to position one or more read-write heads, embedded in sliders, each over a rotating disk surface. The data stored on the rotating disk surface is typically arranged in concentric tracks. To access the data of a track, a servo controller first positions the read-write head by electrically stimulating the voice coil motor, which couples through the voice coil and an actuator arm to move a head gimbal assembly in lateral positioning the slider close to the track. Once the read-write head is close to the track, the servo controller typically enters an operational mode known herein as track following. It is during track following mode that the read-write head is used to access data stored in the track.
Micro-actuators provide a second actuation stage for lateral positioning the read-write head during track following mode. They often use an electrostatic effect and/or a piezoelectric effect to rapidly make fine position changes. They have doubled the bandwidth of servo controllers and are believed essential for high capacity hard disk drives from hereon.
Using micro-actuator requires an accurate stroke sensitivity estimate. The stroke sensitivity is the displacement of the read-write head in the lateral plane for a given electrical stimulus. There are several difficulties associated with achieving this. The stroke sensitivity often needs to be measured on an individual basis, inside the assembled hard disk drive, during access operations. The stroke sensitivity measurements may need to be repeated as the hard disk drive ages and may differ for each of the micro-actuators and their coupled read-write heads.
There is also a question as to whether and how much a specific micro-actuator is aiding the track following process. One useful estimate of its contribution would be an effective estimate of its operational bandwidth, over which there is close to flat frequency response.
Finally, there is the need to calibrate each specific micro-actuator as to the details of its dynamics, including mode peaks, possibly related to air flow turbulence or other sources of mechanical vibration affecting the micro-actuator.
The invention includes using an estimate of the stroke sensitivity of a micro-actuator coupled with a slider and its read-write head, which is the product of a method of estimating the stroke sensitivity, which includes the following. A micro-actuator stimulus signal is used to drive the micro-actuator, inducing noise into the lateral positioning of the read-write head near a track by the voice coil motor to create the Position Error Signal (PES). The lateral position noise is derived from the Position Error Signal. The stroke sensitivity is estimated based upon the later position noise and upon the micro-actuator stimulus signal.
The invention includes a method of operating the micro-actuator using the stroke sensitivity. This includes controlling the micro-actuator directing the read-write head toward the track using the stroke sensitivity to create the micro-actuator stimulus signal. The micro-actuator may be further controlled using the stroke sensitivity and based upon the Position Error Signal to create the micro-actuator stimulus signal. A servo controller may support the method of operating the micro-actuator.
The servo controller may include the servo computer accessibly coupled to the memory, and directed by a second program system including program steps residing in the memory, and/or a means for controlling the micro-actuator and/or a means for controlling the voice coil motor. The second program system may include the program step controlling the micro-actuator directing the read-write head toward the track using the stroke sensitivity to create the micro-actuator stimulus signal. At least one of the means for controlling the voice coil motor and/or the means for controlling the micro-actuator may include at least one of a second computer second accessibly coupled to a second memory and directed by a third program system, a finite state machine, and/or an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC).
In certain embodiments, the method of estimating may be used to create the stroke sensitivity during the initialization/calibration phase of manufacturing the hard disk drive. This stage often occurs after the hard disk drive is assembled. The method estimates the stroke sensitivity for at least one micro-actuator, and if the hard disk drive includes more than one micro-actuator, may preferably perform the estimate for each of the micro-actuators.
In certain embodiments, the method of estimating may be implemented as the program system with its program steps residing in a volatile memory component of the memory, the stroke sensitivity estimate or estimates are the product of this manufacturing process, which are usually stored in a non-volatile memory component of the memory. Alternatively, the program system may be implemented with its program steps residing in a non-volatile memory component of the memory. These embodiments are useful in estimating the stroke sensitivity throughout the life of the hard disk drive.
Making the servo controller and/or the embedded circuit including the servo controller may include installing the servo computer, the second program system, and the memory into the servo controller to create the embedded circuit (servo controller), and/or installing a means for controlling the voice coil motor and a means for controlling the micro-actuator to create the embedded circuit (servo controller).
The second program system may further support estimating the operational bandwidth of the micro-actuator. The operational bandwidth in certain instances may degrade over the life of the hard disk drive. When the operational bandwidth is non-functional the micro-actuator may be less useful, and in certain cases, may be non-functional.
A hard disk drive may include the servo controller, and possibly the embedded circuit, coupled to the voice coil motor, to provide the micro-actuator stimulus signal driving the micro-actuator, and a read differential signal pair from the read-write head to the servo controller to generate the Position Error Signal.
The invention includes making the servo controller, possibly the embedded circuit, as well as the hard disk drive. The servo controller, the embedded circuit, and the hard disk drive are products of these processes.
This invention relates to hard disk drives, in particular, to methods and apparatus estimating the stroke sensitivity of a micro-actuator inside a hard disk drive, and operating the hard disk drive based upon that stroke sensitivity estimate.
The invention includes a method of estimating the stroke sensitivity of a micro-actuator coupled with a slider and its read-write head and a method of using the stroke sensitivity estimate to operate the hard disk drive.
The estimating method may be used within a hard disk drive 10 to estimate the stroke sensitivity 634 of a micro-actuator 80 coupled with a slider 90 and its read-write head 94. A micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 is used 1500 to drive the micro-actuator, inducing noise into the lateral positioning of the read-write head near a track 122 by the voice coil motor 18 to create the Position Error Signal 260 (PES). The lateral position noise 638 is derived 1510 from the Position Error Signal, which is often represented by a PES Count 640. The stroke sensitivity is estimated 1520 based upon the lateral position noise and upon the micro-actuator stimulus signal. These examples show the method implemented within a servo controller 600.
The servo controller 600 may further preferably include the means for controlling the voice coil motor 1530 to laterally position the read-write head 94 near the track 122 on the rotating disk surface 120-1, and the means for controlling the micro-actuator 1532 using the stroke sensitivity 634 to generate the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650, as shown in
At least one member of the means group may include at least one of a computer accessibly coupled to a memory and directed by a program system including at least one program step residing in the memory, a finite state machine, and an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC). The means group may consist of the means for controlling the voice coil motor 1530, the means for controlling the micro-actuator 1532, the means for using 1500, the means for deriving 1510, and the means for estimating 1520.
Examples of these embodiments are shown in
In more detail, the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 driving the micro-actuator driver 28 may include the micro-actuator stimulus signal feeding a digital to analog converter providing a first micro-actuator driving signal contributing to the lateral control signal. Further, the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 feeding the digital to analog converter may include the first micro-actuator driving signal presented to a first amplifier providing a first amplified signal further contributing to the lateral control signal. The first amplifier providing the first amplified signal may include the first amplified signal presented to a first filter to provide the lateral control signal.
Alternatively, the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 driving the micro-actuator driver 28 may include the first micro-actuator driving signal presented to a second filter providing a second filtered signal further contributing to the lateral control signal. The second filter providing a second filtered signal may include the second filtered signal presented to a second amplifier providing the lateral control signal.
While the invention claims and discloses that the servo controller may include more than one computer embodying the various means as discussed before, for the sake of simplifying the discussion, we will proceed by discussing only the embodiment where there is one computer, the servo computer. It is common that the hard disk drive and/or the embedded circuit contain a second computer, which often deals with error control coding/decoding of tracks and memory management tasks.
A computer as used herein may include at least one instruction processor and at least one data processor, where each of the data processors is directed by at least one of the instruction processors.
The following Figures include flowcharts of at least one method of the invention possessing arrows. These arrows will signify of flow of control and sometimes data, supporting implementations including at least one program step or program thread executing upon a computer, inferential links in an inferential engine, state transitions in a finite state machine, and learned responses within a neural network.
The operation of starting a flowchart refers to at least one of the following and is denoted by an oval with the text “Start” in it. Entering a subroutine in a macro-instruction sequence in a computer. Entering into a deeper node of an inferential graph. Directing a state transition in a finite state machine, possibly while pushing a return state. And triggering at least one neuron in a neural network.
The operation of termination in a flowchart refers to at least one of the following and is denoted by an oval with the text “Exit” in it. The completion of those steps, which may result in a subroutine return, traversal of a higher node in an inferential graph, popping of a previously stored state in a finite state machine, return to dormancy of the firing neurons of the neural network.
An operation in a flowchart refers to at least one of the following. The instruction processor responds to the operation as a program step to control the data execution unit in at least partly implementing the step. The inferential engine responds to the operation as nodes and transitions within an inferential graph based upon and modifying a inference database in at least partly implementing the operation. The neural network responds to the operation as stimulus in at least partly implementing the operation. The finite state machine responds to the operation as at least one member of a finite state collection comprising a state and a state transition, implementing at least part of the operation. Often a method will be described in terms of operations in these flowcharts.
Several flowcharts include multiple operations. In certain aspects, any one of the operations may be found in an embodiment of the invention. In other aspects, multiple operations are needed in an embodiment of the invention. When multiple operations are needed, these operations may be performed concurrently, sequentially and/or in a combination of concurrent and sequential operations. The shapes of the arrows in multiple operation flowcharts may differ from one flowchart to another, and are not to be construed as having intrinsic meaning in interpreting the concurrency of the operations.
As mentioned before, the servo controller 600 may include a second program system 3000 as shown in
The method of using may further include subtracting 2100 the Position Error Signal 260 from the lateral positioning 2102 to create a feed-forward stimulus 2104, and controlling 2010 the voice coil motor based upon the feed-forward stimulus to create a voice coil stimulus 22. The first sumer 2100 subtracts the Position Error Signal 260 from the on track lateral control 2102 to create the feed-forward stimulus 2104. The means for controlling the voice coil motor is shown as the Voice Coil Motor Control 2010 of
Some further details, a third sumer 2110 subtracts the micro-actuator plant effect 2132 from the feed-forward stimulus 2104 to create the voice coil motor control input 2112. The voice coil motor plant 2020 generates a voice coil motor effect 2122, which is presented with the micro-actuator plant effect 2132 to the fourth sumer 2140 to create the Position Error Signal 260.
The method of using may include feedback-decoupling the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 from the feed-forward stimulus 2104 to create a second feed-forward stimulus 2112, and controlling 2010 the voice coil motor 18 based upon the second feed-forward stimulus to create a voice coil stimulus 22, as shown in
Further details relating to
Controlling the micro-actuator 80 may further include creating a first micro-actuator stimulus signal 2252 using the stroke sensitivity 634 and based upon the feed-forward stimulus 2104, and second notch-filtering 2250 the first micro-actuator stimulus signal to create the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650, as shown in
Making the servo controller 600 and/or the embedded circuit 500 may further include programming the memory 620 with the second program system 3000 to create the servo controller and/or the embedded circuit, preferably programming a non-volatile memory component of the memory.
The second program system 3000 may further support estimating the operational bandwidth 6678 of the micro-actuator 80. The operational bandwidth in certain instances may degrade over the life of the hard disk drive 10. When the operational bandwidth is non-functional the micro-actuator may be less useful, and in certain cases, may be non-functional.
While the method for estimating the stroke sensitivity may be implemented with more than one computer, and that computer may be specialized to implementing just a part of the process, the method will be discussed from hereon in terms of a single servo computer as shown in
The method of estimating may be implemented by the program system 1000 shown in
The method of estimating the stroke sensitivity of
Estimating the stroke sensitivity of Operation 1016 may further include Operation 1018 of
Similarly, the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 may be generated with the first amplitude 636 at a second frequency 632. A lateral position noise 638 at the second frequency may be derived from the Position Error Signal 260 at the second frequency. The stroke sensitivity 634 at the second frequency may be estimated based upon the lateral position noise at the second frequency and upon the first amplitude.
The stroke sensitivity 634 may be estimated based upon the stroke sensitivity at the first frequency 630 and upon the stroke sensitivity at the second frequency 632. This estimation may include, but is not limited to, the following. Averaging the stroke sensitivity at the first frequency and the stroke sensitivity at the second frequency to create the stroke sensitivity. Or, weighted-averaging the stroke sensitivity at the first frequency and the stroke sensitivity at the second frequency to create the stroke sensitivity.
In certain embodiments, a spread spectrum approach may be used to implement the method of estimating shown in
Similarly to
Similarly to the discussion of
Similarly to the discussion of
Consider some examples based upon experimental results, as shown in
In both
Consider the following model of the inventions method of estimating the stroke sensitivity 634 as shown in
Where ESFVCM denotes the Error Sensitivity Function of the Voice Coil Motor 18, P1 denotes the effect of the Voice Coil Plant 2020, C1 denotes the effect of the Voice Coil Motor Control 2010, and P2 denotes the effect of the Micro-actuator Plant 2050. The error sensitivity function may be measured at a specific cylinder, more specifically, at a track number 652 for one or more frequencies of interest. The inventors have found that the frequency response of the error sensitivity function is flat up to a certain frequency, as shown in
The stroke sensitivity 634 may be defined as a Direct Current (DC) gain of the frequency response of the Error Sensitivity Function of the voice coil motor. More specifically, for a first frequency ω0, the gain of P2 may be calculated by
The magnitude of the ratio of the injection of the micro-actuator stimulus signal 634 to abpos may be obtained by performing a Fast Fourier Transform on the Position Error Signal 260. The calculated gain of P2 at the frequency ω0 is the DC gain of the frequency response of the micro-actuator 80, which closely approximates, and may often be, the stroke sensitivity 634.
Additionally, by generating the micro-actuator stimulus signal 634 from the first frequency 630 by sweeping through a range of frequencies, vibration mode peaks can be identified up to the sampling frequency of the voice coil motor 18 while the hard disk drive 10 is in track-following mode, which is supported by Operation 1042 in
Consider estimating the stroke sensitivity 634 for a micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 at a first frequency 630, for example, at 540 Hz, and for the micro-actuator stimulus signal at a second frequency 632, at 1700 Hz, both with a first amplitude of 636 of 512 counts. The average of these stroke sensitivity estimates can be visually estimated from the third trace 714 and the sixth trace 720 of
Over time, the micro-actuator 80 in the hard disk drive 10 may not function as well as when it was manufactured. The range of flat frequency response may decline in bandwidth. Consider generating the micro-actuator stimulus signal may include a first spreading signal 644, which by way of example may have the form of a sum of sinusoidal signals, say at 420 Hz, 760 Hz, 1100 Hz, and 1350 Hz, which are all in the flat frequency response range of the micro-actuator 80 as shown in
In this example, the first bandwidth 674, shown in
be the first spreading signal 644 and the second spreading signal 656, respectively. Let w, be the first weight 646, and w2 be the second weight 658. Let s1 be the first stroke sensitivity 662 estimated with the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 generated by w1S1 (t), the first spreading signal multiplied by the first weight, creating N1(t), the lateral position noise 628. Let s2 be the second stroke sensitivity 664 estimated with the micro-actuator stimulus signal generated by w2S2 (t), the second spreading signal multiplied by the second weight, creating N2 (t), the second lateral position noise 680.
In the following discussion, the integrals are over the same time interval, which provides sufficient samples to perform the FFT mentioned earlier.
Our first task will be to demodulate the lateral position noise 628, N1(t) by the first spreading signal 644, S1(t) and estimate the first stroke sensitivity 622, s1. Decompose N1(t)S1(t) to the least square closest fit of
by minimizing the first Euclidean distance:
which is a non-negative and smooth real-valued function of the N1k, and will have a minima when
=0, for each j=1, . . . , 4, which becomes
Assuming for the moment that each N1j≠0 allows the removal of 2Nj as a common factor in the last version of (1.6) and applying
yields the following linear system of equations for j=1, . . . 4:
which has a solution, N1j for j=1, . . . , 4. Similarly estimate the first stroke sensitivity s1 as minimizing
Again, this is a non-negative and smooth function of s1, possessing a minimum when
Further deriving this relationship
which assuming w1≠0, becomes
and makes
Now demodulating the second lateral position noise 680, N2 (t) by the second spreading signal 656, S2 (t) and estimating the second stroke sensitivity 664, s2. Decompose N2(t)S2(t) to the least square closest fit of
by minimizing the second Euclidean distance:
which is a non-negative and smooth real-valued function of the N2k, and will have a minima when
=0, for each j=1, . . . ,4, which leads in a similar fashion to the following linear system of equations for j=0, . . . , 5:
which has a solution, N2j for j=0, . . . , 5. Similarly estimate the first stroke sensitivity s1 as minimizing
Again, this is a non-negative and smooth function of s2, possessing a minimum when
which assuming w1≠0, leads to
The method, shown here as a refinement of the example implementation of the program system 1000 of
To further develop our example, calculate the first distance 670 as
and calculate the second distance 672 as
Determining the operational bandwidth 678 may be done in a variety of ways. For example, when the first distance 670 is within a tolerance 682 of the second distance 672, the operational bandwidth 678 may be the second bandwidth 676, the bandwidth of the second spreading signal 656. When the first distance is more than the tolerance from the second distance, the operational bandwidth may be the first bandwidth 674, the bandwidth of the first spreading signal 644.
Alternatively and/or additionally, when the second distance 672 is less than a second tolerance 684, the operational bandwidth 678 may be the second bandwidth 676, the bandwidth of the second spreading signal 656. And when the first distance 670 is less than the second tolerance and the second distance is greater than the second tolerance, the operational bandwidth may be the first bandwidth 674, the bandwidth of the first spreading signal 644. The method may include various alternatives and refinements. When the second distance is less than or equal to the second tolerance, the operational bandwidth may be the bandwidth of the second spreading signal. And when the first distance is less than or equal to the second tolerance and the second distance is greater than the second tolerance, the operational bandwidth may be the bandwidth of the first spreading signal. Another alternative, when the first distance is less than the second tolerance and the second distance is greater than or equal to the second tolerance, the operational bandwidth may be the bandwidth of the first spreading signal.
Determining the operational bandwidth 678 may include when the first distance 670 is greater than the second tolerance 684, the operational bandwidth is non-functional. In certain embodiments, the operational bandwidth being non-functional may include a bandwidth of 0 Hz.
The method of operating the hard disk drive may be implemented by the program system 1000 of
In certain embodiments, the method of estimating may be used to create the stroke sensitivity 634 during the initialization/calibration phase of manufacturing the hard disk drive 10. This stage often occurs after the hard disk drive is assembled. The method estimates the stroke sensitivity for at least one micro-actuator 80. If the hard disk drive includes more than one micro-actuator as in
During the initialization/calibration phase, the stroke sensitivity 634 may preferably be estimated for more than one track 122. Often the stroke sensitivity for one or more tracks near the inside diameter ID and/or one or more tracks near the outside diameter OD are estimated. In certain embodiments, a table of stroke sensitivity estimates is constructed for collections of adjacent tracks on the rotating disk surface is created and used.
The method of estimating may be implemented as the program system 1000 with its program steps residing in a volatile memory component of the memory 620, the stroke sensitivity 634 estimate or estimates are the product of this manufacturing process, which are usually stored in a non-volatile memory component of the memory. Alternatively, the program system 1000 may be implemented with its program steps residing in a non-volatile memory component of the memory 620. These embodiments are useful in estimate the stroke sensitivity throughout the life of the hard disk drive 10.
As previously mentioned, the embedded circuit 500 may include the servo controller 600. A hard disk drive 10 may include the servo controller, and possibly the embedded circuit, coupled to the voice coil motor 18, to provide the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 driving the micro-actuator 80, and a read differential signal pair contained in the read and write differential signal pairs rw0 from the read-write head 94 to the servo controller to generate the Position Error Signal 260.
Making the embedded circuit 500, and in some embodiments, the servo controller 600, may include installing the servo computer 610 and the memory 620 into the servo controller and programming the memory with the program system 1000 to create the servo controller and/or the embedded circuit. Making the embedded circuits and/or the servo controller, may include installing at least one of the means for using 1500, the means for deriving 1510, and the means for estimating 1520 to create the servo controller and/or the embedded circuit.
The invention's hard disk drive 10 may include the servo controller 600 and/or the embedded circuit 500 coupled to the voice coil motor 18, to provide the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 driving the micro-actuator 80, and a read differential signal pair as part of the read and write differential signal pairs rw0 from the read-write head 94 to the servo controller to generate the Position Error Signal 260.
Making the hard disk drive 10 may include coupling the servo controller 600 and/or the embedded circuit 500 to the voice coil motor 18, providing the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 to drive the micro-actuator 80, and the read and write differential signal pairs rw0 include a read differential signal pair from the read-write head to the servo controller to generate the Position Error Signal 260.
Looking at some of the details of
The read-write head 94 interfaces through a preamplifier 24 on a main flex circuit 200 using a read and write differential signals rw0 typically provided by the flexure finger 20, to a channel interface 26 often located within the servo controller 600. The channel interface often provides the Position Error Signal 260 (PES) within the servo controller. It may be preferred that the micro-actuator stimulus signal 650 be shared when the hard disk drive includes more than one micro-actuator. It may be further preferred that the lateral control signal 82 be shared, as shown in
Returning to
Returning to
The micro-actuator 80 as used herein preferably provides lateral positioning of the read-write head 94 near the track 122. In certain embodiments the micro-actuator may also provided vertical positioning. The micro-actuator may use a piezoelectric effect and/or an electro-static effect in providing lateral and/or vertical positioning.
During normal disk access operations, the embedded circuit 500 and/or the servo controller 600 direct the spindle motor 270 to rotate the spindle shaft 40. This rotating is very stable, providing a nearly constant rotational rate through the spindle shaft to at least one disk 12, and as shown in some of the Figures, sometimes more than one disk. The rotation of the disk creates the rotating disk surface 120-1, used to access the track 122 during track following mode, as discussed elsewhere. These accesses normally provide for reading the track and/or writing the track.
Returning to
The preceding embodiments provide examples of the invention and are not meant to constrain the scope of the following claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/886,171, filed Jul. 6, 2004, the specification of which is hereby incorporated by referenced in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10886171 | Jul 2004 | US |
Child | 11329851 | Jan 2006 | US |