1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to magnetic recording disk drives, and more particularly to a system and method for measuring readback signal amplitude asymmetry in a perpendicular magnetic recording disk drive.
2. Description of the Related Art
Perpendicular magnetic recording, wherein the recorded bits are stored in the generally planar recording layer in a generally perpendicular or out-of-plane orientation (i.e., other than parallel to the surfaces of the disk substrate and the recording layer), is a promising path toward ultra-high recording densities in magnetic recording hard disk drives. A common type of perpendicular magnetic recording disk drive uses a “dual-layer” disk. This type of disk drive is shown schematically in
The read head and write head are typically formed as an integrated read/write head on an air-bearing slider. The slider is attached to an actuator arm by a suspension and positioned very close to the disk surface by the suspension. The actuator moves the slider across the disk surface so that the read/write head can access the data tracks. There are typically a stack of disks in the disk drive with a slider-suspension assembly associated with each disk surface in the stack.
In a perpendicular magnetic recording disk drive the amplitude of the readback signal from the read head is asymmetric as a natural result of the construction of the read head. It is believed that stray magnetic fields arising from the media background may also contribute to amplitude asymmetry. Readback signal amplitude asymmetry means that the amplitudes of the pulses from magnetizations recorded in one direction (e.g., the “positive” direction) are different from the amplitudes of the pulses from magnetizations recorded in the opposite direction (e.g., the “negative” direction). Thus the amplitude asymmetry (AASY) measured in percent can be expressed by the following equation:
AASY=[(POS−NEG)/(POS+NEG)]*100, Equation (1)
where POS represents the measured amplitude of the pulses recorded in one direction and NEG represents the measured amplitude of the pulses recorded in the other direction.
A high value of AASY is undesirable because it is correlated with a high bit error rate (BER) when the data is read back. Thus it is important to be able to accurately measure AASY to both improve the design of the read channel to improve the BER and to determine which heads to accept for use during disk drive manufacturing.
The conventional approach for AASY measurement is with the use of a head-disk tester (also called a spin stand). Most head-disk testers include a spectrum analyzer that is used for testing many read and write head parameters, such as spectral signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for the read head and overwrite (OW) for the write head. To measure AASY a special pattern is written on the disk to generate a readback signal of alternating isolated positive and negative pulses. The pattern is then read back by the read head. The readback signal is illustrated in
What is needed is a head-disk tester and method for accurate AASY measurement that does not require a peak detection channel and that does not require additional test time.
The invention relates to a system and method for operating a head-disk tester to calculate AASY in the frequency domain without the need for a peak detection channel. The method uses a special pattern of magnetizations that are written to the disk. The tester first signals the write head to generate a first pattern on the disk. This first pattern comprises isolated regions magnetized in a first perpendicular direction (e.g., positive), with these isolated regions being separated by baseline regions of high-frequency alternating positive and negative magnetizations. The read head then detects this first recorded pattern and sends the readback signal to a spectrum analyzer connected to the tester. The spectrum analyzer measures the amplitude of this first readback signal in the frequency domain using a bandpass filter. The tester then signals the write head to generate a second pattern on the disk. This second pattern comprises isolated regions magnetized in a second perpendicular direction (e.g., negative) opposite the first direction, with these isolated regions being separated by baseline regions of high-frequency alternating positive and negative magnetizations. The read head then detects this second recorded pattern and sends the readback signal to the spectrum analyzer. The spectrum analyzer measures the amplitude of this second readback signal. A controller in the tester calculates AASY from the measured amplitudes of the first and second readback signals. The invention includes the above-described method as well as a computer program product that comprises a computer-readable medium and computer-executable program code embodied in the computer-readable medium for enabling the tester to perform the method.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and advantages of the invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description taken together with the accompanying figures.
The invention is applicable to head-disk testers, also called dynamic electrical testers (DETs), that are used in magnetic recording disk drive manufacturing to test heads and disks. A DET is sometimes also called a spin stand. Examples of head-disk testers include the Model RH-4160E DET from Hitachi DECO and the Model V2002 from Guzik Technical Enterprises.
Actuator arm 14 is attached to actuator 27. The actuator 27 is mounted on the tester's positioning stage 31 (also called an X-Y stage). Movement of the positioning stage 31 moves the actuator 27 so that the sliders 13, 17 can be positioned to various locations on their respective disk surfaces. This enables the read/write heads to access different portions of the magnetic recording layers where data is desired to be written or read. The positioning stage 31 and the spindle motor 8 are mounted on a support base 9.
The tester includes a controller 80 that controls the operation of spindle motor 8 and positioning stage 31. Controller 80 may be a microprocessor or digital signal processor that includes logic control circuits, memory storage, and a microprocessor. The controller 80 runs a computer program that is stored in memory 82 and that embodies the logic and algorithms described further below. The memory 82 may be separate from controller 80 or as embedded memory on the controller chip. The computer program may also be implemented in microcode or other type of memory accessible to the controller 80. Computer programs on removable media (e.g., compact disc, floppy disk, portable hard drive, and flash memory) can be input to the tester and run by controller 80 through port 83. Computer-executable program code for performing the method described below is embodied in the computer-readable removable media.
Controller 80 is also connected to the write head 70. Controller 80 can thus signal the write head 70, through write amplifier 39, to cause the write head 70 to write magnetizations in the magnetic recording layer of disk surface 11 according to predetermined patterns stored in memory 82 or provided by computer program instructions.
The tester includes spectrum analyzer 100, which may be an internal spectrum analyzer incorporated into the tester, as depicted in
The spectrum analyzer uses a bandpass filter (BPF) 102 and a sweeping voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) 104. The input power is limited by an attenuator 106 to prevent saturation. An input filter 103 removes noise from the input signal. The input signal and the VCO signal are combined through a device called a “mixer” 108. The output of mixer 108 contains various frequency components related to these two signals.
Because the VCO frequency is known, then by sending these frequency components through a narrow filter, i.e., BPF 102, both the amplitude and the frequency of the unknown input signal can be measured. An AC voltage is produced that is related to the input signal's amplitude. This AC voltage is converted to a DC voltage by an envelope detector 110, and the results are sent through a video filter 111 for display on the Y-axis of the display 112. The response is typically displayed in units of decibels referenced to a milliwatt, or dBm. The log scale (dB scale) is used because it is a good mathematical tool to cover an extremely large dynamic range. As shown in
In this invention, the above-described tester is used to cause the write head 70 to generate specific patterns of magnetizations on the disk 10. The recorded magnetizations are then detected by the read head 60 and the readback signal is sent to input 101 of spectrum analyzer 100. The output from spectrum analyzer 100 is input to controller 80, which calculates AASY. The invention relies on the spectrum analyzer 100 to measure the amplitudes in the frequency domain and does not require a peak detection channel, thereby reducing the cost of the tester by approximately 10-15 percent.
However, the conventional magnetization pattern, whose readback signal is depicted in
In this invention the controller 80 recalls from memory 82 a computer program to generate a series of signals to write amplifier 39 to cause a first pattern of magnetizations to be recorded in a data track or tracks of the recording layer of the disk 10 to generate isolated readback pulses in a first direction (for example, positive). The controller 80 then signals the read head 60 to read back the recorded magnetizations. This readback signal is shown in
Next, the controller 80 recalls from memory 82 a computer program to generate a series of signals to write amplifier 39 to cause a second pattern of magnetizations to be recorded in a data track or tracks of the recording layer of the disk 10 to generate readback pulses in a second direction (for example, negative) opposite to said first direction. The controller 80 then signals the read head 60 to read back the recorded magnetizations. This readback signal is shown in
The method is shown by the flow chart of
In a typical example for calculating AASY according to the method of this invention, the patterns were written on the track to cause magnetizations at a linear density of approximately 20K bits per inch (bpi) at a disk rotational speed of 5400 RPM. Each pattern was a series of 48 consecutive alternating positive and negative bits followed by 8 consecutive positive bits (for the first pattern) or negative bits (for the second pattern). The bandpass filter 102 of spectrum analyzer 100 was set to a center frequency of 11.07 MHz with 30 kHz resolution bandwidth.
In addition to cost savings by the elimination of a separate peak detection channel, the invention substantially reduces the overall test time because the AASY measurement, as well as other read parameter measurements, such as MFTAA and LFTAA, do not need to be done separately, as would be required with a separate peak detection channel. This is because these other read head parameters can be obtained as intermediate results from measurement of other parameters by the spectrum analyzer. For example, MFTAA can be obtained as the intermediate result from the spectrum analyzer measurement of spectral SNR and LFTAA can be obtained as the intermediate result from spectrum analyzer measurement of OW.
While the invention has been described for AASY measurement in perpendicular magnetic recording disk drives, the invention is also fully applicable for AASY measurement in the more conventional horizontal or longitudinal magnetic recording disk drives. In horizontal recording the regions of the recording layer are magnetized in the plane of the recording layer. The patterns written in the horizontal media would thus differ from the written patterns described above, but would still generate the same type of readback signals.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the preferred embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the disclosed invention is to be considered merely as illustrative and limited in scope only as specified in the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4142215 | Roberts | Feb 1979 | A |
5485320 | Vogel et al. | Jan 1996 | A |
6072647 | Hiramatsu | Jun 2000 | A |
6529340 | Gowda et al. | Mar 2003 | B2 |
20070195444 | Annampedu | Aug 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
8221924 | Aug 1996 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080037152 A1 | Feb 2008 | US |