Patents by Inventor Thao Anh Nguyen
Thao Anh Nguyen 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).
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Patent number: 7509728Abstract: A method for manufacturing a first disk drive includes incorporating a first storage disk having a first storage surface, and a first slider having a first read/write head and a slider mover into the first disk drive. Further, the first read/write head is movably positioned a first head-to-disk spacing relative to the first storage surface. The method also includes determining an incremental power level necessary to be delivered to a second slider mover of a second slider having a second read/write head to adjust a second head-to-disk spacing relative to a second storage surface by a predetermined increment. In addition, the method includes adjusting a first head-to-disk spacing by directing an operational power level to the first slider mover. The operational power level is derived from the incremental power level.Type: GrantFiled: April 7, 2005Date of Patent: March 31, 2009Assignee: Maxtor CorporationInventors: Erhard Schreck, Francis P. Crimi, Duc Bahn, Thao Anh Nguyen, Kazuhiro Saito, Donald J. Brunnett, Andrew LeFebvre, Scott Hughes, Brian Strom, Michael Mallary, Hyunchul Shim, Bruce C. Schardt
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Patent number: 7486459Abstract: A disk drive for storing data includes a drive housing, a storage disk that is rotatably coupled to the drive housing, a slider assembly positioned near the storage disk, and a drive circuitry. The slider assembly includes a head that interacts with the storage disk during a data transfer operation. The drive circuitry performs a performance test on the head at a first HtD spacing and at a second HtD spacing that is different than the first HtD spacing while the drive is operation. The slider assembly includes a slider mover that moves the head between the first HtD spacing and the second HtD spacing. The slider mover can move the head to the first HtD spacing during the data transfer operation if the result of the performance test is a first test result and the slider mover moves the head to the second HtD spacing during the data transfer operation if the result of the performance test is a second test result.Type: GrantFiled: April 7, 2005Date of Patent: February 3, 2009Assignee: Maxtor CorporationInventors: Erhard Schreck, Anthony R. Hurtado, Andrew LeFebvre, Chris Hawks, Thao Anh Nguyen, Scott Hughes, Bruce C. Schardt, Donald J. Brunnett
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Patent number: 7324299Abstract: A disk drive having a drive housing, a storage disk that is rotatably coupled to the drive housing, and a slider assembly that includes a head and a slider mover. The head reads data from the storage disk during a read operation and writes data to the storage disk during a write operation. The slider mover maintains the head at a read HtD spacing during the read operation, at a pre-write HtD spacing during the read operation prior to the write operation, at a write HtD spacing during the write operation, and at an idle HtD spacing when the drive is not performing the read operation or the write operation. The disk drive includes a drive circuitry that directs a read power level to the slider mover to maintain the head at the read HtD spacing, a pre-write power level to maintain the head at the pre-write HtD spacing, a write power level to maintain the head at the write HtD spacing, and a idle power level to maintains the head at the idle HtD spacing.Type: GrantFiled: April 7, 2005Date of Patent: January 29, 2008Assignee: Maxtor CorporationInventors: Erhard Schreck, Donald J Brunnett, Jingbo Yu, Francis P. Crimi, Scott Hughes, Duc Banh, Anthony R. Hurtado, Kazuhiro Saito, Andrew LeFebvre, Chris Hawks, Thao Anh Nguyen, Brian Strom, Bruce C. Schardt
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Patent number: 7310195Abstract: A disk drive includes a drive housing, a storage disk, a slider and a drive circuitry. The storage disk has an inner and an outer diameter. The slider includes a read/write head and a slider mover that receives power from the drive circuitry to position the read/write head at a predetermined head-to-disk spacing during radial movement of the slider relative to the storage disk. The drive circuitry can direct a varying level of power to the slider mover during radial movement of the slider. In addition, the drive circuitry can increase the power to the slider mover as the read/write head nears a target track in order to decrease the head-to-disk spacing at the appropriate time. The drive circuitry can adjust the power to the slider mover so that the head-to-disk spacing remains within a predetermined range as the slider moves radially relative to the storage disk.Type: GrantFiled: April 7, 2005Date of Patent: December 18, 2007Assignee: Maxtor CorporationInventors: Erhard Schreck, Francis P. Crimi, Andrew LeFebvre, Duc Banh, Thao Anh Nguyen, Brian Strom, Bruce C. Schardt
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Patent number: 7310194Abstract: A disk drive includes a drive housing, a storage disk, a slider and a drive circuitry. The slider magnetically interacts with the storage disk, and includes a read/write head that is positioned to have an actual head-to-disk spacing greater than zero nanometers during rotation of the storage disk. The drive circuitry can determine and/or monitor the actual head-to-disk spacing at any time during the operation of the disk drive based on an amplitude or a change in the amplitude of a signal such as a variable gain amplifier signal. In one embodiment, the slider includes a slider mover that receives current via the drive circuitry and causes a deformation of a portion of the slider to change the head-to-disk spacing based on the amplitude of the signal.Type: GrantFiled: April 7, 2005Date of Patent: December 18, 2007Assignee: Maxtor CorporationInventors: Bruce C. Schardt, Erhard Schreck, Jingbo Yu, Michael Mallary, Scott Hughes, Duc Banh, Kazuhiro Saito, Donald J Brunnett, Tim Glassburn, Chris Hawks, Thao Anh Nguyen, Andrew LeFebvre, Joerg Ferber, Richard K. Oswald, Brian Strom
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Patent number: 6246543Abstract: A magnetic recording disk with a glass substrate is textured by a process which creates an array of bumps in a magnetic head contact start and stop (CSS) region of the disk. The texturing process uses a laser to provide pulses of predetermined energy fluence on the glass substrate to produce a plurality of raised bumps in the substrate surface, each bump having a surface elevation controllable to within a few nanometers. The bumps are created without unwanted micro-cracking or ejection of surface material by exploiting a narrow operating region below the abrupt thermal shock fluence threshold of the glass substrate. This textured glass substrate provides the magnetic recording disk with improved stiction, wear, coatability and sensor flying height properties.Type: GrantFiled: September 17, 1996Date of Patent: June 12, 2001Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Peter Michael Baumgart, Wing Pun Leung, Hung Viet Nguyen, Thao Anh Nguyen, Andrew Ching Tam, Anthony Wu
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Patent number: 6205002Abstract: A disk drive having a disk with a contact start/stop (CSS) region on which a slider can rest is described. The CSS region is divided into at least three zones with the inner and outer zones having a surface topography which is different from the surface topography of the middle zone. The middle zone of the CSS region may be textured with bumps having a lower average height, a lower average density and/or a different bump diameter. The middle zone may also be left untextured. The slider is maintained over the CSS region during spin up and/or spin down.Type: GrantFiled: June 13, 1997Date of Patent: March 20, 2001Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Peter Michael Baumgart, Thomas Allen Gregory, Ulla Vasant Nayak, Thao Anh Nguyen, Michael Luis Ramirez, Andrew Ching Tam, Run-Han Wang
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Patent number: 6118632Abstract: A magnetic disk with nonmagnetic information encoded under, in or above the magnetic layer of the disk is described along with the disk drive using the magnetic disks. The information may be stored as a series of laser-written marks (e.g., bumps, oxidized spots or spots with altered reflectivity) upon the surface(s) of each disk of the disk stack. The set of marks may be a series of laser bumps which serve a dual purpose as a landing zone or contact start/stop (CSS) zone for the slider and as encoded identifying information. During the manufacturing process for disk drives containing the disks, each disk's identifier can be read using outboard equipment such as an HRF tester or by means contained in the drive itself. Each disk identifier can then be stored magnetically in a special region of the hard disk reserved for use by the drive and/or within the flash memory of the hard drive. The drive can then communicate the identifier(s) to a host computer using the conventional communication hardware and firmware.Type: GrantFiled: February 12, 1997Date of Patent: September 12, 2000Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Thomas Robert Albrecht, Peter Michael Baumgart, Thao Anh Nguyen, Kurt Allen Rubin, Andrew Ching Tam
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Patent number: 6013336Abstract: A process for creating a "distant bump array" surface texture in a magnetic recording disk for reducing stiction and the disk so textured. The texturing process uses a tightly focused diode-pumped Nd:YLF or Nd:YVO.sub.4 or other solid-state laser that is pulsed with a 0.3-90 nanosecond pulse train to produce a plurality of distantly-spaced bumps in the disk surface. The bump creation process is highly controllable, permitting repeated creation of a preselected bump profile such as a smooth dimple or one with a central protrusion useful for low stiction without close spacing or elevated "roughness". Some bump profiles permit texturing of the data-storage region of the disk surface for low stiction without materially affecting magnetic data storage density.Type: GrantFiled: January 8, 1998Date of Patent: January 11, 2000Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Peter Michael Baumgart, Wing Pun Leung, Thao Anh Nguyen, Andrew Ching Tam
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Patent number: 5875084Abstract: A process for creating a "distant bump array" surface texture in a magnetic recording disk for reducing stiction and the disk so textured. The texturing process uses a tightly focused diode-pumped Nd:YLF or Nd:YVO.sub.4 or other solid-state laser that is pulsed with a 0.3-90 nanosecond pulse train to produce a plurality of distantly-spaced bumps in the disk surface. The bump creation process is highly controllable, permitting repeated creation of a preselected bump profile such as a smooth dimple or one with a central protrusion useful for low stiction without close spacing or elevated "roughness". Some bump profiles permit texturing of the data-storage region of the disk surface for low stiction without materially affecting magnetic data storage density.Type: GrantFiled: July 8, 1997Date of Patent: February 23, 1999Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Peter Michael Baumgart, Wing Pun Leung, Thao Anh Nguyen, Andrew Ching Tam
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Patent number: 5768076Abstract: A data recording disk having at least part of the data storage surface textured according to a process for creating a "distant bump array" surface texture for reducing stiction. The texturing process uses a tightly focused diode-pumped Nd:YLF or Nd:YVO.sub.4 or other solid-state laser that is pulsed with a 0.3-90 nanosecond pulse train to produce a plurality of distantly-spaced bumps in the disk surface. The bump profile can be selected as a smooth dimple or one with a central protrusion useful for low stiction without close spacing or elevated "roughness". The data-storage region of the disk surface can be textured for low stiction without materially affecting magnetic data storage density.Type: GrantFiled: February 15, 1996Date of Patent: June 16, 1998Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Peter Michael Baumgart, Wing Pun Leung, Thao Anh Nguyen, Andrew Ching Tam
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Patent number: 5729399Abstract: A contact start/stop (CSS) magnetic recording disk drive has a highly textured head easier landing zone on the disk and uses a start/stop precedure that minimize both the time the carrier is in contact with the landing zone and the disk rotational speed during contact. The disk landing zone is textured with a pattern of laser-induced bumps that define a surface higher than the surface of the disk data region. At disk drive start-up and power-down, the head carrier exits and enters the landing zone at a predetermined disk rotational speed selected such that the air-bearing surface of the head carrier is still in contact with the surface of the landing zone but is flying in the data region. This limits the amount of time the carrier spends in contact with the textured surface and minimizes the disk speed when it is in contact.Type: GrantFiled: December 13, 1995Date of Patent: March 17, 1998Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Thomas Robert Albrecht, Thao Anh Nguyen
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Patent number: 5689057Abstract: Crater shaped bumps are made on a calibration disk which can be used for calibrating a PZT slider, the PZT slider in turn being used for detecting predetermined asperities on a production run magnetic disk. The crater shaped bumps emulate predetermined asperities of production run magnetic disks and especially asperities which are undesirable and would cause the production run disk to be discarded after testing by the PZT slider. Crater shaped bumps which emulate undesirable asperities on current production runs of magnetic disks have a diameter in the range of 10 to 25 .mu.m and a peripheral ridge with a height h.sub.r above a nominal surface of the calibration disk in the range of 75 to 120 nm. Close tolerance crater shaped bumps with this configuration can be made by impinging two or more pulses of laser energy on the same location of a calibration disk. By increasing the number of pulses the height of the peripheral ridge progressively increases.Type: GrantFiled: February 27, 1996Date of Patent: November 18, 1997Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Peter Michael Baumgart, Karl A. Flechsig, Michael Franklin Lee, Wing P. Leung, Ullal Vasant Nayak, Thao Anh Nguyen, Timothy Christopher O'Sullivan, Andrew Ching Tam
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Patent number: 5658475Abstract: A disk texturing tool is used, for example, to provide textured spots in an annular portion of both sides of a hardfile disk. Disks are moved into and out of the texturing process in cassettes, through two disk-handling stations. In each disk-handling station, a lifter raises each individual disk from the cassette. The individual disk is then transferred to a pick-and-place mechanism, which moves it to a spindle. The spindle spins and translates the disk, so that both sides of the disk are exposed to beams derived from a pulsed laser. The pick-and-place mechanism then returns the disk to the lifter, which lowers it into the cassette pocket from which it was taken. The pick-and-place mechanism simultaneously moves one disk from the lifter to the spindle and another from the spindle to the lifter. While disks are moved by the pick-and-place mechanism of one disk-handling station, a disk in the spindle of the other disk-handling station is exposed to the laser beams.Type: GrantFiled: March 11, 1996Date of Patent: August 19, 1997Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Michael Barenboim, Peter Michael Baumgart, Benjamin Karni, Pieter J. M. Kerstens, Thao Anh Nguyen, Hong S. Seing, Andrew Ching Tam, Peter Paul Chrusch
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Patent number: RE37145Abstract: A disk texturing tool is used, for example, to provide textured spots in an annular portion of both sides of a hardfile disk. Disks are moved into and out of the texturing process in cassettes, through two disk-handling stations. In each disk-handling station, a lifter raises each individual disk from the cassette. The individual disk is then transferred to a pick-and-place mechanism, which moves it to a spindle. The spindle spins and translates the disk, so that both sides of the disk are exposed to beams derived from a pulsed laser. The pick-and-place mechanism then returns the disk to the lifter, which lowers it into the cassette pocket from which it was taken. The pick-and-place mechanism simultaneously moves one disk from the lifter to the spindle and another from the spindle to the lifter. While disks are moved by the pick-and-place mechanism of one disk-handling station, a disk in the spindle of the other disk-handling station is exposed to the laser beams.Type: GrantFiled: August 13, 1999Date of Patent: April 24, 2001Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Michael Barenboim, Peter Michael Baumgart, Peter Paul Chrusch, Benjamin Karni, Pieter J. M. Kerstens, Thao Anh Nguyen, Hong S. Seing, Andrew Ching Tam