• DocumentCode
    1350004
  • Title

    Evaluation of amorphous diamond-like carbon-nitrogen films as wear protective coatings on thin film media and thin film head sliders

  • Author

    Sivertsen, John M. ; Wang, Geng ; Chen, Ga-Lane ; Judy, Jack H.

  • Author_Institution
    Center for Micromagn. & Inf. Technol., Minnesota Univ., Minneapolis, MN, USA
  • Volume
    33
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    1997
  • fDate
    1/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    926
  • Lastpage
    931
  • Abstract
    As the magnetic data storage industry strives to achieve ultra-high recording densities requiring fly heights of less than one microinch, the tribology of the head-disk interface (HDI) is a limiting factor in disk drive design. Amorphous diamond-like-carbon (DLC) films have been the materials of choice for wear-protective coatings. Various amorphous DLC type coatings have been developed. The earliest DLC material was DC magnetron sputtered pure carbon films. Recent developments have produced C:H (hydrogenated-carbon) and C:N (carbon-nitrogen) films with greater wear-resistance than pure C film. Our intent is to describe and evaluate the wear-resistance performance of amorphous C:N films as wear-protective overcoats on thin film media and thin film sliders. Both C:H and C:N films have demonstrated superiority over DC magnetron sputtered pure carbon films. The bond character, microhardness, surface roughness features, and the physical nature of initial wear damage influence wear-resistance performance significantly. A recent report of nano-indentor measurements and wear-resistance performance confirmed the superiority of RF diode and DC magnetron Facing Target Sputtering (FTS) of thin C:N coatings over other DLC films
  • Keywords
    amorphous state; carbon; magnetic heads; magnetic recording; magnetic thin film devices; nitrogen; sputtered coatings; wear resistant coatings; C:N; DC magnetron sputtering; RF diode sputtering; amorphous diamond-like carbon-nitrogen film; bonding; facing target sputtering; fly height; head-disk interface; magnetic data storage; microhardness; nanoindentation; surface roughness; thin film head slider; thin film media; tribology; ultra-high recording density; wear protective coating; Amorphous magnetic materials; Amorphous materials; Coatings; Disk recording; Magnetic films; Magnetic materials; Magnetic recording; Memory; Sputtering; Tribology;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9464
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/20.560133
  • Filename
    560133