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1.
Recently, it is found experimentally that the flying height of an air bearing slider is influenced by the lubricant on the disk. It is explained as the air molecules are entrapped in the lubricant under the slider due to the high air bearing pressure, causing the reduction in air bearing force, and hence, the flying height decreases accordingly. This paper employs both experiment and simulation to study such a phenomenon. First, the flying height vibration signals of a slider are detected by a laser Doppler vibrometer, on both lubed and delubed disks. It is observed that the heater touchdown power of the slider is approximately 3.4 mW more for delubed disk than the lubed disk. It suggests that the lubricant may cause the flying height lower. Second, a new model is developed to describe the pressure drop due to the air entrapment. Next, simulations are conducted on three different slider designs based on the new model. Flying height drops are investigated due to the air entrapment. The simulation results are compared with published experimental results, and good correlations are observed for the values of the parameters alpha and beta selected. Finally, the effects of solubility on the flying height are discussed, and the flying height drops are evaluated. It is suggested that the slider design must consider the phenomenon to get more accurate simulation results on flying height.  相似文献   

2.
In this article, we explore the physical mechanisms for lubricant migration on recording head slider surfaces and how this migration leads to increased slider–disk spacing during disk drive operations. This is done using both a new experimental methodology, called the “droplet stress test,” and through simulation. In our simulations, we compare the air shear-induced lubricant migration modeled either as viscous flow of a continuum liquid film with zero slip or as wind driven slippage of molecules across the surface. The experimental data are best fitted using the viscous flow model to determine an effective viscosity for the sub-nanometer thick lubricant films. This effective viscosity tends to be somewhat less than the lubricant bulk viscosity due to air shear promoting the slippage of lubricant molecules across the surface. Our experimental results also indicate that the potential spacing increase from the pickup of disk lubricant on the slider is limited by the mobile fraction of the dewetting thickness of the lubricant film on the slider.  相似文献   

3.
Lubricant accumulation on the slider’s surface of a hard disk drive (HDD) has a detrimental effect on its read/write performance. Air flow through the slider-disk clearance moves some of the lubricant from the air-bearing surface (ABS) toward the slider’s lateral walls where it accumulates. In this article, we show by numerical simulations that the lubricant accumulation characteristics are strongly dependent on the slider’s flying height, skew angle and ABS design. The lubricant flow on the slider’s surface is quantified numerically. Air shear stress, air pressure and disjoining pressure are used as driving forces in the simulations. The lubricant thickness profile and volume evolution are calculated for two states of the HDD: operating and at rest. In the first state, lubricant is driven by air shear stress toward the trailing edge of the slider where it accumulates on the deposit end. In the second state, lubricant from the deposit end flows back into the ABS driven by the action of disjoining pressure. Lubricant accumulation on the four lateral walls of the slider is taken into account. The lateral walls are unfolded to study the flow using a two-dimensional lubrication model. The effects of flying height, skew angle and slider design on the accumulation removal of lubricant from the ABS are determined for the two states of the drive.  相似文献   

4.
The thermal flying height control (TFC), aka dynamic fly height (DFH), technique has been recently used in the head disk interface of hard disk drives to obtain a lower head-media spacing. The air bearing cooling effect, i.e., the heat conduction between the slider and the air film, has been incorporated in the numerical thermal–mechanical simulation of the slider’s static performance. However, the heating effect of the viscous dissipation of the air flow has not been considered yet. In this article, both effects are included in the simulation of a flying slider with its flying height controlled by thermal protrusion, and different models for the air bearing cooling are used to obtain the slider’s static flying attitudes. The simulation results directly show that the air bearing cooling is dominant compared with the viscous heating. All of the air bearing cooling models, including a recent one that considers the dependence of the air molecular mean free path on the air temperature, have simulation results close to each other. The largest relative difference in the simulated flying height is less than 9% even when the transducer flying height is lowered to below 2 nm.  相似文献   

5.
One of the challenges in heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR) is the creation of write-induced head contamination at the near-field transducer. A possible mechanism for the formation of this contamination is the transfer of lubricant from the disk to the slider (lubricant pickup) due to temperature-driven evaporation/condensation and/or mechanical interactions. Here we develop a continuum model that predicts the head-to-disk lubricant transfer during HAMR writing. The model simultaneously determines the thermocapillary shear stress-driven deformation and evaporation of the lubricant film on the disk, the convection and diffusion of the vapor phase lubricant in the air bearing and the evolution of the condensed lubricant film on the slider. The model also considers molecular interactions between disk–lubricant, slider–lubricant and lubricant–lubricant in terms of disjoining pressure. We investigate the effect of media temperature, head temperature and initial lubricant thickness on the lubricant transfer process. We find that the transfer mechanism is initially largely thermally driven. The rate of slider lubricant accumulation can be significantly reduced by decreasing the media temperature. However, as the amount of lubricant accumulation increases with time, a change in the transfer mechanism occurs from thermally driven to molecular interactions driven. A similar change in transfer mechanism is predicted as the head–disk spacing is reduced. There exists a critical value of head lubricant thickness and a critical head–disk spacing at which dewetting of the disk lubricant begins, leading to enhanced pickup.  相似文献   

6.
The relationship between slider and lubricant becomes increasingly important as the mechanical spacing between slider and disk is reduced to satisfy the demand for higher areal density. At a reduced flying height, the slider easily contacts the lubricant, which can cause slider instability. This study analyzed slider dynamics to improve the head–disk reliability in the unsteady proximity condition, considering bias voltages between the slider, disk, and lubricant. Force–distance curves were measured using atomic force microscopy to investigate changes in lubricant performance induced by an applied voltage. Additionally, the touch-down power and take-off power were measured under various applied voltage conditions. Experiments were carried out to estimate slider instability as a function of charged disk and slider conditions, to improve the slider dynamics in the unsteady proximity condition. The effect of the bias voltage induced by a voltage applied to the lubricant was carefully examined to accurately understand slider dynamics. The relationship between the lubricant behavior and the applied voltage was investigated; the voltage applied to the disk was more influential in improving slider dynamics. Consequently, the effects of bias voltage and lubricant, as induced by a charged disk, should be considered when analyzing slider dynamics to improve head–disk interface reliability in an unsteady proximity condition.  相似文献   

7.
A model for lubricant transfer from a rotating magnetic recording disk to a magnetic recording slider is developed using molecular dynamics simulation. The combined effect of disk velocity and local air-bearing pressure changes on lubricant transfer is investigated. The simulation results indicate that local pressure changes in the absence of disk circumferential velocity can cause lubricant redistribution on the disk, while local pressure changes on a moving disk can result in lubricant transfer from the disk to the slider. The amount of lubricant transferred from the disk to the slider and the lubricant buildup on the disk are a function of the local pressure change and disk velocity. The amount of lubricant transferred from the disk to the slider and the height of lubricant buildup on the disk surface decrease with an increase in the number of functional groups of the disk, a decrease in the local pressure change, and a decrease in the disk circumferential velocity.  相似文献   

8.
磁盘速度与容纳系数对硬盘气膜静态特性的影响   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
随着硬盘(Hard disk drives,HDDs)中浮动块与磁盘间飞行高度的降低,气体分子与磁头/磁盘间的交互作用逐渐增强,磁盘速度及容纳系数(Accommodation coefficients, ACs)对气膜承载特性的影响越来越重要。采用一种无网格法—最小二乘有限差分(Least square finite difference, LSFD)法,对简化的分子气膜润滑(Molecular gas film lubrication, MGL)方程进行求解,研究了磁盘速度、磁头和磁盘表面ACs对HDDs超低飞高气膜静态特性的影响。数值结果表明:对称性分子交互作用时,磁头和磁盘表面ACs对气膜静态特性的影响明显;非对称性分子交互作用时,磁盘表面ACs对气膜静态特性的影响较大,而磁头/浮动块表面ACs的影响较小;不同ACs条件下,随着磁盘速度或最小飞行高度的增加,压力幅值点位置的变化较均匀。  相似文献   

9.
Lubricant transfer from disk to slider and lubricant accumulation on slider are very important in designing a stable slider-disk interface of ultra-low spacing. In this article, the effects of different parameters on the lubricant transfer and accumulation are studied and the reasons behind the effects are explained. Furthermore, the time for the lubricant transfer to reach steady state is estimated. It is found that lubricant molecular weight plays a dominant role in the lubricant transfer and accumulation. Lubricant transfer and accumulation decrease dramatically with the increase in lubricant molecular weight. Lubricant transfer also strongly depends on lubricant thickness and bonding ratio on disk surface. A thinner lubricant and higher lubricant bonding ratio on disk surface reduce lubricant transfer obviously, which results in less lubricant accumulation. A diamond-like-carbon (DLC) overcoat of low adsorption area density on slider surface can reduce lubricant transfer and accumulation, especially for lubricant of low molecular weight. Lubricant accumulation increases with disk velocity and increases slightly with the decrease in slider flying height. Lubricant accumulation can be reduced by minimizing the area of slider pad. Lubricant transfer and accumulation become worse at higher ambient temperature. It takes seconds for lubricant of low molecular weight to reach steady transferred thickness and hours for lubricant of high molecular weight to reach the steady state.  相似文献   

10.
Active-head sliders with a unimorph piezoelectric actuator for flying height control were experimentally evaluated. It was found that the stroke of the actuator is 1.3 to 1.5 nm/V without flying over the disk. The adjustment amount of flying height is about 1.4 nm/V when the active-head slider is flying over the disk. It was found that flying height could be reduced and decrease from 24 to 10 nm by applying 10 V to the actuator under flying condition. Both the air pressure generated at the active-pad and the impact pressure due to the head/disk contact must be taken into account for precise control of flying height.  相似文献   

11.
With the decrease in slider flying height, slider flying instability caused by slider–disk interactions is becoming a big concern. Novel technology has to be employed to further improve our understandings about slider–disk interaction. In this work, a slider flying height-attitude testing (3D) system was employed to study slider–disk interaction during a slider landing process to demonstrate its capability for the application. It is shown that great details of slider–disk interactions and subtle variations of the slider flying attitude during the landing process can be revealed with the 3D system. Slider dynamic flying height and attitude (pitch and roll angles) during the landing process can be determined from the data recorded in one test. Furthermore, analysis in frequency domain can be done not only on flying height, but also on pitch and roll angles directly. It is found that the slider landing process can have different stages during which slider performance and characteristics of slider–disk interaction are different.  相似文献   

12.
The temperature inside modern hard disk drives (HDDs) can become as high as 100°C during operation. The effects of such high temperatures on the slider’s flying attitude and the shear forces on the slider and the disk are investigated in this paper. General formulae for the shear forces are derived, and the generalized Reynolds equation is modified to take into account the temperature effect on the mean free path of air as well as the air viscosity. Numerical results are obtained for two different air bearing surface designs. It is shown that the temperature changes result in non-negligible changes in the slider’s flying height and the shear forces. These changes could further induce changes in the deformation and instability of the lubricant layer and thereby affect the reliability of the HDDs.  相似文献   

13.
Lubricants on thin-film disks have large effects on head–disk interface characteristics. They reduce head and disk wear while thick lubricant film increases friction force between them and lubricant transfer onto head surfaces. Therefore, we have to know the lubricant behavior in many cases. Lubricant depletion due to disk rotation has been studied very well. However, the effects of flying heads have not been understood systematically until now. We developed a simulation program to numerically calculate the change in lubricant thickness under a flying head on a thin-film magnetic disk. The program included the effects of centrifugal force, shear stress from the air due to disk rotation with a flying head, and the effect of lubricant diffusion. We first calculated a change in lubricant thickness under a flying head using previously published data without the effect of diffusion. Calculated results showed fairly good agreement with the published experimental data with very high peaks on both sides of the flying head rails. With the introduction of diffusion effects, these peaks became moderate and the calculated result agreed very well with the experimental data. The coefficient of diffusion obtained to best fit to the experimental data was close to that reported in a literature. We analyzed the effects of air shear stress patterns under flying head on the change in lubricant distribution. We found that the side shapes had large effect on the distribution. We also confirmed that our program could calculate lubricant depletion on rotating disks without a flying head.  相似文献   

14.
When the spacing between the slider and lubricant in a hard disk drive decreases to less than 5 nm, the effect of the intermolecular force between these two surfaces can no longer be ignored. This effect on the lubricant distribution at the near-contact head disk interface is investigated via molecular dynamics method. In this study, the lubricant is confined between a smooth disk surface and a rough slider surface represented as a partially cosinusoidal wave. The simulation results reveal that the intermolecular force-induced meniscus formation at the near-contact head disk interface is strongly sensitive to the slider-to-disk separation, lubricant film thickness and the asperity shape (or roughness) of the slider. The attractive van der Waals forces between the slider and lubricant become weaker with increasing slider-to-disk separation and asperity mid-height, but decreasing lubricant film thickness and asperity mid-width. The Hamaker theory application to van der Waals interactions is also introduced to verify the molecular dynamics simulation. It is found that the critical separation, below which the lubricant will lose its stability to form a meniscus, increases approximately linearly with the lubricant film thickness, for slider surfaces with or without roughness both in the molecular dynamics simulation and Hamaker theory application to van der Waals interactions. Moreover, it is observed that the critical separation between a smooth disk and rough slider surface will slightly decrease when the asperity mid-height increases. The same phenomenon is observed when the asperity mid-width reduces.  相似文献   

15.
In this study, the wear properties of a magnetic head slider on disks lubricated by ultra-thin perfluoropolyether (PFPE) lubricants with different molecular weights were evaluated by the continuous sliding of magnetic head sliders using the slider contact by the dynamic flying height control. Two types of PFPE lubricants (Z-tetraol and D-4OH) with different molecular weights were evaluated. Results show that the slider wear depended on the coverage of the lubricant film; i.e., the lubricant film with sufficient coverage reduced slider wear. The lubricant film with a low molecular weight (low-Mw), including a lubricant material with a Fomblin and Demnum main chain, exhibited better coverage on a diamond-like carbon surface. Sliders with a low-Mw lubricant film showed less wear than those of a high molecular weight (high-Mw), and the depletion of the low-Mw lubricant film was less than that of the high-Mw lubricant film.  相似文献   

16.
The accumulation of contaminants on the slider surface is of paramount importance in hard disk drives because only an ultra small amount of contaminants on the slider surface will cause catastrophic failures for hard disk drives with a spacing between the slider and the hard disk as small as 10 nm, which will be reduced further in the near future to about 5–6 nm in order to attain a recording density of 100 Gbit/in2. In this paper the pumping effect of the slider is proposed as one mechanism of the contaminant accumulation on the slider. Analysis of the pumping effect is conducted by considering the adsorption process and the shear flow process on the slider surface in terms of the continuum. It is found that the pumping effect can be divided into two different classifications depending on the value of the parameter λ which is the ratio of the maximum shear flow of the adsorbed film to the maximum adsorption amount: the shear flow rate-controlling pumping effect for λ < 0.1 and the adsorption rate-controlling pumping effect for λ > 0.4. For the shear flow rate-controlling effect, the accumulation rate of the contaminant is directly proportional to the disk surface velocity, while inversely proportional to the flying height of the slider. An erratum to this article can be found at .  相似文献   

17.
The authors propose a novel slider design. The tri-pad slider has three separate air bearing surfaces, one in the front of the slider and the other two in the back of the slider. This design permits the optimization of the air bearing stiffness and flying attitude without changing the minimum flying height. It can minimize the effect of skew angle on the flying height, and offers ample room for a larger size thin film head element. Samples were fabricated and flying characteristics at several velocities, as well as the dynamic flying stability, were investigated.  相似文献   

18.
磁头与磁盘的特征高度目前已经下降到纳米量级,在此微小间隙下,气体表现出明显的稀薄效应特征。建立适用于纳米间隙下的控制方程,并根据方程特点采用特殊处理方法成功对控制方程进行数值求解,采用数值分析和实验方法分析表面结构变化对稀薄流域和磁头飞行姿态的影响。研究结果表明:在纳米级气膜润滑间隙下,采用逆 Knud-sen 数来划分稀薄流域比仅从特征膜厚高度方面考虑更合理;负压型磁头的主要工作区间在滑流区和过渡区,且过渡流域所占比例要明显高于滑流区域。稀薄效应最大的区域不是在气膜厚度最薄的磁头尾部,而是在压力突然下降且气膜较薄的阶梯过渡区域;磁头 U 型气垫、尾端两侧浅台阶和中间台阶结构变化会影响气流流向,从而影响压力分布,使得稀薄流域也跟随发生变化。  相似文献   

19.
The use of patterned media is a new approach proposed to extend the recording densities of hard disk drives beyond 1 Tb/in.2. Bit-patterned media (BPM) overcome the thermal stability problems of conventional media by using single-domain islands for each bit of recorded information, thereby eliminating the magnetic transition noise (Albrecht et al., Magnetic Recording on Patterned Media, 2003). Considering steady state conditions, we have transferred the pattern from the disk surface onto the slider surface and have investigated the pressure generation due to the bit pattern. To reduce the numerical complexity, we have generated the bit pattern only in the areas of the slider near the trailing edge, where the spacing is small. Cylindrical protrusions were modeled using very small mesh size on the order of nanometers to obtain the flying characteristics for the entire slider air bearing surface (ABS) using the “CMRR” finite element Reynolds equation simulator (Duwensee et al., Microsyst Technol, 2006; Wahl et al., STLE Tribol Trans, 39(1), 1996). The effect of pattern height, pattern diameter, slider skew angle, and slider pitch angle on flying height of a typical slider is investigated. Numerical results show that the flying height decreases for a patterned slider and the change in flying height is a function of the pattern height and ratio of the pattern diameter to the pattern pitch. In comparison to discrete track media, the flying height loss is larger for a patterned slider disk interface for the same recessed area of pattern.  相似文献   

20.
This paper describes the effects of ultra-thin liquid lubricant films on contact slider dynamics in hard-disk drives. In the experiments, the contact slider dynamics as well as ultra-thin liquid lubricants behavior are investigated using three types of lubricants, which have different end-groups and molecular weight as a function of lubricant film thickness. The dynamics of a contact slider is mainly monitored using acoustic emission (AE). The disks are also examined with a scanning micro-ellipsometer before and after contact slider experiments. It is found that the lubricant film thickness instability occurs as a result of slider–disk contacts, when the lubricant film thickness is thicker than one monolayer. Their unstable lubricant behavior depends on the chemical structure of functional end-groups and molecular weight. In addition, it is also found that the AE RMS values, which indicate the contact slider dynamics, are almost same, independent of the end-groups and molecular weight for the lubricants, when the lubricant film thickness is approximately one monolayer. The molecular weight, however, affects the contact slider dynamics, when the lubricant film thickness is less than one monolayer. In other words, the AE RMS values increase remarkably as the molecular weight for the lubricant increases. When the lubricant film thickness is more than one monolayer, the AE RMS values decrease because of the effect of mobile lubricant layer, while the lubricant instability affects the contact slider dynamics. Therefore, it may be concluded that the lubricant film thickness should be designed to be approximately one monolayer thickness region in order to achieve contact recording for future head–disk interface.  相似文献   

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