Effect of van der Waals forces on molecularly thin lubricant in the magnetic storage head-disk interface

2005 ◽  
Vol 98 (12) ◽  
pp. 124906 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ray R. Dagastine ◽  
Lee R. White ◽  
Paul M. Jones ◽  
Yiao-Tee Hsia
2005 ◽  
Vol 97 (10) ◽  
pp. 104503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee R. White ◽  
Raymond R. Dagastine ◽  
Paul M. Jones ◽  
Yiao-Tee Hsia

2005 ◽  
Vol 97 (12) ◽  
pp. 126106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raymond R. Dagastine ◽  
Lee R. White ◽  
Paul M. Jones ◽  
Yiao-Tee Hsia

Author(s):  
Ao Hongrui ◽  
Han Zhiying ◽  
Zhang Kai ◽  
Jiang Hongyuan

The reduction of head-media separation (HMS) results in a decreased flying height. Consequently, the contact probability between the slider and the lubricant layer or hard overcoat surface on the disks will increase greatly. Therefore, investigating the contact stress of the disk is vital for improving the reliability of the head disk interface. In this study, a rigid hemisphere sliding over a multilayer thin film half-space is implemented to simulate the contact between the recording slider and the magnetic storage multilayer disk under the quasi-static condition. The effects of different parameters such as normal load, friction coefficient and radius of slider on the von Mises, shear and principal stresses in the multilayer system are analyzed by using finite element method (FEM).


2014 ◽  
Vol 21 (7) ◽  
pp. 1501-1511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shahla Chowdhury ◽  
Antonis I. Vakis ◽  
Andreas A. Polycarpou

Author(s):  
Antonis I. Vakis ◽  
Melih Eriten ◽  
Andreas A. Polycarpou

A model is presented that accounts for contact with a molecularly thin lubricant layer confined between a rigid sphere and flat substrate. The sphere is moving at a high lateral velocity inducing high shear rates and a significant increase of lubricant viscosity. Interfacial slip is modeled based on experimental and molecular dynamics data and includes effects of lubricant morphology and chemistry. The model is used to interpret experimental measurements of viscosity and slip and express them as functions of shear rate. These data can then be used in a typical head-disk interface in magnetic storage.


2008 ◽  
Vol 131 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Raja R. Katta ◽  
Andreas A. Polycarpou ◽  
Jorge V. Hanchi ◽  
Mallika Roy

As the use of hard disk drives in mobile applications increases, the susceptibility of disk damage due to high velocity slider-disk impact presents a serious challenge. The impact could result in extremely high contact stresses, leading to the failure of the head-disk interface. An elastic-plastic contact-mechanics-based impact model was developed and implemented to study the impact between a slider corner and a disk. The impact model is based on the contact of a rigid sphere on a deformable half-space. The effect of slider corner radii and impact velocities on the contact parameters was initially investigated for a homogeneous disk substrate. To examine the effects of thin-film layers on the disk, the model was extended to a realistic layered disk, where the actual layered mechanical properties were directly measured. At high impact velocities and/or small slider corner radii, the impact was found to be dominated by the substrate and the effect of layers was negligible. At low impact velocities and/or large slider corner radii, the effect of nanometer thick layers could be clearly seen, as these layers are stiffer than the substrate protecting the disk from potential damage at lighter loads. Realistic dynamic impact experiments involving a slider and a spinning thin-film disk were performed using an operational shock tester. The impact damage was characterized in terms of residual penetration depth caused by the impact force of the shock and the impact velocity of the slider. However, the results were inconclusive in correlating with the impact model. To better control the experimental parameters, quasistatic nanoindentation experiments were performed on actual thin-film media and were successfully compared with the model predictions.


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