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Some Tribological Aspects of the Hard Disk Drive Head-Disk Interface for Quasi Contact Conditions: Contact Detection, Lubricant Modulation and Wear

Abstract

The magnetic recording hard disk drive has been one of the most important storage strategies since 1956. Among all storage solutions, hard disk drives possess the unrivaled advantageous combination of storage capacity, speed, reliability and cost over optical strategies and flash memory. Unlike other storage solutions, hard disk drives utilize a mechanical interface to perform the magnetic read/write process, and therefore its success relies heavily on the stability of the head-disk interface (HDI) which is composed of a magnetic transducer carried by an air bearing slider, an air gap of a few nanometers thick, and a disk surface coated with multiple layers of molecularly-thin films. This dissertation addresses the physics of the interface in terms of contact detection, lubricant modulation and wear.

Contact detection serves as one of the core requirements in HDI reliability. The writing process demands a strict spacing control, and its accuracy is based on a proper choice of a contact reference from slider dynamics and therefore the heads’ signal. While functioning in a real drive the only feedback signal comes from sensors neighboring the read-write transducer, and a high speed head-disk contact is associated with complex structural responses inherent in an air-bearing/suspension/lubricant system that may not be well explained solely by magnetic signals. Other than studying the slider-disk interaction at a strong interplay stage, this dissertation tackles the contact detection by performing component-level experimental and simulation studies focusing on the dynamics of air-bearing sliders at disk proximity. The slider dynamics detected using laser Doppler vibrometry indicates that a typical head-disk contact can be defined early as in-plane motions of the slider, which is followed by vertical motions at a more engaged contact. This finding confirms and is in parallel with one of the detection schemes used in commercial drives by magnetic signals.

Lubricated disk surfaces play an important role in contact characteristics. As the nature of contact involves two mating surfaces, the modulation of disk lubricant films should be investigated to further understand the head-disk contact in addition to the slider dynamics. In this dissertation, the lubricant modulation is studied under various contact conditions with reference to slider dynamics. It is found that lubricant modulation can be directly associated with the slider’s dynamics in a location specific way, and its evolution is likely to affect the slider’s stable back-off fly-height as the contact is retracted. In addition to modulations at contact proximities, the lubricant response to passive flying and continuous contacting conditions are also addressed for different lubricant types and thicknesses. By integrating the observations from slider dynamics and lubricant modulations, we can establish an insightful understanding towards the transition from flying to the onset of contact.

Head wear is also a concern when an erroneous contact detection occurs or imperfections from disk surface exists. Typically a protective diamond-like carbon (DLC) layer of thickness 1-2 nm is coated over the area of the reader/writer shields, and this film loss poses a threat to long term reliability. In this dissertation, in-situ methods of monitoring head wear is proposed in two ways. One method is to evaluate the touchdown power variations as a measure of spacing increase by DLC wear, which was verified by using Auger Electron Spectroscopy, and the other method studies the temperature contact sensor response to gauge mechanical wear. The later possesses the advantage of detecting wear without going into actual contact, but it may be affected by the location difference between the touchdown sensor and wear area.

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