Patents by Inventor Robert D. Hempstead

Robert D. Hempstead has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 8919279
    Abstract: A processing system for and a method of producing ions inside a process chamber and shielding the ions from a magnetic field by directing the magnetic field through a magnet keeper is described.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 30, 2010
    Date of Patent: December 30, 2014
    Assignee: WD Media, LLC
    Inventors: Allen J. Bourez, Robert D. Hempstead, Jinliang Chen, Yew Ming Chiong
  • Patent number: 7095585
    Abstract: An information storage system includes a transducer having a loop of ferromagnetic material with pole tips separated by an nonferromagnetic gap located adjacent to a medium such as a rigid disk. During writing the separation between the pole tips and the media layer of the disk is a small fraction of the gap separation. Due to the small separation between the pole tips and the media layer, the magnetic field generated by the transducer and felt by the media has a larger perpendicular than longitudinal component, favoring perpendicular recording over longitudinal recording. The media may have an easy axis of magnetization oriented substantially along the perpendicular direction, so that perpendicular data storage is energetically favored. The transducer may also include a magnetoresistive sensor for reading magnetic information from the disk.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 20, 2004
    Date of Patent: August 22, 2006
    Assignee: Seagate Technology LLC
    Inventors: Alexander P. Payne, William C. Cain, Michael E. Devillier, Harold J. Hamilton, Robert D. Hempstead, Darren T. Imai, Dimitre A. Latev, David D. Roberts
  • Patent number: 6671235
    Abstract: A method of, and apparatus for, defining disk tracks in magnetic recording media. The track-writing apparatus (20) is capable of forming tracks (340) with a track width (TW) and track spaces (350) with a space width (SW) on a magnetic media disk (70) having an upper surface (70S), wherein the disk comprises a magnetic medium with a thermal diffusion length (X). The apparatus comprises, in order along an optical axis (A1), a laser light source (30) capable of providing a pulsed laser light beam (B1), a light pipe (32), and illumination shaping optical system (40) that provides substantially uniform illumination over an exposure region (ER), and a phase plate (60) having a phase grating (210) with a grating period (p), arranged proximate and substantially parallel to the upper surface of the disk so as to form an periodic irradiance distribution (380) at the surface of the disk when the phase plate is illuminated with the exposure region.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 27, 2000
    Date of Patent: December 30, 2003
    Assignee: Ultratech Stepper, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew M. Hawryluk, Robert D. Hempstead, David A. Markle
  • Patent number: 6535361
    Abstract: A hard disk drive head operates in close proximity and dynamic contact with a rapidly spinning rigid disk surface, the head including a transducer with a magnetically permeable path between a poletip disposed adjacent to the disk surface and a magnetoresistive (MR) sensor situated outside the range of thermal noise generated by the surface contact. The magnetically permeable path is the same as that used to write data to the disk, eliminating errors that occur in conventional transducers having MR sensors at a separate location from the writing poletips. Moreover, the magnetically permeable path is preferably formed in a low profile, highly efficient “planar” loop that allows for manufacturing tolerances in throat height and wear of the terminal poletips from disk contact without poletip saturation or poletip smearing. The MR layer is formed in one of the first manufacturing steps atop the substrate, so that the MR layer has a relatively uniform planar template that is free from contaminants.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 28, 2001
    Date of Patent: March 18, 2003
    Assignee: Censtor Corp.
    Inventors: William C. Cain, Michael E. Devillier, Harold J. Hamilton, Robert D. Hempstead, Darren T. Imai, Dimitre A. Latev
  • Patent number: 6493191
    Abstract: A transducer for a hard disk drive system has a planar magnetic core and a pair of poletips that project transversely from the core for sliding contact with the disk during reading and writing. The transducer is formed entirely of thin films in the shape of a low profile table having three legs that slide on the disk, the poletips being exposed at a bottom of one of the legs for high resolution communication with the disk, the throat height of the poletips affording sufficient tolerance to allow for wear. The legs elevate the transducer from the disk sufficiently to minimize lifting by a thin air layer that moves with the spinning disk which, in combination with the small size of the thin film head allows a low load and a flexible beam and gimbal to hold the transducer to the disk.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 15, 1995
    Date of Patent: December 10, 2002
    Assignee: Censtor Corporation
    Inventors: William C. Cain, Richard D. Anderson, Michael A. Baldwinson, Keith R. Berding, Michael E. Devillier, Garrett A. Garrettson, Randolph S. Gluck, Harold J. Hamilton, Robert D. Hempstead, Darren T. Imai, Kwang K. Kim, Dimitre A. Latev, Alexander P. Payne, David D. Roberts
  • Publication number: 20020093761
    Abstract: An information storage system includes a transducer having a loop of ferromagnetic material with pole tips separated by an nonferromagnetic gap located adjacent to a medium such as a rigid disk. During writing the separation between the pole tips and the media layer of the disk is a small fraction of the gap separation. Due to the small separation between the pole tips and the media layer, the magnetic field generated by the transducer and felt by the media has a larger perpendicular than longitudinal component, favoring perpendicular recording over longitudinal recording. The media may have an easy axis of magnetization oriented substantially along the perpendicular direction, so that perpendicular data storage is energetically favored. The transducer may also include a magnetoresistive sensor for reading magnetic information from the disk.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 19, 2001
    Publication date: July 18, 2002
    Inventors: Alexander P. Payne, William C. Cain, Michael E. Devillier, Harold J. Hamilton, Robert D. Hempstead, Darren T. Imai, Dimitre A. Latev, David D. Roberts
  • Publication number: 20010055183
    Abstract: A hard disk drive head operates in close proximity and dynamic contact with a rapidly spinning rigid disk surface, the head including a transducer with a magnetically permeable path between a poletip disposed adjacent to the disk surface and a magnetoresistive (MR) sensor situated outside the range of thermal noise generated by the surface contact. The magnetically permeable path is the same as that used to write data to the disk, eliminating errors that occur in conventional transducers having MR sensors at a separate location from the writing poletips. Moreover, the magnetically permeable path is preferably formed in a low profile, highly efficient “planar” loop that allows for manufacturing tolerances in throat height and wear of the terminal poletips from disk contact without poletip saturation or poletip smearing. The MR layer is formed in one of the first manufacturing steps atop the substrate, so that the MR layer has a relatively uniform planar template that is free from contaminants.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 28, 2001
    Publication date: December 27, 2001
    Inventors: William C. Cain, Michael E. Devillier, Harold J. Hamilton, Robert D. Hempstead, Darren T. Imai, Dimtre A. Latev
  • Patent number: 6320725
    Abstract: An information storage system having a ring head sliding on a rigid magnetic storage disk in such close proximity that the magnetic field felt by the media layer or layers of the disk has a larger perpendicular than longitudinal component so that data is stored in a perpendicular mode. The head to media separation during writing of data to the media is a small fraction of the amagnetic gap separating the poletips of the head. Reading of data may be inductive or may be via a magnetoresistive sensor which is coupled to the magnetically permeable core of the ring head far from the poletips. The media preferably has a high perpendicular anisotropy.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 22, 1995
    Date of Patent: November 20, 2001
    Assignee: Censtor Corporation
    Inventors: Alexander P. Payne, William C. Cain, Michael E. DeVillier, Harold J. Hamilton, Robert D. Hempstead, Darren T. Imai, Mark A. Lauer, Dimitre A. Latev, David D. Roberts
  • Patent number: 6212047
    Abstract: An information storage system having a ring head in such close proximity to a rigid magnetic storage disk that the magnetic field felt by the media layer or layers of the disk has a larger perpendicular than longitudinal component so that data is stored in a perpendicular mode. Reading of data is accomplished with a magnetoresistive sensor which may be coupled to the magnetically permeable core of the ring head far from the poletips, which may contact the disk. The media preferably has a high perpendicular anisotropy, and may be formed in a plurality of films with crystalline structures traversing the films.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 20, 1996
    Date of Patent: April 3, 2001
    Assignee: Censtor Corporation
    Inventors: Alexander P. Payne, William C. Cain, Michael E. Devillier, Harold J. Hamilton, Robert D. Hempstead, Darren T. Imai, Dimitre A. Latev, Mark A. Lauer, David D. Roberts
  • Patent number: 6198607
    Abstract: A hard disk drive head operates in close proximity and dynamic contact with a rapidly spinning rigid disk surface, the head including a transducer with a magnetically permeable path between a poletip disposed adjacent to the disk surface and a magnetoresistive (MR) sensor situated outside the range of thermal noise generated by the surface contact. The magnetically permeable path is the same as that used to write data to the disk, eliminating errors that occur in conventional transducers having MR sensors at a separate location from the writing poletips. Moreover, the magnetically permeable path is preferably formed in a low profile, highly efficient “planar” loop that allows for manufacturing tolerances in throat height and wear of the terminal poletips from disk contact without poletip saturation or poletip smearing. The MR layer is formed in one of the first manufacturing steps atop the substrate, so that the MR layer has a relatively uniform planar template that is free from contaminants.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 2, 1996
    Date of Patent: March 6, 2001
    Assignee: Censtor Corporation
    Inventors: William C. Cain, Michael E. Devillier, Harold J. Hamilton, Robert D. Hempstead, Darren T. Imai, Dimitre A. Latev
  • Patent number: 5949612
    Abstract: A operationally contacting hard disk drive system has reduced friction due to lower capillary adhesion between the disk surface and a transducer in a substantially continuous sliding relationship with the surface. The disk surface has an adhesion-reducing texture that includes a microscopic RMS roughness in a range between about 1.5 and 5.5 nanometers, or a number of asperities having a mean plane to peak height in a range between about 6 and 50 nanometers. The roughness may increase in a radially graded fashion to compensate for the increased linear velocity and concomitant frictional power loss near the outer diameter of the disk. It is important that the uppermost reaches of the textured surface are smooth but not flat in order to obtain lasting low friction operation, which is accomplished by constructing the surface with a highest approximately one percent having an average radius of curvature in a range between 2 microns and 100 microns.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 15, 1995
    Date of Patent: September 7, 1999
    Assignee: Censtor Corp.
    Inventors: Christopher S. Gudeman, Michael H. Azarian, Michael A. Baldwinson, Keith R. Berding, Kaynam Chun, Garrett A. Garrettson, Harold J. Hamilton, Robert D. Hempstead, Dimitre A. Latev, Mark A. Lauer
  • Patent number: 4242710
    Abstract: A thin film inductive head is formed with nickel-iron binary alloy or nickel-iron-X ternary alloy pole pieces characterized by negative magnetostriction having a saturation magnetostriction coefficient in the range of -1.times.10.sup.-6 to -5.times.10.sup.-6.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 29, 1979
    Date of Patent: December 30, 1980
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Robert D. Hempstead, James B. Money
  • Patent number: 4130847
    Abstract: A slider element includes a thin film transducer deposited onto a slider along at least one of the rails forming the flying air bearing surface with a magnetic media. A portion of the end tips of the pole pieces and gap of the thin film inductive transducer and a portion of the slider rail adjacent to the transducer is etched by a sputter etching process. A layer of a passivation material such as chromium is sputter deposited into the etched portion such that the leading portion of the rail protects the passivation material from wear. The passivation material over the pole tips of the transducer prevents the corrosion of the iron-nickel alloy comprising the pole tips.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 31, 1977
    Date of Patent: December 19, 1978
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Nephi L. Head, Robert D. Hempstead, Thomas N. Kennedy, Fred Y. Lieu