US20070070550A1 - Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same - Google Patents

Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20070070550A1
US20070070550A1 US11/605,998 US60599806A US2007070550A1 US 20070070550 A1 US20070070550 A1 US 20070070550A1 US 60599806 A US60599806 A US 60599806A US 2007070550 A1 US2007070550 A1 US 2007070550A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
record
disk
reproduction element
magnetic disk
head slider
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US11/605,998
Inventor
Masayuki Kurita
Masaaki Matsumoto
Yuuichi Ootani
Yoshihiko Miyake
Shinsuke Higuchi
Hideaki Tanaka
Junguo Xu
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US11/605,998 priority Critical patent/US20070070550A1/en
Publication of US20070070550A1 publication Critical patent/US20070070550A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B21/00Head arrangements not specific to the method of recording or reproducing
    • G11B21/16Supporting the heads; Supporting the sockets for plug-in heads
    • G11B21/20Supporting the heads; Supporting the sockets for plug-in heads while the head is in operative position but stationary or permitting minor movements to follow irregularities in surface of record carrier
    • G11B21/21Supporting the heads; Supporting the sockets for plug-in heads while the head is in operative position but stationary or permitting minor movements to follow irregularities in surface of record carrier with provision for maintaining desired spacing of head from record carrier, e.g. fluid-dynamic spacing, slider
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B5/00Recording by magnetisation or demagnetisation of a record carrier; Reproducing by magnetic means; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B5/48Disposition or mounting of heads or head supports relative to record carriers ; arrangements of heads, e.g. for scanning the record carrier to increase the relative speed
    • G11B5/58Disposition or mounting of heads or head supports relative to record carriers ; arrangements of heads, e.g. for scanning the record carrier to increase the relative speed with provision for moving the head for the purpose of maintaining alignment of the head relative to the record carrier during transducing operation, e.g. to compensate for surface irregularities of the latter or for track following
    • G11B5/60Fluid-dynamic spacing of heads from record-carriers
    • G11B5/6005Specially adapted for spacing from a rotating disc using a fluid cushion
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B5/00Recording by magnetisation or demagnetisation of a record carrier; Reproducing by magnetic means; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B5/48Disposition or mounting of heads or head supports relative to record carriers ; arrangements of heads, e.g. for scanning the record carrier to increase the relative speed
    • G11B5/488Disposition of heads
    • G11B5/4886Disposition of heads relative to rotating disc
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B5/00Recording by magnetisation or demagnetisation of a record carrier; Reproducing by magnetic means; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B5/48Disposition or mounting of heads or head supports relative to record carriers ; arrangements of heads, e.g. for scanning the record carrier to increase the relative speed
    • G11B5/54Disposition or mounting of heads or head supports relative to record carriers ; arrangements of heads, e.g. for scanning the record carrier to increase the relative speed with provision for moving the head into or out of its operative position or across tracks
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B5/00Recording by magnetisation or demagnetisation of a record carrier; Reproducing by magnetic means; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B5/48Disposition or mounting of heads or head supports relative to record carriers ; arrangements of heads, e.g. for scanning the record carrier to increase the relative speed
    • G11B5/56Disposition or mounting of heads or head supports relative to record carriers ; arrangements of heads, e.g. for scanning the record carrier to increase the relative speed with provision for moving the head support for the purpose of adjusting the position of the head relative to the record carrier, e.g. manual adjustment for azimuth correction or track centering
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B5/00Recording by magnetisation or demagnetisation of a record carrier; Reproducing by magnetic means; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B5/48Disposition or mounting of heads or head supports relative to record carriers ; arrangements of heads, e.g. for scanning the record carrier to increase the relative speed
    • G11B5/58Disposition or mounting of heads or head supports relative to record carriers ; arrangements of heads, e.g. for scanning the record carrier to increase the relative speed with provision for moving the head for the purpose of maintaining alignment of the head relative to the record carrier during transducing operation, e.g. to compensate for surface irregularities of the latter or for track following
    • G11B5/581Disposition or mounting of heads or head supports relative to record carriers ; arrangements of heads, e.g. for scanning the record carrier to increase the relative speed with provision for moving the head for the purpose of maintaining alignment of the head relative to the record carrier during transducing operation, e.g. to compensate for surface irregularities of the latter or for track following maintaining desired contact or spacing by direct interaction of forces generated between heads or supports thereof and record carriers or supports thereof, e.g. attraction-repulsion interactions

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to magnetic disk apparatus with high-density magnetic information recording performances and control methodology thereof.
  • Conventionally known magnetic disk apparatus adaptable for use as external storage devices or else of computers are typically designed to include a rotation mechanism for driving more than one magnetic disk to rotate or spin at high speeds, and a magnetic head slider with a built-in recording/reproduction element.
  • the magnetic head slider is supported by a load beam so that it is position-determined and placed along the diameter of the magnetic disk.
  • the magnetic disk apparatus is arranged to record magnetic information at a desired track(s) on the magnetic disk and also reproduce such stored magnetic information out of the magnetic disk while letting the magnetic head slider relatively move over the magnetic disk.
  • the magnetic head slider is designed to use an air lubrication shaft bearing for flotation by wedge film effects of the air. The use of such structure precludes any direct physical contact between the magnetic disk and magnetic head slider.
  • typically employable methodology for achieving higher recording densities and larger storage capacities of magnetic disk apparatus with or without reducing the size and shape thereof includes methods of increasing track densities and methods of increasing on-track linear recording densities.
  • the on-track linear record density increasing methods may in turn include, but not limited to, a method for increasing the sensitivity of a recording/reproduction element used, and a method of reducing the distance between the record/reproduction element and its associative record carrier body, also known as recording medium.
  • One typical approach to effectively achieving the latter method is to reduce the distance between a magnetic head slider and magnetic disk, that is, the flying height of such slider.
  • a converter for use in recording devices capable of individually precise or micro-adjusting the distance between a recording/reproduction element and a magnetic disk has been disclosed in JP-A-62-250570.
  • the converter as taught thereby is arranged so that a built-in miniaturized or micro actuator is mounted at part of the magnetic head slider, which actuator is generally formed of more than one piezoelectric element. Assembling such piezoelectric micro-actuator enables accomplishment of individual micro-adjustability of the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk.
  • the scheme for controlling the flotation amount of such record/reproduction element using the microactuator as recited in the above-identified Japanese document is generally called the active head slider scheme.
  • This document also suggests therein another method for using the actuator piezoelectric element also as a sensor for detection of contact between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk.
  • Another prior art method is available for designing a magnetic resistive element making up a magnetic information reproduction element in such a way that it also do double-duty as a contact detection sensor, as has been recited in JP-A-10-233070.
  • This method makes use of a technique for detecting a change in resistivity occurring due to a temperature variation upon contacting, also known as thermal asperity, in a way independent of standard or ordinary magnetic information read/write sessions.
  • the magnetic head slider be designed to have its flotation amount that is set at a carefully selected level or greater. Accordingly, the wideness of an allowable region that is limited by upper and lower limit values of the flotation amount is presently made further narrower than was used conventionally.
  • the present invention is made to avoid the problems described above, and its primary object is to provide a new and improved magnetic disk apparatus capable of significantly reducing the length of a time period for physical contact between a recording/reproduction element and its associative magnetic disk along with a control method thereof, thereby improving the durability and reliability of the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • the instant invention provides a new and improved magnetic disk apparatus which includes a rotation mechanism that is provided within an apparatus main body for driving more than one magnetic disk to rotate, a magnetic head slider as movably provided in a radial direction of the magnetic disk for being floated by an air shaft bearing in adjacent to a surface of the magnetic disk with a specified distance therefrom, a recording/reproduction element provided at a distal end of the magnetic head slider for recording and reproducing magnetic information on and from the magnetic disk, a drive unit for changing a distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk, and a position determination unit which supports the magnetic head slider and is operable to perform position determination of the magnetic head slider in the radial direction of the magnetic disk, wherein the apparatus is specifically arranged to further include a detection unit for causing, upon receipt of a command for recording or reproduction magnetic information to or from the magnetic disk, the drive unit to gradually reduce a distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk and for detecting contact between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic
  • the record/reproduction element is specifically arranged so that this element is kept lower in its flotation amount only within a shortened time period for reading/writing data to/from the magnetic disk and, within the remaining, long time periods, is held in a high flotation amount state which is almost free from risks of such physical contact. Accordingly, it is possible to prevent occurrence of damages of the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk otherwise occurring due to physical contact therebetween. This in turn makes it possible to significantly improve the durability and reliability of the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • the magnetic disk apparatus of this invention is the one that is arranged so that the magnetic head slider is generally structured from a primary slider and a secondary slider, wherein the drive unit is provided along the primary slider and the secondary slider while letting the record/reproduction element be provided at a distal end of the secondary slider.
  • the responsibility during shifting of the recording/reproduction element may be improved while simultaneously facilitating execution of subtle shift operations with increased accuracy.
  • the magnetic disk apparatus of the invention is such that a ramp for permitting escape of the magnetic head slider is provided outside of an outer periphery of the magnetic disk to thereby let the magnetic head slider escape to the ramp before interruption of the apparatus main body or alternatively when a read/write command is absent within a prespecified length of time period while causing the record/reproduction element to shift so that the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk increases before recovery of the magnetic head slider from the ramp to a location over the magnetic disk and also before the magnetic head slider escapes from a location over the magnetic disk to the ramp.
  • the magnetic head slider is driven to move from over the magnetic disk and escape to the ramp before interruption of the apparatus main body or alternatively within a predetermined length of time period in which any read/write commands are absent while permitting the record/reproduction element to be shifted in position so that the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk increases accordingly prior to the escape of the magnetic head slider from over the magnetic disk to the ramp.
  • the magnetic disk apparatus of the invention is also such that in case the drive unit is arranged to function also as an acceleration detection unit, when the acceleration detection unit detects zero gravity or alternatively upon detection of rapid acceleration, it causes the record/reproduction element to shift in position thus letting the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk to likewise increase at high speeds.
  • a method of controlling magnetic disk apparatus in accordance with the invention is a control method of magnetic disk apparatus which includes a rotation mechanism provided within an apparatus main body for driving more than one magnetic disk to rotate, a magnetic head slider movably provided in a radial direction of the magnetic disk for being floated by an air bearing in adjacent to a surface of the magnetic disk with a specified distance therefrom, a record/reproduction element provided at a distal end of the magnetic head slider for recording and reproducing magnetic information on and from the magnetic disk, a drive unit for changing a distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk, and a position determination unit for supporting the magnetic head slider and for performing position determination of the magnetic head slider in the radial direction of the magnetic disk, wherein the method includes the steps of: causing, upon receipt of a command for recording or reproduction magnetic information to or from the magnetic disk, the drive means to gradually reduce a distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk; and, upon detection of contact between the record/ reproduction element and the magnetic disk, performing proper shift amount estimation processing for shifting
  • the method of controlling the magnetic disk apparatus of the invention is the one wherein the proper shift amount estimation processing is performed at least one time after completion of assembly of the apparatus main body or alternatively done at least one time per start-up of the apparatus main body or still alternatively done at least one time per a prespecified time interval during startup of the apparatus main body while simultaneously letting a resultant proper shift amount be stored in a memory for use in letting the record/reproduction element shift by the proper shift amount in ordinary read/write events.
  • the magnetic disk apparatus control method of the invention is the one wherein the proper shift amount estimation processing is done when the magnetic head slider is at an outer periphery of the magnetic disk and also done when it is at inner periphery thereof respectively for one time for storing resultant proper shift amounts at the outer periphery and the inner periphery in memories respectively while in the ordinary read/write events performing linear interpolation of the proper shift amounts at the outer periphery and the inner periphery in accordance with a position in a radial direction along the diameter whereat the magnetic head slider presently resides to thereby calculate a proper shift amount at the position thus permitting the record/reproduction element to shift accordingly.
  • Using the method makes it possible to accurately calculate an adequate or proper shift amount of the magnetic head slider at any given positions along the diameter of such magnetic disk while significantly shortening both a time as required for the proper shift amount estimation processing and a time period of contact between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk due to the same processing.
  • the magnetic disk apparatus control method of the invention is the one in which the proper shift amount estimation processing is done a plurality of times when the magnetic head slider is at respective different radial positions of the magnetic disk thereby storing a combination of resultant proper shift amounts and a plurality of radial positions in a memory while in the ordinary read/write events performing linear interpolation of proper drive amounts of two points as selected from the combination adjacent to the above-identified position or alternatively interpolation of more than three points by a polynomial to thereby calculate a proper shift amount at the position thus letting the record/reproduction element shift accordingly.
  • Using the method makes it possible to accurately calculate the proper shift amount of the magnetic head slider at any given radial position along the diameter of the magnetic disk while simultaneously enabling significant reduction of both a time as taken to perform estimation processing of such proper shift amount(s) and a contact time duration for contact between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk due to the same processing.
  • the magnetic disk apparatus control method in accordance with the invention is the one that performs the proper shift amount estimation processing for at least one time when a magnetic information reproduction signal becomes weaker in intensity.
  • the proper shift amount estimation processing is done thereby making it possible to remove away such contamination at the record/reproduction element section, which in turn enables achievement of long-term operabilities of the magnetic disk apparatus while reducing or minimizing complexities in maintenance thereof.
  • FIG. 1 is a diagram showing schematically an arrangement of a magnetic disk apparatus in accordance with the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a diagram showing an enlarged perspective view of a magnetic head slider as provided in the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • FIG. 3 is a flow chart showing a method for control of the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • FIGS. 4A to 4 C are diagrams each for explanation of an operation of the magnetic head slider.
  • FIG. 5 is a pictorial graph showing the characteristics of a drive unit being provided in the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • FIG. 1 shows schematically an overall arrangement of a magnetic disk apparatus embodying the invention.
  • reference numeral is used to designate a magnetic head slider with a built-in recording/reproduction element 2 for recording and reproducing (read/write) magnetic information
  • numeral 3 denotes a magnetic disk that stores therein magnetic information and is driven by a rotation mechanism, not shown, to rotate or spin in a direction indicated by arrow
  • 4 indicates a load beam which is formed of a plate-like flat spring member for performing position determination of the magnetic head slider 1 in a radial direction along the diameter of the magnetic disk 3 while applying a compressive force to displace or bias it toward the magnetic disk 3
  • 5 is a ramp which permits the magnetic head slider 1 to move for safety from over the magnetic disk 3 to a specified place for temporal rest, prior to interruption of an apparatus main body 6 or alternatively when any read/write command is absent for a prespecified length of time period.
  • the magnetic head slider 1 is arranged to perform a seek operation in a radial direction along the diameter of the record/reproduction element 2 together with the load beam 4 as shown by arrow B in FIG. 1 , thereby executing recording/reproduction of magnetic information with respect to an overall surface of the magnetic disk 3 .
  • magnetic head slider 1 and its support unit are designed to perform a radial-directional seek operation due to rotational movements, these may be modified in such a way as to do the intended radial seek operation of magnetic disk 3 through linear movements.
  • FIG. 2 there is depicted an enlarged perspective view of the magnetic head slider 1 of FIG. 1 .
  • the magnetic head slider 1 is generally structured from a plate-like primary slider 1 a and its associative secondary slider 1 b that is provided at one end of this primary slider 1 a.
  • the primary slider 1 a includes floating pads 1 d of an air bearing for utilizing a flow of air as created upon rotation of the magnetic disk 3 at high speeds to permit the primary slider 1 a to float. These air bearing surface pads 1 d are projected downwardly on a lower surface of the magnetic head slider 1 at positions on the opposite sides thereof.
  • the secondary slider 1 b has its base edge portion which is integrally coupled to the primary slider 1 a by formation of a pair of concave grooves 1 c on one end side of this primary slider 1 a.
  • the secondary slider 1 b has a distal end with its lower surface, in which the recording/reproduction element 2 is embedded. This record/reproduction element 2 enables read and write of magnetic information on the magnetic disk 3 .
  • a drive unit 8 is provided on an upper surface of a coupling section of the primary slider 1 a and secondary slider 1 b and also at the upper surface of secondary slider 1 b, which unit is operable to displace the secondary slider 1 b in the direction indicated by arrow C in FIG. 2 , i.e. in a come-closer/go-far direction perpendicular to a magnetic recording surface of the magnetic disk 3 .
  • the drive unit 8 includes a thin film made of piezoelectric materials such as for example lead zirconate titanate (PZT). This thin film is formed by sputter techniques in the form of a layer on the upper surface of the coupling section of primary slider 1 a and secondary slider 1 b and also on the upper surface of secondary slider 1 b.
  • the drive unit 8 also employs a piezoelectric actuator of the so-called unimorph type, which is constituted from a multilayer structure having thin films made of chosen piezoelectric material for use as electrodes with a platinum thin film being interposed therebetween.
  • a cutaway 8 a is formed through etching processes at the coupling section of the primary slider 1 a and secondary slider 1 b, for facilitating displacement of secondary slider 1 b in the direction indicated by arrow C in FIG. 2 .
  • extension or elongation takes place at the piezoelectric actuator in a direction at right angles to an electric field thus created.
  • This elongation permits the distal end of secondary slider 1 b to change or offset in position to come closer to the magnetic disk 3 .
  • This piezoelectric actuator is designed to exhibit characteristics shown in FIG. 5 .
  • the record/reproduction element 2 used in this embodiment is separated into an inductive recording element and a reproduction element utilizing magnetoresistive (MR) effects and is fabricated by lithography processes, other types of record/reproduction elements may alternatively be employed.
  • MR magnetoresistive
  • the secondary slider 1 b becomes about 30 nm in displacement at the distal end thereof. This value is a displacement amount large enough to adjust a flotation amount of the record/reproduction element 2 .
  • the thin film made of chosen piezoelectric material may be fabricated by several methods other than the sputtering, such as liquid-phase supplement methodology known as sol-gel method.
  • the piezoelectric actuator for use with the drive unit 8 employing the piezoelectric material thin film may be replaced with others actuators.
  • One example is an actuator of the bimetal type which is comprised for example of a plurality of layers made of materials with different thermal expansivities for permitting a layer to exhibit thermal expansion deformation due to heat as resistively produced upon flowing of a current in these layers.
  • Other examples are an electro-static actuator and an electromagnetic actuator or equivalents thereto.
  • the above embodiment is designed to employ a specific structure with the primary slider 1 a having the recess grooves 1 c at its distal end for displacing the secondary slider 1 b alone
  • another structure is also employable wherein a piezoelectric actuator is mounted and adhered onto an entire top surface of the primary slider 1 a for letting this piezoelectric actuator deform the primary slider 1 a to thereby displace a crown at the distal end of such primary slider 1 a toward the magnetic disk 3 side.
  • the crown behaves to vary in position causing its floating height and/or pitch attitude angle to change accordingly, thus achieving adjustability of the flotation amount of the record/reproduction element 2 .
  • the magnetic head slider 1 thus arranged in the way stated supra is also used as a contact detection unit of the magnetic disk 3 .
  • An explanation will next be given of one practical configuration of such unit for detection of contact between the magnetic head slider 1 and magnetic disk 3 .
  • the piezoelectric actuator used in the drive unit 8 is designed to do double-duty as a contact sensor for causing this piezoelectric actuator to detect that the record/reproduction element 2 being provided at the distal end of the secondary slider 1 b of the magnetic head slider 1 comes into contact with the magnetic disk 3 .
  • the record/reproduction element 2 per se as the contact sensor required. More specifically, the record/reproduction element 2 is designed to employ an MR element. Upon contacting of the record/reproduction element 2 with the magnetic disk 3 , a corresponding amount of heat would be produced. This heat causes the MR element to change in resistivity. This is called the thermal asperity phenomenon among those skilled in the art to which the invention pertains. Utilizing this phenomenon enables detection of contact between the record/reproduction element 2 and magnetic disk 3 .
  • circuitry for handling a signal output from the record/reproduction element 2 is subdivided into two parallel circuit systems, one of which is for use as a circuit that reads a signal with a frequency corresponding to inherent magnetic information, and the other of which is for use as a circuit operable to detect a signal with its frequency corresponding to the thermal asperity.
  • circuit arrangement it is possible to adequately monitor any possible contact of the record/reproduction element 2 with the magnetic disk 3 in any events.
  • the above-stated contact detector unit is replaceable with a contact detection unit for letting a strain gage or the like come into contact with the magnetic disk 3 and for detecting contact from resultant frictional force thus occurred at that time or, alternatively, an additional contact detector unit for sensing contact by use of acoustic emission (AE) methodology.
  • AE acoustic emission
  • the magnetic head slider 1 is designed to move for safety from over the magnetic disk 3 toward a rest place called a ramp 5 before interruption of the apparatus or alternatively when any read/write commands are absent within a prespecified length of time period.
  • the control procedure shown in the flow chart of FIG. 3 starts with step S 1 , which turns on or activates the power supply of a system concerned.
  • the magnetic disk 3 begins rotating or spinning at high speeds.
  • the control procedure goes to step S 2 which causes the magnetic head slider 1 to leave the ramp 5 and move along with the load beam 4 toward a position overlying a data storage region of the magnetic disk 3 .
  • the drive unit 8 is required to be preset in its neutral state prior to displacement as shown in FIG. 4A or alternatively displaced causing the record/reproduction element 2 to go far from the magnetic disk 3 .
  • the magnetic head slider 1 Upon termination of loading of the magnetic head slider 1 to part overlying the surface of magnetic disk 3 at step S 2 of FIG. 3 , the magnetic head slider 1 is held at a specified normal floating position with a fixed flotation amount.
  • the flotation amount at this time is typically set at 10 nanometers (nm) or greater to ensure less risk or hazardous accident of contact with the magnetic disk 3 .
  • this proper shift amount estimation processing is as follows. For instance, suppose the use of a piezoelectric actuator which includes its magnetic head slider 1 comprised mainly of silicon, measures 0.6 mm in length with an actuator thickness of 0.05 mm and also with a PZT piezoelectric thin-film thickness of 1 ⁇ m or more or less. If this is the case, a distal end displacement becomes about 30 nm upon application of a voltage of 10V to its electrode.
  • any contact with the magnetic disk 3 will no longer occur with an applied voltage of 5V, that is, with a distal end displacement of 15 nm; on the contrary, contact is available without exceptions with an applied voltage of 10V, i.e. with a distal end displacement of 30 nm.
  • step S 3 a voltage of 5V is applied to the electrode as an initial voltage (V 1 of FIG. 3 ) at step S 3 .
  • the voltage gradually increase in potential by a fixed amount, step-like potential increase amount ( ⁇ V in FIG. 3 ) is 0.1 V.
  • steps S 4 and S 5 let the application voltage potentially increase in a step-like fashion with 0.1V being as a unit increment until the record/reproduction element 2 that also functions as the contact detector unit detects occurrence of contact.
  • step S 6 Upon actual detection of such contact, the control procedure goes to step S 6 which removes a voltage component of 0.1V and then determines that the resultant application voltage obtained at this time point is adaptable for use as a proper application voltage at such radial position along the disk diameter, which will then be stored in either a built-in memory of the magnetic disk apparatus or a system-side memory.
  • the above-noted proper shift amount estimation processing be carried out at a plurality of radial positions along the diameter of the magnetic disk 3 in association with interpolation during actual read/write operations to thereby calculate for application the required proper application voltage in a way pursuant to such along-the-diameter positions.
  • proper application voltages are first estimated at the innermost peripheral position and outermost peripheral position plus an intermediate circumferential position of the magnetic disk 3 , which are then subject to interpolation using a quadratic equation to thereby obtain the intended proper application voltage at any given along-the-diameter position.
  • Another example is that while letting the proper application voltages as have been estimated at a great number of diameter positions be combined with their corresponding diameter positions into a map for storage, the actual proper application voltage is arranged so that one proper application voltage at a certain diameter position nearest to the actual diameter position is directly read out of the map for usage.
  • step S 10 if at step S 10 it is judged that a read/write command is present, then the system control routine proceeds to step S 12 which reads servo information while at the same time letting the magnetic head slider 1 move up to a target track diameter position for effectuation of reading or writing of magnetic information from or onto the magnetic disk 3 .
  • the application voltage being presently given to the drive unit 8 is removed away causing the secondary slider 1 b to again return to its high flotation state as shown in FIG. 4C , in which it shifts into a state with substantially no risks of contact and is set in a wait mode, wherein it is held in the state with substantially no contact risks in any events excluding read/write events.
  • step S 12 if at step S 12 it is judged that any read/write commands are absent for a predefined length of time period from the wait state, then the system procedure goes to step S 14 which causes the magnetic head slider 1 to go into an unload state in which it escapes to the ramp 5 and thus is set in a read/write command wait mode at step S 15 .
  • the drive unit 8 is set in the neutral state with no displacement or, alternatively, it is displaced causing the record/reproduction element 2 to go far from the magnetic disk 3 .
  • the processing for estimation of a proper application voltage to the drive unit 8 is performed for one time upon power-up of the system to thereby modify the proper application voltage value until shut-down of the system power supply
  • the frequency i.e. the number of repetitions of a process per unit time and timing of such drive-unit proper application voltage estimation processing may be set up in a way which follows.
  • a first method is the one that executes the proper application voltage value estimation processing in a test/inspection line once after assembly of the magnetic disk apparatus to provide a proper voltage value, which is then stored in a memory.
  • This approach is incapable of handling and reacting in-use environment differences such as an atmospheric pressure difference; however, it offers an ability to successfully adjust at least machining deviations.
  • a second method is the one that performs the above-noted processing upon power-up of the system and thereafter executes additional similar processing at a time whenever a prespecified length of time, e.g. one minute, is elapsed to thereby recurrently update a presently established proper application voltage value where necessary.
  • This approach is capable of well handling and reacting both machining variations and atmospheric pressure differences and further capable of accommodating reaction to in-use environment differences such as temperature changes during usage or the like.
  • the aforesaid processing may be executed extensively within an extended time period until termination of the record/playback operation.
  • the drive unit 8 is arranged to operate as the piezoelectric actuator for causing the record/reproduction element 2 to come closer to the magnetic disk 3 and, in addition, is designed to comprise a spring-mass system to thereby also function as an acceleration detection unit capable of measuring inertia forces.
  • the drive unit 8 function as the acceleration detector unit enables achievement of an additional functionality which follows. Upon detection of zero gravity of the apparatus main body 5 or alternatively application of rapid acceleration to the apparatus main body 5 , it determines that the apparatus main body 5 per se is in the process of free fall. Subsequently it predicts that the apparatus main body 5 must soon drop down onto a floor with significant shock applied thereto. If this is the case, immediately interrupt application of any voltage to the drive unit 8 even when the record/reproduction element 2 is presently performing read/write operations, thus removing displacement of the drive unit 8 to thereby force the secondary slider 1 b to go into its high flotation state.
  • the distance between the magnetic disk 3 and magnetic head slider 1 may be sufficiently retained even upon occurrence of erroneous fall-down of the apparatus main body 5 .
  • An approach to avoiding this contamination problem is to employ a technique using processing similar to the above-stated proper shift amount estimation processing. More specifically, upon detection of an error during record/playback operations, apply a voltage to the drive unit 8 while the magnetic head slider 1 is in its retry operation, thereby reducing or “shrinking” the distance between the record/reproduction element 2 and the magnetic disk 3 . If it is detected that the record/reproduction element 2 comes into contact with the magnetic disk 3 , then pull the secondary slider 1 b back. Executing such processing makes it possible to remove away contaminants being attached to the record/reproduction element 2 by such contact with the magnetic disk 3 . This in turn enables improvement in lifetime of the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • the magnetic head slider 1 be driven to move toward a certain location out of the data recording region on the magnetic disk 3 before rendering the drive unit 8 operative. With such slider escape procedure, it becomes possible to prevent occurrence of any secondary errors even where once-removed contaminants behave to again attach onto the magnetic disk 3 .
  • the present invention is such that specifically controlling the device for permitting the drive unit to gradually reduce the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk upon receipt of a command for recording or reproducing information on or from a magnetic disk and for detecting contact between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk and the drive unit for causing upon detection of such contact between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk by the detection unit the record/reproduction element to shift in position by a fixed amount to thereby increase the distance makes it possible to realize a low flotation amount corresponding to high recording density irrespective of machining variations of the individual magnetic head slider and in-use environments including but not limited to atmospheric pressure differences while simultaneously making it possible to prevent continuous physical contact between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk, resulting in preclusion of generation of contact vibration and/or thermal asperity, which in turn enables improvement in linear recording densities and thus further increases in storage capacities of the magnetic disk apparatus while further miniaturizing the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • the flotation amount of the record/reproduction element is kept lower for a shortened time period for execution of read/write operations with respect to the magnetic disk while letting the record/reproduction element be held in a high flotation amount state which is hardly associated with any risks of physical contact, whereby it is possible to prevent occurrence of damages of both the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk otherwise occurring due to physical contact therebetween so that the magnetic disk apparatus may be greatly improved in durability and also in reliability thereof.

Abstract

A disk apparatus including: a head slider for being floated above a disk; a record/reproduction element provided at the head slider for recording and/or reproducing information on and/or from the disk; a displacer for shifting the record/reproduction element to approach closer to, or retreat farther away from, the disk; and a controller for controlling the displacer to shift the record/reproduction element in a direction to retreat rather from the disk, if the record/reproduction element has contacted the disk.

Description

    CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
  • This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/920,343, filed Aug. 18, 2004, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/929,128, filed Aug. 15, 2001 (now U.S. Pat. No. 6,798,605). This application relates to and claims priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2000-337510, filed on Nov. 6, 2000. The entirety of the contents and subject matter of all of the above is incorporated herein by reference.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of the Invention
  • The present invention relates to magnetic disk apparatus with high-density magnetic information recording performances and control methodology thereof.
  • 2. Description of the Related Art
  • Conventionally known magnetic disk apparatus adaptable for use as external storage devices or else of computers are typically designed to include a rotation mechanism for driving more than one magnetic disk to rotate or spin at high speeds, and a magnetic head slider with a built-in recording/reproduction element. The magnetic head slider is supported by a load beam so that it is position-determined and placed along the diameter of the magnetic disk. The magnetic disk apparatus is arranged to record magnetic information at a desired track(s) on the magnetic disk and also reproduce such stored magnetic information out of the magnetic disk while letting the magnetic head slider relatively move over the magnetic disk. The magnetic head slider is designed to use an air lubrication shaft bearing for flotation by wedge film effects of the air. The use of such structure precludes any direct physical contact between the magnetic disk and magnetic head slider.
  • In addition, typically employable methodology for achieving higher recording densities and larger storage capacities of magnetic disk apparatus with or without reducing the size and shape thereof includes methods of increasing track densities and methods of increasing on-track linear recording densities. The on-track linear record density increasing methods may in turn include, but not limited to, a method for increasing the sensitivity of a recording/reproduction element used, and a method of reducing the distance between the record/reproduction element and its associative record carrier body, also known as recording medium. One typical approach to effectively achieving the latter method is to reduce the distance between a magnetic head slider and magnetic disk, that is, the flying height of such slider.
  • On the other hand, traditionally in cases where the flotation amount of the magnetic head slider is designed, there are provided certain margins which are determined by taking into account of any possible flotation amount reduction occurring due to machining variation of the magnetic head slider and/or environmental differences such as atmospheric pressure differences. If such margins are removed away, then it is possible to further shrink the resultant flotation amount of the record/reproduction element.
  • A converter for use in recording devices capable of individually precise or micro-adjusting the distance between a recording/reproduction element and a magnetic disk has been disclosed in JP-A-62-250570. The converter as taught thereby is arranged so that a built-in miniaturized or micro actuator is mounted at part of the magnetic head slider, which actuator is generally formed of more than one piezoelectric element. Assembling such piezoelectric micro-actuator enables accomplishment of individual micro-adjustability of the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk.
  • The scheme for controlling the flotation amount of such record/reproduction element using the microactuator as recited in the above-identified Japanese document is generally called the active head slider scheme. This document also suggests therein another method for using the actuator piezoelectric element also as a sensor for detection of contact between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk.
  • Another prior art method is available for designing a magnetic resistive element making up a magnetic information reproduction element in such a way that it also do double-duty as a contact detection sensor, as has been recited in JP-A-10-233070. This method makes use of a technique for detecting a change in resistivity occurring due to a temperature variation upon contacting, also known as thermal asperity, in a way independent of standard or ordinary magnetic information read/write sessions.
  • On the other hand, in order to meet the need for achievement of higher recording densities of information, it should be required to further reduce the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk. This in turn strictly requires that design be made within a specific flotation amount region in which intermittent physical contact takes place due to micro-unevenness configuration on the magnetic disk side and also on the magnetic head slider side.
  • Additionally, from a view point of preclusion of the magnetic head slider's unwanted vibration due to physical contact and prevention of thermal asperity, a need is felt to minimize the frequency of physical contact events and the volume of an impingement or collision portion. Due to this, it is required that the magnetic head slider be designed to have its flotation amount that is set at a carefully selected level or greater. Accordingly, the wideness of an allowable region that is limited by upper and lower limit values of the flotation amount is presently made further narrower than was used conventionally.
  • Unfortunately, with the active head slider scheme as taught from the above-identified former Japanese citation JP-A-62-250570, it is required in order to attain the required high record density to further shrink the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk, although the scheme offers enhanced effectivities for reduction of the distance between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk.
  • As per the method for detecting a resistance change occurring due to a temperature variation upon contacting, i.e. thermal asperity, independently of ordinary magnetic data read/write operations as suggested by the latter document JP-A-10-233070, this method is encountered with a risk of frequent occurrence of intermittent physical contact due to microconfiguration on the magnetic disk side and on the magnetic head slider side, causing a serious problem as to likewise decreases in durability and reliability.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • The present invention is made to avoid the problems described above, and its primary object is to provide a new and improved magnetic disk apparatus capable of significantly reducing the length of a time period for physical contact between a recording/reproduction element and its associative magnetic disk along with a control method thereof, thereby improving the durability and reliability of the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • To attain the foregoing object, the instant invention provides a new and improved magnetic disk apparatus which includes a rotation mechanism that is provided within an apparatus main body for driving more than one magnetic disk to rotate, a magnetic head slider as movably provided in a radial direction of the magnetic disk for being floated by an air shaft bearing in adjacent to a surface of the magnetic disk with a specified distance therefrom, a recording/reproduction element provided at a distal end of the magnetic head slider for recording and reproducing magnetic information on and from the magnetic disk, a drive unit for changing a distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk, and a position determination unit which supports the magnetic head slider and is operable to perform position determination of the magnetic head slider in the radial direction of the magnetic disk, wherein the apparatus is specifically arranged to further include a detection unit for causing, upon receipt of a command for recording or reproduction magnetic information to or from the magnetic disk, the drive unit to gradually reduce a distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk and for detecting contact between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk, and a control unit for controlling the drive unit in such a way that when the detection unit detects contact between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk the record/reproduction element shifts in position by a fixed amount thereby letting the distance increase accordingly.
  • With such an arrangement, it is possible to achieve a low flotation amount corresponding to the required high recording density irrespective of machining variations of the individual magnetic head slider and in-use environments including, but not limited to atmospheric pressure differences, while at the same time making it possible to prevent any possible continuous physical contact between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk, resulting in preclusion of contact vibration and/or thermal asperity. This in turn enables improvement in linear recording density and thus further increases in storage capacities of the magnetic disk apparatus while further miniaturizing the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • In addition, the record/reproduction element is specifically arranged so that this element is kept lower in its flotation amount only within a shortened time period for reading/writing data to/from the magnetic disk and, within the remaining, long time periods, is held in a high flotation amount state which is almost free from risks of such physical contact. Accordingly, it is possible to prevent occurrence of damages of the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk otherwise occurring due to physical contact therebetween. This in turn makes it possible to significantly improve the durability and reliability of the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • The magnetic disk apparatus of this invention is the one that is arranged so that the magnetic head slider is generally structured from a primary slider and a secondary slider, wherein the drive unit is provided along the primary slider and the secondary slider while letting the record/reproduction element be provided at a distal end of the secondary slider.
  • With such an arrangement, the responsibility during shifting of the recording/reproduction element may be improved while simultaneously facilitating execution of subtle shift operations with increased accuracy.
  • The magnetic disk apparatus of the invention is such that a ramp for permitting escape of the magnetic head slider is provided outside of an outer periphery of the magnetic disk to thereby let the magnetic head slider escape to the ramp before interruption of the apparatus main body or alternatively when a read/write command is absent within a prespecified length of time period while causing the record/reproduction element to shift so that the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk increases before recovery of the magnetic head slider from the ramp to a location over the magnetic disk and also before the magnetic head slider escapes from a location over the magnetic disk to the ramp.
  • With such an arrangement, the magnetic head slider is driven to move from over the magnetic disk and escape to the ramp before interruption of the apparatus main body or alternatively within a predetermined length of time period in which any read/write commands are absent while permitting the record/reproduction element to be shifted in position so that the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk increases accordingly prior to the escape of the magnetic head slider from over the magnetic disk to the ramp. Thus it becomes possible to preclude damages otherwise occurring due to physical contact between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk in loading and unloading events.
  • The magnetic disk apparatus of the invention is also such that in case the drive unit is arranged to function also as an acceleration detection unit, when the acceleration detection unit detects zero gravity or alternatively upon detection of rapid acceleration, it causes the record/reproduction element to shift in position thus letting the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk to likewise increase at high speeds.
  • The use of such an arrangement permits, when the acceleration detection unit detects zero gravity or alternatively detects any rapid acceleration, quick removal of a positional change or displacement of the drive unit causing the record/reproduction element to shift into its high flotation state or adversely displacing the drive unit toward the high flotation state side thus letting the record/reproduction element shift into the high flotation state thereof. Thus it is possible, even upon occurrence of erroneous or accidental fall-down of the magnetic disk apparatus, to sufficiently retain the required flotation amount of the record/reproduction element. This in turn makes it possible to successfully prevent damages of the magnetic head slider and/or magnetic disk otherwise occurring due to application of shocks when falling down.
  • A method of controlling magnetic disk apparatus in accordance with the invention is a control method of magnetic disk apparatus which includes a rotation mechanism provided within an apparatus main body for driving more than one magnetic disk to rotate, a magnetic head slider movably provided in a radial direction of the magnetic disk for being floated by an air bearing in adjacent to a surface of the magnetic disk with a specified distance therefrom, a record/reproduction element provided at a distal end of the magnetic head slider for recording and reproducing magnetic information on and from the magnetic disk, a drive unit for changing a distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk, and a position determination unit for supporting the magnetic head slider and for performing position determination of the magnetic head slider in the radial direction of the magnetic disk, wherein the method includes the steps of: causing, upon receipt of a command for recording or reproduction magnetic information to or from the magnetic disk, the drive means to gradually reduce a distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk; and, upon detection of contact between the record/ reproduction element and the magnetic disk, performing proper shift amount estimation processing for shifting the record/reproduction element by a fixed amount thereby letting the distance increase accordingly.
  • With the use of the method above, it is possible to achieve a low flotation amount corresponding to the required high recording density irrespective of machining variations of the individual magnetic head slider and in-use environments including, but not limited to atmospheric pressure differences while at the same time making it possible to prevent any possible continuous physical contact between the magnetic head slider and magnetic disk, resulting in preclusion of contact vibration and/or thermal asperity. This in turn enables improvement in linear recording density and thus further increases in storage capacities of the magnetic disk apparatus while further miniaturizing or downsizing the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • The method of controlling the magnetic disk apparatus of the invention is the one wherein the proper shift amount estimation processing is performed at least one time after completion of assembly of the apparatus main body or alternatively done at least one time per start-up of the apparatus main body or still alternatively done at least one time per a prespecified time interval during startup of the apparatus main body while simultaneously letting a resultant proper shift amount be stored in a memory for use in letting the record/reproduction element shift by the proper shift amount in ordinary read/write events.
  • With use of the method, it is possible to shorten a response time with respect to a read/write command, which in turn makes it possible to lessen the frequency of contact between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk while at the same time significantly reducing the length of a read/write time duration. This enables reduction of wear otherwise occurring due to physical contact between the record/ reproduction element and magnetic disk.
  • The magnetic disk apparatus control method of the invention is the one wherein the proper shift amount estimation processing is done when the magnetic head slider is at an outer periphery of the magnetic disk and also done when it is at inner periphery thereof respectively for one time for storing resultant proper shift amounts at the outer periphery and the inner periphery in memories respectively while in the ordinary read/write events performing linear interpolation of the proper shift amounts at the outer periphery and the inner periphery in accordance with a position in a radial direction along the diameter whereat the magnetic head slider presently resides to thereby calculate a proper shift amount at the position thus permitting the record/reproduction element to shift accordingly.
  • Using the method makes it possible to accurately calculate an adequate or proper shift amount of the magnetic head slider at any given positions along the diameter of such magnetic disk while significantly shortening both a time as required for the proper shift amount estimation processing and a time period of contact between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk due to the same processing.
  • The magnetic disk apparatus control method of the invention is the one in which the proper shift amount estimation processing is done a plurality of times when the magnetic head slider is at respective different radial positions of the magnetic disk thereby storing a combination of resultant proper shift amounts and a plurality of radial positions in a memory while in the ordinary read/write events performing linear interpolation of proper drive amounts of two points as selected from the combination adjacent to the above-identified position or alternatively interpolation of more than three points by a polynomial to thereby calculate a proper shift amount at the position thus letting the record/reproduction element shift accordingly.
  • Using the method makes it possible to accurately calculate the proper shift amount of the magnetic head slider at any given radial position along the diameter of the magnetic disk while simultaneously enabling significant reduction of both a time as taken to perform estimation processing of such proper shift amount(s) and a contact time duration for contact between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk due to the same processing.
  • The magnetic disk apparatus control method in accordance with the invention is the one that performs the proper shift amount estimation processing for at least one time when a magnetic information reproduction signal becomes weaker in intensity.
  • With the method, in case where contaminants are deposited on the record/reproduction element during long-term operation resulting in a decrease in intensity of the magnetic disk's magnetic information playback signal, the proper shift amount estimation processing is done thereby making it possible to remove away such contamination at the record/reproduction element section, which in turn enables achievement of long-term operabilities of the magnetic disk apparatus while reducing or minimizing complexities in maintenance thereof.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1 is a diagram showing schematically an arrangement of a magnetic disk apparatus in accordance with the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a diagram showing an enlarged perspective view of a magnetic head slider as provided in the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • FIG. 3 is a flow chart showing a method for control of the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • FIGS. 4A to 4C are diagrams each for explanation of an operation of the magnetic head slider.
  • FIG. 5 is a pictorial graph showing the characteristics of a drive unit being provided in the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
  • One preferred embodiment of the present invention will now be set forth in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings of FIGS. 1 to 5 below.
  • FIG. 1 shows schematically an overall arrangement of a magnetic disk apparatus embodying the invention. In this drawing, reference numeral is used to designate a magnetic head slider with a built-in recording/reproduction element 2 for recording and reproducing (read/write) magnetic information; numeral 3 denotes a magnetic disk that stores therein magnetic information and is driven by a rotation mechanism, not shown, to rotate or spin in a direction indicated by arrow; 4 indicates a load beam which is formed of a plate-like flat spring member for performing position determination of the magnetic head slider 1 in a radial direction along the diameter of the magnetic disk 3 while applying a compressive force to displace or bias it toward the magnetic disk 3; and 5 is a ramp which permits the magnetic head slider 1 to move for safety from over the magnetic disk 3 to a specified place for temporal rest, prior to interruption of an apparatus main body 6 or alternatively when any read/write command is absent for a prespecified length of time period.
  • The magnetic head slider 1 is arranged to perform a seek operation in a radial direction along the diameter of the record/reproduction element 2 together with the load beam 4 as shown by arrow B in FIG. 1, thereby executing recording/reproduction of magnetic information with respect to an overall surface of the magnetic disk 3.
  • It should be noted here that although in the illustrative embodiment the magnetic head slider 1 and its support unit are designed to perform a radial-directional seek operation due to rotational movements, these may be modified in such a way as to do the intended radial seek operation of magnetic disk 3 through linear movements.
  • Turning to FIG. 2, there is depicted an enlarged perspective view of the magnetic head slider 1 of FIG. 1. As shown herein, the magnetic head slider 1 is generally structured from a plate-like primary slider 1 a and its associative secondary slider 1 b that is provided at one end of this primary slider 1 a.
  • The primary slider 1 a includes floating pads 1 d of an air bearing for utilizing a flow of air as created upon rotation of the magnetic disk 3 at high speeds to permit the primary slider 1 a to float. These air bearing surface pads 1 d are projected downwardly on a lower surface of the magnetic head slider 1 at positions on the opposite sides thereof. The secondary slider 1 b has its base edge portion which is integrally coupled to the primary slider 1 a by formation of a pair of concave grooves 1 c on one end side of this primary slider 1 a.
  • The secondary slider 1 b has a distal end with its lower surface, in which the recording/reproduction element 2 is embedded. This record/reproduction element 2 enables read and write of magnetic information on the magnetic disk 3. A drive unit 8 is provided on an upper surface of a coupling section of the primary slider 1 a and secondary slider 1 b and also at the upper surface of secondary slider 1 b, which unit is operable to displace the secondary slider 1 b in the direction indicated by arrow C in FIG. 2, i.e. in a come-closer/go-far direction perpendicular to a magnetic recording surface of the magnetic disk 3.
  • The drive unit 8 includes a thin film made of piezoelectric materials such as for example lead zirconate titanate (PZT). This thin film is formed by sputter techniques in the form of a layer on the upper surface of the coupling section of primary slider 1 a and secondary slider 1 b and also on the upper surface of secondary slider 1 b. The drive unit 8 also employs a piezoelectric actuator of the so-called unimorph type, which is constituted from a multilayer structure having thin films made of chosen piezoelectric material for use as electrodes with a platinum thin film being interposed therebetween.
  • In addition, a cutaway 8 a is formed through etching processes at the coupling section of the primary slider 1 a and secondary slider 1 b, for facilitating displacement of secondary slider 1 b in the direction indicated by arrow C in FIG. 2. Whereby, upon application of a voltage across the electrodes, extension or elongation takes place at the piezoelectric actuator in a direction at right angles to an electric field thus created. This elongation permits the distal end of secondary slider 1 b to change or offset in position to come closer to the magnetic disk 3. This piezoelectric actuator is designed to exhibit characteristics shown in FIG. 5.
  • Note here that although the record/reproduction element 2 used in this embodiment is separated into an inductive recording element and a reproduction element utilizing magnetoresistive (MR) effects and is fabricated by lithography processes, other types of record/reproduction elements may alternatively be employed.
  • Additionally in case silicon is used as main material of the magnetic head slider 1 while employing the drive unit 8 including its piezoelectric actuator with a length of 0.6 mm and a thickness of 0.05 mm and also a PZT piezoelectric thin film with a thickness of 1 μm or more or less, when a voltage of 10V is applied to the electrode, the secondary slider 1 b becomes about 30 nm in displacement at the distal end thereof. This value is a displacement amount large enough to adjust a flotation amount of the record/reproduction element 2.
  • Further note that the thin film made of chosen piezoelectric material may be fabricated by several methods other than the sputtering, such as liquid-phase supplement methodology known as sol-gel method. The piezoelectric actuator for use with the drive unit 8 employing the piezoelectric material thin film may be replaced with others actuators. One example is an actuator of the bimetal type which is comprised for example of a plurality of layers made of materials with different thermal expansivities for permitting a layer to exhibit thermal expansion deformation due to heat as resistively produced upon flowing of a current in these layers. Other examples are an electro-static actuator and an electromagnetic actuator or equivalents thereto.
  • Additionally, although the above embodiment is designed to employ a specific structure with the primary slider 1 a having the recess grooves 1 c at its distal end for displacing the secondary slider 1 b alone, another structure is also employable wherein a piezoelectric actuator is mounted and adhered onto an entire top surface of the primary slider 1 a for letting this piezoelectric actuator deform the primary slider 1 a to thereby displace a crown at the distal end of such primary slider 1 a toward the magnetic disk 3 side. In this case, the crown behaves to vary in position causing its floating height and/or pitch attitude angle to change accordingly, thus achieving adjustability of the flotation amount of the record/reproduction element 2.
  • On the other hand, the magnetic head slider 1 thus arranged in the way stated supra is also used as a contact detection unit of the magnetic disk 3. An explanation will next be given of one practical configuration of such unit for detection of contact between the magnetic head slider 1 and magnetic disk 3. The piezoelectric actuator used in the drive unit 8 is designed to do double-duty as a contact sensor for causing this piezoelectric actuator to detect that the record/reproduction element 2 being provided at the distal end of the secondary slider 1 b of the magnetic head slider 1 comes into contact with the magnetic disk 3. To this end, it is arranged so that while separately monitoring a direct current (DC) voltage as applied to the piezoelectric actuator's electrode, a counter electromotive power that is produced upon contacting of the record/reproduction element 2 with the magnetic disk 3 is used to detect a noise signal, which in turn is used for detection of contact between the record/reproduction element 2 and magnetic disk 3.
  • Another approach for obtaining similar results is to use the record/reproduction element 2 per se as the contact sensor required. More specifically, the record/reproduction element 2 is designed to employ an MR element. Upon contacting of the record/reproduction element 2 with the magnetic disk 3, a corresponding amount of heat would be produced. This heat causes the MR element to change in resistivity. This is called the thermal asperity phenomenon among those skilled in the art to which the invention pertains. Utilizing this phenomenon enables detection of contact between the record/reproduction element 2 and magnetic disk 3.
  • In this case, circuitry for handling a signal output from the record/reproduction element 2 is subdivided into two parallel circuit systems, one of which is for use as a circuit that reads a signal with a frequency corresponding to inherent magnetic information, and the other of which is for use as a circuit operable to detect a signal with its frequency corresponding to the thermal asperity. With such circuit arrangement, it is possible to adequately monitor any possible contact of the record/reproduction element 2 with the magnetic disk 3 in any events.
  • It should be noted that the above-stated contact detector unit is replaceable with a contact detection unit for letting a strain gage or the like come into contact with the magnetic disk 3 and for detecting contact from resultant frictional force thus occurred at that time or, alternatively, an additional contact detector unit for sensing contact by use of acoustic emission (AE) methodology.
  • A control method of the magnetic disk apparatus thus arranged in the way described above will next be set forth with reference to a flow chart shown in FIG. 3 along with operation/function explanation diagrams shown in FIGS. 4A to 4C.
  • In magnetic disk apparatus of the type using the so-called load/unload scheme, the magnetic head slider 1 is designed to move for safety from over the magnetic disk 3 toward a rest place called a ramp 5 before interruption of the apparatus or alternatively when any read/write commands are absent within a prespecified length of time period. In this state, the control procedure shown in the flow chart of FIG. 3 starts with step S1, which turns on or activates the power supply of a system concerned. Upon power-up, the magnetic disk 3 begins rotating or spinning at high speeds. Then, the control procedure goes to step S2 which causes the magnetic head slider 1 to leave the ramp 5 and move along with the load beam 4 toward a position overlying a data storage region of the magnetic disk 3.
  • It must be noted here that in such loading event the drive unit 8 is required to be preset in its neutral state prior to displacement as shown in FIG. 4A or alternatively displaced causing the record/reproduction element 2 to go far from the magnetic disk 3.
  • This is inevitable because if adversely the drive unit 8 is displaced downwardly in FIG. 2 causing the recording/reproduction element 2 to come closer to the magnetic disk 3 then a recording/playback portion of the record/reproduction element 2 is set in the state that it relatively projects from the surface of the primary slider 1 a, which would result in an increase in risk of impingement or collision of the element portion with the magnetic disk 3 due to application of resultant shocks occurring in weight loading events prior to creation of a sufficient floating pressure at the primary slider 1 a.
  • Upon termination of loading of the magnetic head slider 1 to part overlying the surface of magnetic disk 3 at step S2 of FIG. 3, the magnetic head slider 1 is held at a specified normal floating position with a fixed flotation amount. The flotation amount at this time is typically set at 10 nanometers (nm) or greater to ensure less risk or hazardous accident of contact with the magnetic disk 3.
  • While retaining this state, let the drive unit 8 gradually vary in position causing the record/reproduction element 2 as provided at the secondary slider 1 b come into contact with the magnetic disk 3 as shown in FIG. 4B. Upon detection of such contact, let it go backward by a minute amount. A routine consisting of a series of these operations will be repeated. This series of operations will be referred to as “proper shift amount estimation processing” in this embodiment.
  • More specifically, this proper shift amount estimation processing is as follows. For instance, suppose the use of a piezoelectric actuator which includes its magnetic head slider 1 comprised mainly of silicon, measures 0.6 mm in length with an actuator thickness of 0.05 mm and also with a PZT piezoelectric thin-film thickness of 1 μm or more or less. If this is the case, a distal end displacement becomes about 30 nm upon application of a voltage of 10V to its electrode. If the air bearing of magnetic head slider 1 is designed so that the resulting flotation amount of magnetic head slider 1 is nominally set at 20 nm with a deviation of plus/minus 5 nm or less, then any contact with the magnetic disk 3 will no longer occur with an applied voltage of 5V, that is, with a distal end displacement of 15 nm; on the contrary, contact is available without exceptions with an applied voltage of 10V, i.e. with a distal end displacement of 30 nm.
  • Now assume that a voltage of 5V is applied to the electrode as an initial voltage (V1 of FIG. 3) at step S3. Suppose that the voltage gradually increase in potential by a fixed amount, step-like potential increase amount (δV in FIG. 3) is 0.1 V. Then, at steps S4 and S5, let the application voltage potentially increase in a step-like fashion with 0.1V being as a unit increment until the record/reproduction element 2 that also functions as the contact detector unit detects occurrence of contact. Upon actual detection of such contact, the control procedure goes to step S6 which removes a voltage component of 0.1V and then determines that the resultant application voltage obtained at this time point is adaptable for use as a proper application voltage at such radial position along the disk diameter, which will then be stored in either a built-in memory of the magnetic disk apparatus or a system-side memory.
  • The reasons for storage of the proper application voltage are as follows. First, if the proper shift amount estimation processing were done once at a time whenever a read/write command is received, then the resulting response time to such read/write command would be lengthened undesirably. Second, in view of the fact that the above-stated proper shift amount estimation processing does not come without associating a penalty of slight contact between the magnetic disk 3 and record/reproduction element 2, execution of the processing on a per-read/write command basis can result in unwanted wear or abrasion of the record/reproduction element 2.
  • It will also be preferable that the above-noted proper shift amount estimation processing be carried out at a plurality of radial positions along the diameter of the magnetic disk 3 in association with interpolation during actual read/write operations to thereby calculate for application the required proper application voltage in a way pursuant to such along-the-diameter positions.
  • The reason for this is as follows. Differences in diameter positions would result in occurrence of a difference in relative speed of the magnetic disk 3 and record/reproduction element 2 and also in difference in flotation amount of the magnetic head slider 1. To correct or this, at steps S3 through S10 of FIG. 3, the proper shift amount estimation processing is done at the disk's innermost peripheral position and outermost peripheral position to determine proper application voltages at the both positions, which are then stored in an appropriate memory. In actual read/write events, while retaining a high flotation state without any voltage application, read servo information causing the magnetic head slider 1 to move up to a location with an aimed or target track diameter; thereafter, use the both proper application voltages being prestored in the memory to effectuate linear interpolation thereby finally determining a voltage, which will then be applied to the drive unit 8.
  • It should be noted that although in the illustrative embodiment the specific method is employed for linearly interpolating the proper application voltages at the inner circumferential portion and outer circumferential portion, this may be replaced with other similar suitable methods including, but not limited to, a method of obtaining in advance proper application voltages at multiple diameter positions and then determining an actually employable proper application voltage by use of linear interpolation techniques or other available interpolation techniques.
  • One example is that proper application voltages are first estimated at the innermost peripheral position and outermost peripheral position plus an intermediate circumferential position of the magnetic disk 3, which are then subject to interpolation using a quadratic equation to thereby obtain the intended proper application voltage at any given along-the-diameter position. Another example is that while letting the proper application voltages as have been estimated at a great number of diameter positions be combined with their corresponding diameter positions into a map for storage, the actual proper application voltage is arranged so that one proper application voltage at a certain diameter position nearest to the actual diameter position is directly read out of the map for usage.
  • In the way discussed above, utilizing the proper shift amounts at a plurality of diameter positions of the magnetic disk 3 makes it possible to accurately estimate an actual proper shift amount at any given diameter position, which in turn makes it possible to eliminate machining variations of the magnetic head slider 1 and its flotation margins with the in-use environment air pressure differences being also considered therein as well as margins of flotation amount differences depending upon diameter positions, thus enabling successful achievement of high-density recordability of the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • Turning again to FIG. 3, if at step S10 it is judged that a read/write command is present, then the system control routine proceeds to step S12 which reads servo information while at the same time letting the magnetic head slider 1 move up to a target track diameter position for effectuation of reading or writing of magnetic information from or onto the magnetic disk 3. After having terminated reading or writing of such magnetic information, the application voltage being presently given to the drive unit 8 is removed away causing the secondary slider 1 b to again return to its high flotation state as shown in FIG. 4C, in which it shifts into a state with substantially no risks of contact and is set in a wait mode, wherein it is held in the state with substantially no contact risks in any events excluding read/write events. Thus it is possible to improve the lifetime by about two orders of magnitude when compared to prior art schemes for forcing the magnetic head slider 1 to always retain low flotation whenever it is over the magnetic disk 3.
  • Alternatively, if at step S12 it is judged that any read/write commands are absent for a predefined length of time period from the wait state, then the system procedure goes to step S14 which causes the magnetic head slider 1 to go into an unload state in which it escapes to the ramp 5 and thus is set in a read/write command wait mode at step S15. In this unloading event also, as in the loading event, it is preferable that the drive unit 8 is set in the neutral state with no displacement or, alternatively, it is displaced causing the record/reproduction element 2 to go far from the magnetic disk 3.
  • Although in the above-discussed control method the processing for estimation of a proper application voltage to the drive unit 8 is performed for one time upon power-up of the system to thereby modify the proper application voltage value until shut-down of the system power supply, the frequency i.e. the number of repetitions of a process per unit time and timing of such drive-unit proper application voltage estimation processing may be set up in a way which follows.
  • A first method is the one that executes the proper application voltage value estimation processing in a test/inspection line once after assembly of the magnetic disk apparatus to provide a proper voltage value, which is then stored in a memory. This approach is incapable of handling and reacting in-use environment differences such as an atmospheric pressure difference; however, it offers an ability to successfully adjust at least machining deviations.
  • A second method is the one that performs the above-noted processing upon power-up of the system and thereafter executes additional similar processing at a time whenever a prespecified length of time, e.g. one minute, is elapsed to thereby recurrently update a presently established proper application voltage value where necessary. This approach is capable of well handling and reacting both machining variations and atmospheric pressure differences and further capable of accommodating reaction to in-use environment differences such as temperature changes during usage or the like. Additionally in cases where a record/playback operation is periodically performed at specified time intervals, the aforesaid processing may be executed extensively within an extended time period until termination of the record/playback operation.
  • One modified example of the drive unit 8 is as follows. The drive unit 8 is arranged to operate as the piezoelectric actuator for causing the record/reproduction element 2 to come closer to the magnetic disk 3 and, in addition, is designed to comprise a spring-mass system to thereby also function as an acceleration detection unit capable of measuring inertia forces.
  • More specifically, letting the drive unit 8 function as the acceleration detector unit enables achievement of an additional functionality which follows. Upon detection of zero gravity of the apparatus main body 5 or alternatively application of rapid acceleration to the apparatus main body 5, it determines that the apparatus main body 5 per se is in the process of free fall. Subsequently it predicts that the apparatus main body 5 must soon drop down onto a floor with significant shock applied thereto. If this is the case, immediately interrupt application of any voltage to the drive unit 8 even when the record/reproduction element 2 is presently performing read/write operations, thus removing displacement of the drive unit 8 to thereby force the secondary slider 1 b to go into its high flotation state.
  • With such an arrangement, the distance between the magnetic disk 3 and magnetic head slider 1 may be sufficiently retained even upon occurrence of erroneous fall-down of the apparatus main body 5. Thus it becomes possible to preclude generation of damages of the head and disk otherwise occurring due to application of fall-down shocks.
  • In addition, in case the magnetic disk apparatus is operated for an extended length of time, dust particles or contaminants can deposit at the record/reproduction element 2 or therearound, which leads to risks of generation of read/write errors.
  • An approach to avoiding this contamination problem is to employ a technique using processing similar to the above-stated proper shift amount estimation processing. More specifically, upon detection of an error during record/playback operations, apply a voltage to the drive unit 8 while the magnetic head slider 1 is in its retry operation, thereby reducing or “shrinking” the distance between the record/reproduction element 2 and the magnetic disk 3. If it is detected that the record/reproduction element 2 comes into contact with the magnetic disk 3, then pull the secondary slider 1 b back. Executing such processing makes it possible to remove away contaminants being attached to the record/reproduction element 2 by such contact with the magnetic disk 3. This in turn enables improvement in lifetime of the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • When performing the above-noted cleaning operation, it will be preferable that the magnetic head slider 1 be driven to move toward a certain location out of the data recording region on the magnetic disk 3 before rendering the drive unit 8 operative. With such slider escape procedure, it becomes possible to prevent occurrence of any secondary errors even where once-removed contaminants behave to again attach onto the magnetic disk 3.
  • As has been described in detail, the present invention is such that specifically controlling the device for permitting the drive unit to gradually reduce the distance between the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk upon receipt of a command for recording or reproducing information on or from a magnetic disk and for detecting contact between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk and the drive unit for causing upon detection of such contact between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk by the detection unit the record/reproduction element to shift in position by a fixed amount to thereby increase the distance makes it possible to realize a low flotation amount corresponding to high recording density irrespective of machining variations of the individual magnetic head slider and in-use environments including but not limited to atmospheric pressure differences while simultaneously making it possible to prevent continuous physical contact between the record/reproduction element and magnetic disk, resulting in preclusion of generation of contact vibration and/or thermal asperity, which in turn enables improvement in linear recording densities and thus further increases in storage capacities of the magnetic disk apparatus while further miniaturizing the magnetic disk apparatus.
  • In addition, since the flotation amount of the record/reproduction element is kept lower for a shortened time period for execution of read/write operations with respect to the magnetic disk while letting the record/reproduction element be held in a high flotation amount state which is hardly associated with any risks of physical contact, whereby it is possible to prevent occurrence of damages of both the record/reproduction element and the magnetic disk otherwise occurring due to physical contact therebetween so that the magnetic disk apparatus may be greatly improved in durability and also in reliability thereof.

Claims (17)

1. A disk apparatus comprising:
a head slider for being floated above a disk;
a record/reproduction element provided at the head slider for recording and/or reproducing information on and/or from the disk;
a displacer for shifting the record/reproduction element to approach closer to, or retreat rather away from, the disk; and
a controller for controlling the displacer to shift the record/reproduction element in a direction to retreat farther from the disk, if the record/reproduction element has contacted the disk.
2. The disk apparatus in claim 1, wherein the controller shifts the record/reproduction element in a direction of coming-closer to the disk until the record/reproduction element contacts the disk.
3. The disk apparatus in claim 1, wherein the displacer is a piezoelectric actuator.
4. The disk apparatus in claim 3, wherein the piezoelectric actuator detects the contact by monitoring a direct current voltage as applied to the piezoelectric actuator's electrode.
5. The disk apparatus in claim 1, wherein the record/reproduction element is an MR element.
6. The disk apparatus in claim 5, wherein the MR element detects the contact by utilizing a thermal asperity phenomenon.
7. The disk apparatus in claim 6, comprising:
a circuit for handling a signal output from the MR element, subdivided into two parallel circuits, one of which is used for reading a signal with a frequency corresponding to inherent magnetic information, and the other of which is used for detecting a signal with its frequency corresponding to a thermal asperity.
8. The disk apparatus in claim 1, comprising:
a strain gage to detect the contact by detecting a frictional force between the strain gage and the disk.
9. The disk apparatus in claim 1, comprising:
a detector to detect the contact by acoustic emission methodology.
10. A disk apparatus comprising:
a head slider for being floated above a disk;
a record/reproduction element provided at the head slider for recording and/or reproducing information on and/or from the disk;
a displacer for shifting the record/reproduction element to approach closer to, or retreat rather away from, the disk;
a detector for detecting acceleration; and
a controller to control the displacer to shift the record/reproduction element in a direction to retreat farther from, the disk, if the detector detects zero gravity or rapid acceleration.
11. The disk apparatus in claim 10, wherein the displacer is designed to comprise a spring-mass system to operate as the detector.
12. The disk apparatus in claim 10, wherein the displacer is a piezoelectric actuator.
13. A control method of a disk apparatus, comprising:
shifting a record/reproduction element to approach closer to a disk;
detecting contact between the record/reproduction element and the disk;
shifting the record/reproduction element to retreat rather away from the disk;
storing a resultant shift amount in a memory.
14. The control method in claim 13, comprising:
shifting the record/reproduction element to the resultant shift amount.
15. The control method in claim 1, wherein the detecting includes a plurality of detecting at the different positions on the disk.
16. The control method in claim 15; wherein
the different positions include the innermost periphery position, and the outermost periphery position.
17. The control method in claim 15, comprising:
a proper shift amount at the position the record/ reproduction element locates according to the resultant of the plurality of detecting.
US11/605,998 2000-11-06 2006-11-30 Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same Abandoned US20070070550A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/605,998 US20070070550A1 (en) 2000-11-06 2006-11-30 Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same

Applications Claiming Priority (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP2000337510A JP3706015B2 (en) 2000-11-06 2000-11-06 Magnetic disk drive and control method thereof
JP2000-337510 2000-11-06
US09/929,128 US6798605B2 (en) 2000-11-06 2001-08-15 Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same
US10/920,343 US7209309B2 (en) 2000-11-06 2004-08-18 Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same
US11/605,998 US20070070550A1 (en) 2000-11-06 2006-11-30 Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/920,343 Continuation US7209309B2 (en) 2000-11-06 2004-08-18 Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20070070550A1 true US20070070550A1 (en) 2007-03-29

Family

ID=18812881

Family Applications (3)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US09/929,128 Expired - Fee Related US6798605B2 (en) 2000-11-06 2001-08-15 Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same
US10/920,343 Expired - Fee Related US7209309B2 (en) 2000-11-06 2004-08-18 Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same
US11/605,998 Abandoned US20070070550A1 (en) 2000-11-06 2006-11-30 Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same

Family Applications Before (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US09/929,128 Expired - Fee Related US6798605B2 (en) 2000-11-06 2001-08-15 Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same
US10/920,343 Expired - Fee Related US7209309B2 (en) 2000-11-06 2004-08-18 Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (3) US6798605B2 (en)
JP (1) JP3706015B2 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20070253092A1 (en) * 2006-04-28 2007-11-01 Fujitsu Limited Information-recording/reproducing apparatus and method of detecting the gap between a head and a recording medium
US20100245518A1 (en) * 2009-03-26 2010-09-30 Seiko Epson Corporation Piezoelectric motor, liquid ejecting apparatus and timepiece
US20110122533A1 (en) * 2009-11-24 2011-05-26 Tdk Corporation Magnetic disk device having mechanism for detecting projections on recording medium

Families Citing this family (43)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP3706015B2 (en) * 2000-11-06 2005-10-12 株式会社日立グローバルストレージテクノロジーズ Magnetic disk drive and control method thereof
US7538983B1 (en) * 2003-07-29 2009-05-26 Meyer Dallas W Micropositioner recording head for a magnetic storage device
US7072136B2 (en) * 2003-09-25 2006-07-04 Hitachi Global Storage Technologies Netherlands B.V. Method and apparatus for dynamically establishing pitch static attitude in hard disk drive
US7355814B1 (en) * 2004-09-02 2008-04-08 Maxtor Corporation Disk texture located in load/unload zone of disk for cleaning contamination and disk lubricant from head ABS surface
US7292407B2 (en) * 2004-09-30 2007-11-06 Hitachi Global Storage Technologies Netherlands B.V. Disk drive with support structure for disk-vibration capacitive sensors
US20060146437A1 (en) * 2004-12-30 2006-07-06 Andrei Khurshudov Apparatus for detecting contact between a read-write head and the accessed disk surface in a hard disk drive
US7813541B2 (en) 2005-02-28 2010-10-12 Applied Materials South East Asia Pte. Ltd. Method and apparatus for detecting defects in wafers
US7804993B2 (en) * 2005-02-28 2010-09-28 Applied Materials South East Asia Pte. Ltd. Method and apparatus for detecting defects in wafers including alignment of the wafer images so as to induce the same smear in all images
JP2006252593A (en) * 2005-03-08 2006-09-21 Hitachi Global Storage Technologies Netherlands Bv Magnetic disk device, control method and manufacturing method thereof
US8310779B2 (en) 2005-04-27 2012-11-13 Seagate Technology Llc Head assembly having a sensing element
US7564649B2 (en) * 2005-04-27 2009-07-21 Seagate Technology Llc Head assembly having a sensing element to provide feedback for head-media instability
JP4128192B2 (en) * 2005-07-26 2008-07-30 Tdk株式会社 Manufacturing method of thin film magnetic head
US7525751B2 (en) * 2005-11-14 2009-04-28 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Hard disk drive adapted to detect free-fall and perform emergency parking of read/write head prior to impact
JP2007184023A (en) * 2006-01-04 2007-07-19 Hitachi Global Storage Technologies Netherlands Bv Disk drive and its control method
US7593188B2 (en) * 2006-03-31 2009-09-22 Hitachi Global Storage Technologies Netherlands, B.V. Low protrusion compensation air bearing
US7630157B1 (en) 2006-04-13 2009-12-08 Honda Motor Co., Ltd. Method of selecting an audio source
KR100782299B1 (en) * 2006-05-02 2007-12-06 삼성전자주식회사 Hard disk drive, method for controlling FOD voltage thereof, and computer readable recording media recording the method
US20070297080A1 (en) * 2006-06-23 2007-12-27 Lee Sungchang Apparatus and method for bending a slider to create rounded corners on its trailing edge in a hard disk drive
US20080037933A1 (en) * 2006-08-14 2008-02-14 Negevtech, Ltd. Speckle reduction using a fiber bundle and light guide
JP2008135132A (en) * 2006-11-29 2008-06-12 Showa Denko Kk Method of manufacturing hard disk drive, method for adjusting floating height of magnetic head, and hard disk drive
US7881017B2 (en) * 2006-12-27 2011-02-01 Hitachi Global Storage Technologies, Netherlands, B.V. Fly height control apparatus and electrical coupling thereto for supporting a magnetic recording transducer
US7929249B2 (en) * 2007-03-28 2011-04-19 Seagate Technology Llc Spring loaded head for reduced fly height and tracking control
US9202495B2 (en) 2007-05-01 2015-12-01 Seagate Technology Llc Method and apparatus for detecting proximity contact between a transducer and a medium
US7440220B1 (en) 2007-05-29 2008-10-21 Western Digital (Fremont), Llc Method for defining a touch-down power for head having a flying height actuator
US7436620B1 (en) 2007-05-29 2008-10-14 Western Digital (Fremont), Llc Method for selecting an electrical power to be applied to a head-based flying height actuator
KR20090005620A (en) * 2007-07-09 2009-01-14 삼성전자주식회사 Near-field optical disc apparatus and focus pull-in method
US7551390B1 (en) 2007-08-21 2009-06-23 Western Digital Technologies, Inc. Disk drive to characterize misaligned servo wedges
US7583466B2 (en) * 2007-11-15 2009-09-01 Western Digital (Fremont), Llc Disk drive determining operating fly height by detecting head disk contact from disk rotation time
US20090128959A1 (en) * 2007-11-20 2009-05-21 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Self PSA adjustment using thermal adapter on suspension for improving takeoff in hot/wet environment
US7839595B1 (en) 2008-01-25 2010-11-23 Western Digital Technologies, Inc. Feed forward compensation for fly height control in a disk drive
US7630162B2 (en) 2008-02-04 2009-12-08 Western Digital Technologies, Inc. Disk drive servoing off of first head while determining fly height for second head
US8482873B1 (en) 2008-02-18 2013-07-09 Western Digital Technologies, Inc. Disk drive employing pulse width modulation of head control signal
JP2010123231A (en) * 2008-11-21 2010-06-03 Hitachi Global Storage Technologies Netherlands Bv Disk drive and method for controlling clearance
US7675707B1 (en) 2008-11-21 2010-03-09 Western Digital Technologies, Inc. Disk drive employing repeatable disturbance compensation for fly height control
US8934192B1 (en) 2008-11-24 2015-01-13 Western Digital Technologies, Inc. Disk drive determining operating fly height by detecting head disk contact from read signal amplitude variance
JP4923092B2 (en) * 2009-10-15 2012-04-25 株式会社日立製作所 Magnetic recording medium initialization device
US8531799B2 (en) * 2009-10-22 2013-09-10 Seagate Technology Llc Head gimbal assembly with contact detection
US8059357B1 (en) 2010-03-18 2011-11-15 Western Digital Technologies, Inc. Disk drive adjusting fly height when calibrating head/disk contact
US8320069B1 (en) 2010-03-18 2012-11-27 Western Digital Technologies, Inc. Disk drive detecting positive correlation in fly height measurements
US8184394B2 (en) * 2010-04-20 2012-05-22 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Transducer head assemblies and modules
US7916420B1 (en) 2010-05-14 2011-03-29 Western Digital Technologies, Inc. Disk drive employing comb filter for repeatable fly height compensation
US8300338B1 (en) 2010-09-30 2012-10-30 Western Digital Technologies, Inc. Disk drive correlating different fly height measurements to verify disk warpage
US8767345B2 (en) * 2011-04-12 2014-07-01 HGST Netherlands B.V. Magnetic head having a contact detection sensor

Citations (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4605977A (en) * 1983-12-14 1986-08-12 Sperry Corporation Air bearing head displacement sensor and positioner
US4853810A (en) * 1985-11-19 1989-08-01 International Business Machines Corporation Method and apparatus for controlling the flying height of the head in a magnetic storage unit
US5021906A (en) * 1989-10-31 1991-06-04 International Business Machines Corporation Programmable air bearing slider including magnetic read/write element
US5153785A (en) * 1988-09-19 1992-10-06 Hitachi, Ltd. Apparatus for measuring the clearance of recording transducer, and a recorder using the apparatus, and a method of controlling the recorder
US5335126A (en) * 1991-05-23 1994-08-02 Hitachi, Ltd. Magnetic disk device without slider and having magnetic head mounted directly on magnetic head support including integral gas pressure generating structure
US5377058A (en) * 1992-12-31 1994-12-27 International Business Machines Corporation Fly height servo control of read/write head suspension
US5423207A (en) * 1993-12-27 1995-06-13 International Business Machines Corporation Advanced PZT glide head design and implementation for a small slider
US5991113A (en) * 1997-04-07 1999-11-23 Seagate Technology, Inc. Slider with temperature responsive transducer positioning
US6140814A (en) * 1998-02-10 2000-10-31 Seagate Technology, Inc. Disk glide testing with zone detection
US6236527B1 (en) * 1997-06-24 2001-05-22 International Business Machines Corporation Disk drive with actuator load/unload controller
US6351341B1 (en) * 1993-12-31 2002-02-26 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Apparatus and method for providing axial control outside impact resistance of a hard disk drive to maintain a constant flying height of a head by control of a suspension
US6366416B1 (en) * 2000-02-03 2002-04-02 Seagate Technology Llc Glide test head with active fly height control
US6501625B1 (en) * 1999-06-29 2002-12-31 Hutchinson Technology Incorporated Disk drive suspension with multi-layered piezoelectric actuator controlled gram load
US6570730B1 (en) * 1999-06-09 2003-05-27 Seagate Technology, Llc. Shear-based transducer for HDD read/write element height control
US6735036B1 (en) * 2000-01-13 2004-05-11 Seagate Technology Llc Control of data sensor fly height
US6757124B2 (en) * 1999-12-03 2004-06-29 Seagate Technology Llc Actuator system for a disc drive using a piezoelectric assembly
US6798605B2 (en) * 2000-11-06 2004-09-28 Hitachi, Ltd. Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same
US6943189B2 (en) * 1994-09-13 2005-09-13 G.D. Searle & Co. Combination therapy employing ileal bile acid transport inhibiting benzothiepines and HMG CO-A reductase inhibitors
US6952330B1 (en) * 1999-06-11 2005-10-04 Seagate Technology Llc Dynamic flying attitude control using augmented gimbal

Family Cites Families (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS62250570A (en) 1986-04-22 1987-10-31 インタ−ナショナル ビジネス マシ−ンズ コ−ポレ−ション Converter for memory
JPH03173981A (en) 1989-11-30 1991-07-29 Sony Corp Disk device
JPH0534781A (en) 1991-07-31 1993-02-12 Canon Inc Power dividing mechanism
JPH0944979A (en) 1995-07-31 1997-02-14 Toshiba Corp Disk recording and reproducing device and head collision detecting device to be applied to the same device
JPH0991911A (en) 1995-09-20 1997-04-04 Toshiba Corp Carriage control device of disc-recording/reproducing apparatus and head-floating control method applied to disc-recording/reproducing apparatus
US5943189A (en) * 1996-12-05 1999-08-24 Seagate Technology, Inc. Piezoelectric engageable slider and slider microactuator

Patent Citations (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4605977A (en) * 1983-12-14 1986-08-12 Sperry Corporation Air bearing head displacement sensor and positioner
US4853810A (en) * 1985-11-19 1989-08-01 International Business Machines Corporation Method and apparatus for controlling the flying height of the head in a magnetic storage unit
US5153785A (en) * 1988-09-19 1992-10-06 Hitachi, Ltd. Apparatus for measuring the clearance of recording transducer, and a recorder using the apparatus, and a method of controlling the recorder
US5021906A (en) * 1989-10-31 1991-06-04 International Business Machines Corporation Programmable air bearing slider including magnetic read/write element
US5335126A (en) * 1991-05-23 1994-08-02 Hitachi, Ltd. Magnetic disk device without slider and having magnetic head mounted directly on magnetic head support including integral gas pressure generating structure
US5377058A (en) * 1992-12-31 1994-12-27 International Business Machines Corporation Fly height servo control of read/write head suspension
US5423207A (en) * 1993-12-27 1995-06-13 International Business Machines Corporation Advanced PZT glide head design and implementation for a small slider
US6351341B1 (en) * 1993-12-31 2002-02-26 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Apparatus and method for providing axial control outside impact resistance of a hard disk drive to maintain a constant flying height of a head by control of a suspension
US6943189B2 (en) * 1994-09-13 2005-09-13 G.D. Searle & Co. Combination therapy employing ileal bile acid transport inhibiting benzothiepines and HMG CO-A reductase inhibitors
US5991113A (en) * 1997-04-07 1999-11-23 Seagate Technology, Inc. Slider with temperature responsive transducer positioning
US6236527B1 (en) * 1997-06-24 2001-05-22 International Business Machines Corporation Disk drive with actuator load/unload controller
US6140814A (en) * 1998-02-10 2000-10-31 Seagate Technology, Inc. Disk glide testing with zone detection
US6570730B1 (en) * 1999-06-09 2003-05-27 Seagate Technology, Llc. Shear-based transducer for HDD read/write element height control
US6952330B1 (en) * 1999-06-11 2005-10-04 Seagate Technology Llc Dynamic flying attitude control using augmented gimbal
US6501625B1 (en) * 1999-06-29 2002-12-31 Hutchinson Technology Incorporated Disk drive suspension with multi-layered piezoelectric actuator controlled gram load
US6757124B2 (en) * 1999-12-03 2004-06-29 Seagate Technology Llc Actuator system for a disc drive using a piezoelectric assembly
US6735036B1 (en) * 2000-01-13 2004-05-11 Seagate Technology Llc Control of data sensor fly height
US6366416B1 (en) * 2000-02-03 2002-04-02 Seagate Technology Llc Glide test head with active fly height control
US6798605B2 (en) * 2000-11-06 2004-09-28 Hitachi, Ltd. Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20070253092A1 (en) * 2006-04-28 2007-11-01 Fujitsu Limited Information-recording/reproducing apparatus and method of detecting the gap between a head and a recording medium
US7365931B2 (en) * 2006-04-28 2008-04-29 Fujitsu Limited Information-recording/reproducing apparatus and method of detecting the gap between a head and a recording medium
US20100245518A1 (en) * 2009-03-26 2010-09-30 Seiko Epson Corporation Piezoelectric motor, liquid ejecting apparatus and timepiece
US20110122533A1 (en) * 2009-11-24 2011-05-26 Tdk Corporation Magnetic disk device having mechanism for detecting projections on recording medium
US8144412B2 (en) * 2009-11-24 2012-03-27 Tdk Corporation Magnetic disk device having mechanism for detecting projections on recording medium

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JP3706015B2 (en) 2005-10-12
US7209309B2 (en) 2007-04-24
US20020054447A1 (en) 2002-05-09
US20050013057A1 (en) 2005-01-20
US6798605B2 (en) 2004-09-28
JP2002150735A (en) 2002-05-24

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7209309B2 (en) Magnetic disk apparatus and method of controlling the same
US6704158B2 (en) Shear mode multilayered collocated micro-actuator for dual-stage servo controllers in disk drives
KR100255641B1 (en) Head flying height control method and apparatus for hard disk drive
US5777815A (en) Disk drive with shock detection based on thermoresistive signal from magnetoresistive head
KR100230550B1 (en) Adaptive and in-situ load/unload damage estimation and compensation
US5864241A (en) Magnetic transducer with wear indicator in a magnetic data storage system
US8035913B2 (en) Parking ramp for hard disk drive
US6005736A (en) Method and means for active shock protection in a magnetic disk storage device using electrostatic forces
US5982568A (en) Apparatus for detecting error in magnetic head for use in disk storage system
TWI223237B (en) Sensor system for a disc device having suspension floating pick-up head
JP2003308670A (en) Magnetic disk unit
US7177111B2 (en) System and method for optimizing track spacing across a stroke
US6933735B2 (en) Ramp arrangement and method for measuring the position of an actuator in a rotating media data storage device
JP2007200467A (en) Magnetic disk device and magnetic disk control method
US6760195B2 (en) Intrinsically excitable actuator assembly
US7440218B2 (en) Charge remover for magnetic disk
JP2003303402A (en) Information recording device
KR100640656B1 (en) Method for detection and recovery of head lube pick-up and appartus thereof
JPS5834029B2 (en) Head crush prevention device
JPS63282956A (en) Storage device
JPS63276758A (en) Storage device
JP2008204498A (en) Magnetic disk device
JPH09320175A (en) Impact-detecting mechanism for magnetic disk device
JPH02192083A (en) Magnetic disk device
JPH04360082A (en) Magnetic disk device

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION