1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a motor for supporting one or more hard disk(s) on which digitized information is recorded. More specifically, the present invention is related to a motor used in an application where the disk(s) are required to be kept extremely clean.
2. Description of the Related Art
Generally, oils having lower viscosities are preferable for bearings, especially fluid dynamic bearing for spindle motors of hard disk drives. Viscosity of oil is a major cause of frictional loss of a fluid dynamic bearing. Oil with lower viscosity, however, has higher evaporation rate, which means that such oil evaporates relatively easily. Therefore, manufacturers of conventional motors for hard disk drives permit certain rate of oil evaporation, and manufacturers of hard disk drives have no choice but to tolerate such evaporation, knowing that the evaporated oil could become a contaminant on a disk. Such toleration is increasingly costly as information density on disks and disk's vulnerability to contaminants increase.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention reduce contamination by adopting a new structural design for a motor. For example, preferred embodiments of the present invention provide a motor for a hard disk drive including an adsorption plate portion in a magnetic space of the motor at a radially inward location relative to a disk placing portion on which hard disks are installed. The magnetic space of the motor is defined by a ceiling portion of a rotor hub and the adsorption plate portion. A liquid surface of lubricant of the fluid dynamic bearing mechanism is arranged radially inwardly relative to the adsorption plate portion, and a gap to which the liquid surface is exposed is connected to the magnetic space. At least a portion of the surface of the adsorption plate portion is not covered with paint or other material so as to be utilized as an adsorption area.
The adsorption plate portion is preferably made of stainless steel. The metallic surface of the stainless steel is exposed to the magnetic space at the adsorption area. The metallic material is not limited to stainless steel, but a contact angle of the lubricant oil relative to the surface of the metallic material should be smaller than that relative to the surface of the base main body. The base main body is made of aluminum and covered with paint material.
More vaporized lubricant adheres to a surface on which the lubricant in liquid state exhibits smaller contact angle. The amount of vaporized lubricant which escapes from a magnetic space into a disk space where a hard disk is accommodated is reduced because a portion of the vaporized lubricant adheres to the surface of the adsorption area.
The above and other elements, features, steps, characteristics and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to
The motor base 32 including the adsorption plate portion 322 is preferably a single monolithic piece made of a ferritic stainless steel. The stator supporting portion 321, the adsorption plate portion 322, and the raised portion 323 may be lathed or formed separately from different materials, but at least a portion of the upper surface of the adsorption plate portion 322 should be made of or covered with a ferritic stainless steel. An area of the upper surface of the adsorption plate portion 322 which is made of or covered with a ferritic stainless steel is preferably an adsorption area 3221. The motor of preferred embodiments of the present invention uses liquid lubricant including an ester oil for its bearing mechanism. The contact angle of the liquid lubricant to the adsorption area 3221 is preferably about 10 degrees at room temperature, while a contact angle of the liquid lubricant to the surface of the base main body 31, which is coated with paint material, is preferably more than about 20 degrees. The smaller contact angle means that the liquid has larger affinity to that surface. Therefore, the smaller contact angle on the adsorption area 3221 ensures that some portions of molecules of evaporating lubricant are adsorbed on the surface of the adsorption area 3221, and the amount of lubricant vapor that diffuses into the inner space of the hard disk drive 1 is reduced.
The surface of the adsorption area 3221 preferably should be cleaned to make a contact angle of liquid lubricant sufficiently small before it is installed to the base main body 31. The motor base 32 of the present preferred embodiment is preferably washed by ultrasonic cleaning with organic solvents including hydrocarbons having a boiling temperature higher than a room temperature. The liquid hydrocarbon may be selected from, for example, paraffin hydrocarbons and olefin hydrocarbons, ether, or mixture of these. Ultrapure water is also used for the ultrasonic cleaning after ultrasonic cleaning with organic solvent. The power of ultrasound applied to washing liquid, which is liquid hydrocarbon or ultrapure water, is preferably larger than about 10 Watts per liter but not exceeding about 90 Watts per liter. The frequency of the ultrasound is preferably higher than about 20 kHz but not exceeding about 150 kHz. These conditions of the power and the frequency and the combination of multi-step cleaning with different solvents can not only clean the motor base 32 but can also make the contact angle of liquid lubricant sufficiently small. A contact angle usually depends on a kind of liquid lubricant. The liquid lubricant of this preferred embodiment preferably includes a ester and exhibits small contact angle of less than about 10 degrees if its drop is put on the adsorption area 3221 of the motor base 32.
The metallic material of which the surface of the adsorption area is made is not limited to ferritic stainless steel. For example, austenitic stainless steel is one of the possible alternatives. Both surfaces of ferritic stainless steel and austenitic stainless steel are covered with an atomically thin layer including chromium(III) oxide. The small contact angles on a surface of stainless steels originate from the property of chromium(III) oxide. A heating treatment after washing to dry a motor base is effective to increase the affinity of an ester oil to the surface thereof, especially if it is heated equal to or higher than about 60 degrees Celsius. Nickel or nickel based alloys are also usable as other alternatives in accordance with preferred embodiments of the present invention. The surfaces of these metals are covered with atomically thin layer including nickel oxide like stainless steels, while the surface of aluminum is covered with aluminum oxide on which the contact angle of liquid lubricant is larger.
A rotor hub 5 preferably includes a ceiling portion 51 and a disk placing portion 52. The disk placing portion 52 includes a ring portion 521 including a circular surface extending radially and a cylindrical portion 522 having a cylindrical shape extending axially from the inner end of the ring portion 521. The ceiling portion 51 extends radially inwardly from the upper end of the cylindrical portion 522. The radially inner end area of the ceiling portion 522 connects with the upper end portion of the shaft 62. The rotor hub 5 and the shaft 62 is preferably a single monolithic piece made, for example, by lathing a disk shaped plate made of ferritic stainless steel. All of the surfaces of the rotor hub 5 are preferably lathed surfaces and washed by ultrasonic cleaning before the rotor hub 5 is assembled to the bearing mechanism 6. The shaft 62 and the rotor hub 5 may alternatively be made separately, and then be joined to each other, if so desired. A conventional method to join a shaft to a rotor hub is that preparing a rotor hub having a through hole at the center thereof, press-fitting a shaft into the through hole. The method is also applicable to various preferred embodiments of the present invention, but the through hole of the rotor hub should be hermetically closed by the shaft. The feature ensures that the magnetic space M in
The bearing mechanism 6 shown in
The motor base 32 preferably includes a supporting portion 321, an adsorption plate portion 322, and a raised portion 323. The supporting portion 321 has a cylindrical or approximately cylindrical shape extending in the axial direction of the bearing mechanism 6. A cylindrical peripheral surface of a bearing mechanism 6 preferably contacts, and is fixed to, the cylindrical inner surface of the supporting portion 321. The adsorption plate portion 322 extends radially from the lower end portion of the bearing support portion 321 and preferably surrounds the bearing support portion 321. The upper surface of the adsorption plate portion 322 is preferably not coated such that a metallic surface of stainless is exposed to the magnetic space M.
The rotor hub 5 preferably includes a ceiling portion 51 and a disk placing portion 52. The disk placing portion 52 preferably further includes a ring portion 521 and a cylindrical portion 522. The ring portion 52 contacts and supports an inner edge portion 91 of a center through hole of the hard disk 9. The ceiling portion 51 and the disk placing portion 52, including the ring portion 521 and the cylindrical portion 522, are portions of a single monolithic piece made of stainless steel. The rotor hub shown in
The liquid lubricant which lubricates the bearing mechanism 6 preferably includes, for example, an ester oil and additives. The ester based lubricant exhibits excellent performance as a lubricant. It, however, evaporates slowly but constantly. The evaporating lubricant diffuses from lubricant surface 63 to the connecting gap C and further flows into the magnetic space M. The bottom of the magnetic space M is defined by the upper surface of the adsorption plate portion 322 on which the adsorption area 3221 is arranged. Due to its affinity to the lubricant, the adsorption area 3221 adsorbs at least a portion of the evaporating lubricant, and, therefore, reduces the amount of the evaporating lubricant which moves out into a disk space outside the magnetic space M. One may select ferritic stainless steel as the material from which the rotor hub 5 is made. If the rotor hub made of ferritic stainless steel is also washed in a procedure like that for the adsorption plate portion 322, i.e., the combination of a first ultrasonic cleaning with liquid organic solvent and a second ultrasonic cleaning with ultrapure water, the lower surface of the ceiling portion can also adsorb the evaporating lubricant. It contributes to reduce the amount of evaporating lubricant that escapes into the disk space. The contact angle of the liquid lubricant to the lower surface of the ceiling portion 51 in this preferred embodiment is preferably about 10 degrees, while the contact angle to the base main body 31 coated with paint material is preferably more than about 20 degrees. Austenitic stainless steel, for example, is also applicable as a material of the motor base 32.
The configuration of the second preferred embodiment is beneficial if a shaft is needed to be fixed at both ends. The top of the shaft 62B is preferably higher or slightly higher than any other portion of the motor. This feature makes it relatively easy to affix the top end of the shaft 62B to a cover 4. A shaft tied to a stationary portion at both ends is more rigid if the other configurations are same.
The bearing mechanism 6B in this configuration preferably includes two liquid surfaces, a first liquid surface 631 and a second liquid surface 632. The first liquid surface 631 is exposed to a connecting gap C which extends to a magnetic space M. While the axial position of the first liquid surface 631 is clearly lower than that of the ceiling portion 51, the axial position of the second liquid surface 632 is not. The axial position of the second liquid surface 632 is close or same to that of the ceiling portion.
The second liquid surface is preferably located in a second tapering space 66 defined by a second pair of adjacent surfaces 661 and 662. Both surfaces slant in a way in which the surfaces extend away from the shaft 62B when they extend downwards. The degrees of slants are preferably different. The angle to the axial direction of the surface 661, which is located radially inward from the other surface 662, is larger than that of the other surface 662. This configuration provides the tapering space 66 which tapers towards a tip thereof. The surface 661 is a portion of the outer circumferential surface of the bearing stationary portion 60A. The surface 662 is a portion of the inner circumferential surface of the bearing rotational portion 60B. An angle defined by the second pair of adjacent surfaces 661 and 662 is larger than that of the first pair of adjacent surfaces 651 and 652 in
Unlike the first liquid surface 631, the second liquid surface 632 is preferably not accompanied by a magnetic space and an adsorption area which intervenes between the second liquid surface 632 and the disk space. Reducing the area of the second liquid surface is effective to reduce contamination originated from the second liquid surface 632.
Adopting a specific method or procedure of assembling parts is beneficial to obtain a motor of the preferred embodiments of the present invention. Although an adsorption plate portion is washed and cleaned at a preparation process, a specific method helps keep or enhance the cleanness during the assembly process.
At step B, the stator is preferably heated to about 90 degrees Celsius and the temperature is preferably kept for about 60 minutes. The stator of various preferred embodiments of the present invention preferably includes a stator core and plurality of coils each defined by winding a conducting wire and attached to the stator core. These windings provide larger surface area to the stator, and the surface is cleaned by heating because heating drives out molecules already existing on the surface of the wires. The stator has an ability to adsorb evaporating lubricant molecules after the heating. This helps reduce contamination on a hard disk by evaporating lubricant.
At step C, the rotor magnet is fixed to the rotor hub.
At step D, the stator is fixed to the motor base preferably after it is cooled to the room temperature.
At step E, the fluid dynamic bearing mechanism is fixed to the motor base.
The step B is preferably conducted under an ambient pressure one fourth of that at sea level. Low pressure helps drive out molecules adsorbed on the surface of the stator. Such an effect can be attainable at a pressure higher than one fourth of that at sea level, but it is preferable that the pressure is selected to be equal to or lower than one third of that at sea level.
The heating temperature at the step B is not limited to about 90 degrees Celsius. The temperature equal to about 60 degrees or higher can be selected for the step B. The temperature of higher than about 150 degrees Celsius, however, could damage coatings of the wires and is not recommended. The time to keep the temperature also is not limited to about 60 minutes. However, at least five minutes is needed. One may keep the temperature more than six hours. But such a long duration deteriorates the efficiency of production. Therefore, it is recommended to choose the time to keep the temperature to be less than about six hours.
While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described above, it is to be understood that variations and modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing the scope and spirit of the present invention. The scope of the present invention, therefore, is to be determined solely by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61662943 | Jun 2012 | US |