Composite magnetic head arranged so the reproducing elements...

Dynamic magnetic information storage or retrieval – Head – Magnetoresistive reproducing head

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C360S316000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06816344

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is related to away of using a magnetic head in a magnetic disk drive, and more particularly, to a magnetic head, which utilizes a magneto-resistive effect-type electromagnetic conversion element, and a magnetic disk drive for reproducing information using this magnetic head.
2. Description of the Related Art
In recent years, a magneto-resistive effect element (MR element) has been utilized in a magnetic disk drive as an element for reproducing magnetically recorded information. An MR element is one that uses changes in resistivity (magneto-resistive effect) corresponding to leakage magnetic fields from a recording medium, and compared to a conventional inductive-type element, has higher reproduction sensitivity, and is not dependent on circumferential speed. In other words, when detecting magnetic changes recorded on a disk medium, which is a recording medium, when using an MR head, detection output does not vary much even if the rotational speed of the disk medium changes. These characteristics are extremely effective for increasing the capacity of a magnetic disk drive and making a disk medium smaller in diameter, and magnetic heads equipped with MR elements are rapidly coming into widespread use now.
FIG. 2
schematically depicts the constitution of an ordinarily used recording medium and the MR element portion of a magnetic head. Most of the area of the MR element
1
, which is sandwiched between electrodes
2
, is occupied by a single magnetic domain, and when there is no leakage magnetic field from a recording medium
4
, either a bias magnetic field is applied, or anisotropy, such that a bias magnetic field exists, is provided so that magnetization occurs in a predetermined direction. This one area is called the magnetically sensitive portion, and by superimposing leakage magnetic fields
6
generated by the recording medium
4
, the direction of magnetization is readily rotated from the initial state, and the resistivity of the MR element
1
changes in accordance with the angle of rotation thereof. Therefore, this one area functions effectively for reproducing information, and the width of this area is equivalent to the width of the magnetic head reproduction track.
Shielding layers
3
on both sides of the MR element
1
are arranged for the purpose of enhancing spatial resolution. Even when information is recorded on a recording medium
4
at a high density, it is done so as to prevent the interference of the leakage magnetic fields
6
corresponding to each piece of information, and to enable the separation of each piece of information. The constitution of the MR element portion is as described hereinabove, and even for ones that utilize GMR (giant magnetoresistive effect), which uses a spin-valve system in the magnetically sensitive portion, GMR having a stacked structure, TMR (tunneling magnetoresistive effect) that uses a tunnel junction, or other MR elements, the basic constitution of
FIG. 2
is the same.
Because a MR element portion only has a reproduction function and does not have a recording function, by stacking a recording element portion, it can be used as a magnetic head having recording and reproduction functions (composite magnetic head). A rough sketch of a typical constitution of a composite magnetic head is shown in FIG.
3
.
FIG. 3
is a schematic diagram of the element portion of a magnetic head as seen from the side opposite the disk medium (hereinafter referred to as the medium-opposing side). A magnetic pole
5
for recording is stacked onto the MR element
1
.
The recording head of
FIG. 3
constitutes an inductive element having magnetic pole
5
and shielding layer
3
as two magnetic poles, and records information to a disk medium via a magnetic field which leaks through a gap portion between magnetic pole
5
and shielding layer
3
. Composite magnetic heads, which have MR element
1
as reproduction element as shown in
FIG. 3
, have rapidly come into use in recent years due to the high reproduction sensitivity thereof, promoting rapid increases in magnetic disk drive capacity.
On the other hand, because a MR element is an extremely thin thin-film element, new problems occur. Ideally it is desirable for the magnetic thin film constituting the magnetically sensitive portion of a MR element to form a single magnetic domain, but there are times when new magnetic domains are formed due to heat, stress or an external magnetic field. A change in magnetic domain structure like this is manifested as a change in reproduction characteristics. Further, when a new magnetic domain is formed, it is often accompanied by Barkhausen noise in the reproduction signal. Consequently, a challenge when using a MR element is giving serious consideration to stabilizing reproduction characteristics while enhancing reproduction sensitivity.
In particular, due to the fact that a composite magnetic head stacks a MR element and a recording element, there are cases in which the recording magnetic field at recording affects the MR element, causing changes in the characteristics of the MR element. With the goal of lessening the influence of a recording magnetic field like this, a structure (piggyback structure) like that shown in
FIG. 4
, which divides into two the layer that served as both a magnetic pole for the recording head and a shield for the MR element, has come into use recently.
Further, as another method for lessening the influence of a recording magnetic field, a structure, which provides a reproduction element portion outside of a range interposed between two perpendiculars lowered from both ends of the gap-opposing surface of the recording magnetic pole as shown in
FIG. 5
, is disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-open No. H11-39619.
As for the relation of the gap between the recording and reproduction heads in the prior art, as shown in
FIG. 3
, because the structure stacks the MR element and the recording element, there are case when a recording magnetic field affects the MR element, causing changes in the characteristics of the MR element. In response to this, the structures of FIG.
4
and
FIG. 5
are proposed as structures for lessening the influence of a recording magnetic field.
The inventors of this application, in order to confirm the effects of these structures, investigated the ratio of reproduction error occurrence when recording and reproducing were repeatedly carried out using magnetic disk drives equipped with composite magnetic heads of the constitutions of FIG.
3
through FIG.
5
. The investigation was carried out using 100 magnetic disk drives for each of the magnetic head structures. Each magnetic disk drive was equipped with four magnetic heads, the ambient temperature was 55 C, magnetomotive force at recording was varied from 0.275 AT (ampere-turns) to 0.495 AT, and recording and reproducing were carried out 10,000 times at each magnetomotive force.
FIG. 6
is a comparison of when the magnetic heads shown in FIG.
3
and
FIG. 4
were used. In the structure of
FIG. 3
(3.0 m-thick recording magnetic pole-cum-shield layer), which is the prior art, the ratio of magnetic disk drives, in which errors occurred, suddenly increased in line with increases in the magnetomotive force at recording at 0.385 AT and above, clarifying the effects of magnetomotive force at recording.
Further, according to a study of waveforms at error generation, vertical asymmetry occurred in reproduction waveforms, and Barkhausen noise was confirmed, and the causes of error occurrence are assumed to have been the formation of new magnetic domains in the magnetically sensitive portions of the reproduction elements, and altered bias values.
Conversely, in the structure of
FIG. 4
(1.5 m-thick shielding layer, 1.5 m lower magnetic pole, and 0.8 m-thick magnetic separation layer for the shield and lower magnetic pole), the ratio of magnetic disk drives, in which errors occurred, dropped greatly, and the improved efficacy by making the magnetic head the constitution of
FIG. 4
is evident.

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