Experimental study of Amorphous Hydrogenated Carbon (a-C: H) as Lubricating Films in Self-Acting Air Bearing

Spindle motors in data storage devices such as hard disk drives (HDDs), are required to have higher speed, highly accurate rotational performance and low power consumption. Utilization of a self-acting air bearing has been considered as an alternative of the existing precision ball bearings for its...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nihon Kikai Gakkai ronbunshū. C 1994, Vol.60 (578), p.3499-3503
Hauptverfasser: Toshimitsu, Manabu, Fuse, Hiroko, Konno, Daisuke
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container_end_page 3503
container_issue 578
container_start_page 3499
container_title Nihon Kikai Gakkai ronbunshū. C
container_volume 60
creator Toshimitsu, Manabu
Fuse, Hiroko
Konno, Daisuke
description Spindle motors in data storage devices such as hard disk drives (HDDs), are required to have higher speed, highly accurate rotational performance and low power consumption. Utilization of a self-acting air bearing has been considered as an alternative of the existing precision ball bearings for its bearing system. A self-acting air bearing has not come into practical use partly because the performance of contact start stop (CSS) was not satisfactory. In this paper, we have utilized amorphous hydrogenated carbon (a-C:H) as a thin film lubricant of a self-acting air bearing to study its use from the viewpoint of tribology. A result obtained from the contact start stop testing is as follows: when amorphous hydrogenated carbon (a-C:H) was used on the sliding surface of a self-acting air bearing, it exhibited sufficient performance - [which was high enough to be equal to the required] for HDDs - almost more than 15 times that of liquid lubricant which has traditionally been accepted as surface lubricant for magnetic disks.
doi_str_mv 10.1299/kikaic.60.3499
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source EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Air lubrication
Hard disk storage
Lubricants
Mechanical testing
Motors
Surfaces
Thin films
Tribology
title Experimental study of Amorphous Hydrogenated Carbon (a-C: H) as Lubricating Films in Self-Acting Air Bearing
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