This invention relates to a polishing cloth for texturing the surface of a magnetic hard disk substrate by using free abrading particles and a method of texturing by using such a cloth.
In general, the texturing of the surface of a disk substrate, say, of an aluminum alloy by means of free abrading particles is carried out by pressing a polishing cloth on the target surface to be polished while supplying liquid slurry serving as the free particles onto the surface and rotating the disk substrate while adjusting the pressure on the polishing cloth. The liquid slurry may be one obtained by mixing abrading particles of aluminum oxide, silicon carbide or diamond with an aqueous solution containing a surfactant and stirring the mixture together. In the past, woven cloths produced by weaving plastic fibers were frequently used for such a texturing process. Such a cloth may be produced, for example, by weaving both longitudinally and transversely woven bundles of plastic fibers of polyester or tetron and cut in the shape of a circle or a tape.
With the recent increase in the memory capacity of magnetic hard disks, there is a demand to increase the density of various memory media. As a result, it has become necessary to reduce and stabilize the floating distance of a magnetic head over the surface of a magnetic hard disk substrate and the surface texturing on such disk surfaces is required to be ever finer and more uniform than before. By a texturing process with the use of free abrading particles and a polishing cloth as described above, however, abnormal protrusions, waviness and irregular patches are generated on the textured surface and it was not possible to carry out a fine and uniform texturing of a surface of a magnetic hard disk substrate. In other words, it has been very difficult to reduce and stabilize the floating distance of a magnetic head, and this has been a cause of collisions or adhesion between the magnetic head and a hard disk.
Next will be explained the reasons for finding abnormal protrusions, waviness and patches on a textured surface of a magnetic hard disk substrate.
With the recent increase in the demand for magnetic hard disks, it is also coming to be severely required to shorten the time spent for the texturing of magnetic hard disk substrates and to thereby increase the throughput.
It is therefore an object of this invention to provide a method of producing an improved polishing cloth with which the surface of a magnetic hard disk substrate can be finely and uniformly textured.
It is an additional object of this invention to provide a method of producing an improved polishing cloth with which the time required for texturing a disk substrate can be shortened such that the production throughput can be improved.
A polishing cloth embodying this invention, with which the above and other objects can be accomplished, may be characterized as comprising a base material of a woven cloth formed by weaving in woven bundles of plastic fibers having a surface layer formed by portions of these woven bundles which are cut and raised so as to stand up from a surface. Such a polishing cloth can be produced by preparing a woven cloth as its base material by weaving in woven bundles of plastic fibers, cutting portions of these woven bundles over a surface of the woven cloth, and forming a surface layer by raising the cut portions of the woven bundles from a surface. When such a polishing cloth is used for texturing a target surface of a disk substrate, the target surface is rubbed with such a cloth while liquid slurry containing free abrasive particles is supplied to the surface. With a polishing cloth according to this invention, the target surface can be pressed more uniformly and gently and the removed particles from the target surface can be effectively captured inside the surface layer with raised plastic fibers.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and form a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention. In the drawings:
a-1 and 1a-2 are a diagonal external view of a polishing cloth embodying this invention and an enlarged view of a portion thereof, and
a-1 and 2a-2 are a diagonal external view of a prior art polishing cloth and an enlarged view of a portion thereof, and
a and 3b are respectively a microscopic photograph of a surface of a magnetic hard disk substrate after undergoing a texturing process by using a polishing cloth embodying this invention and a prior art polishing cloth;
a-1 and 1a-2 show a polishing cloth 10 embodying this invention, comprising a base material 11 made of a woven cloth formed by weaving in woven bundles of plastic fibers and a surface layer 12 formed over the surface of this base material 11 comprising parts of the plastic fibers 13 formed by cutting parts of the woven bundles and raising them to stand up over the surface and having no abrading particles attached thereto.
According to a method of production embodying this invention, a woven cloth is prepared first as the base material of the polishing cloth by weaving in woven bundles (as indicated by numeral 23 in
According to an embodiment of this invention, the polishing layer of a polishing cloth as described above is pressed against the target surface of a magnetic hard disk surface to be polished and, as a liquid slurry serving as free abrading particles is being supplied, the target surface is rubbed with the polishing cloth with the liquid slurry caused to be present between the surface layer of the polishing cloth serving as its polishing surface and the target surface of the disk substrate to be polished.
The invention is described next by way of the experiments carried out by the present inventors both according to the present invention and as comparison experiments.
As an example of polishing cloth embodying this invention, a polishing tape was produced by using a woven cloth produced as a base material by weaving woven bundled of polyester fibers with thickness 0.06 deniers (diameter=2 μm) both longitudinally and transversely, cutting a portion of the woven bundles on a surface by means of a spiked roller and raising the cut portions of the plastic fibers over the surface of the cloth and thereafter cutting it into the shape of a tape.
For the texturing, magnetic hard disk substrates were prepared by subjecting aluminum plates to a Ni—P plating process and a polishing process. A texturing machine, as shown in
The polishing tape K is caused to travel in the direction of arrow T and the disk substrate D is rotated in the direction of arrow R while the inner force 64 and the outer force 65 on the rubber roller 61 are controlled to press the tape K onto the target surface of the disk substrate D and a liquid slurry 63 is dropped through the nozzle 62 near the contact surface between the polishing tape K and the target surface of the disk substrate D.
A texturing experiment according to this invention was carried out by rotating the disk substrate at a rotary speed of 95 rpm, pressing the polishing tape through a rubber roller with hardness 40 degrees by adjusting the inner force and the outer force respectively equal to 1.36 kg and 1.45 kg and causing it to vibrate in the transverse direction (that is, in the radial direction of the disk substrate) with amplitude of 1 mm and frequency of 150 vibrations per minute, while causing it to travel at a speed of 40 mm/minute against the direction of the rotation of the disk substrate. The vibration of the tape in the transverse direction was for the purpose of preventing sudden changes in the surface roughness on the textured disk substrate such that a magnetic head can maintain a steady floating distance over the disk surface. The liquid slurry was a suspension prepared by mixing diamond particles with average diameter 3 μm and a water-soluble liquid containing a surfactant and stirring the mixture together. The liquid slurry thus prepared was dropped at a rate of 4 cc/minute.
As a comparison experiment, use was made of a prior art polishing tape instead but the texturing was carried out otherwise under identical conditions and by using the same texturing machine as in the test experiment. The results of the test and comparison experiments will be analyzed below.
a and 3b are respectively a microscopic photograph of a surface of a magnetic hard disk substrate after undergoing a texturing process by using a polishing cloth embodying this invention and a prior art polishing cloth. They show clearly that the disk surface processed by a cloth according to this invention has fewer patches and is textured more finely and uniformly.
In summary, if a disk surface is textured by using a polishing cloth according to this invention together with free abrading particles, the entire target surface of the disk substrate is uniformly and gently pressed and hence the abrading particles are pressed more uniformly and gently, and the removed debris particles are captured in the empty spaces in the surface layer comprising raised fibers. As a result, the present invention has the advantages of not forming abnormal protrusions or waviness on the textured target surface, using a liquid slurry more effectively because the free abrading particles contained therein are more uniformly pressed against the target surface to be textured, shortening the time required for the texturing and hence improving the throughput.
This is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 09/881,077 filed Jun. 13, 2001 now abandoned, which is a divisional of application Ser. No. 09/461,994 filed Dec. 15, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,306,013.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040014414 A1 | Jan 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09461994 | Dec 1999 | US |
Child | 09881077 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09881077 | Jun 2001 | US |
Child | 10392726 | US |