AU772323B2 - Multi-surfaced, single sided optical disc - Google Patents

Multi-surfaced, single sided optical disc Download PDF

Info

Publication number
AU772323B2
AU772323B2 AU31414/02A AU3141402A AU772323B2 AU 772323 B2 AU772323 B2 AU 772323B2 AU 31414/02 A AU31414/02 A AU 31414/02A AU 3141402 A AU3141402 A AU 3141402A AU 772323 B2 AU772323 B2 AU 772323B2
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
light
data
frequency
layer
thin film
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
AU31414/02A
Other versions
AU3141402A (en
Inventor
Deborah H. Carey
Christopher Cookson
Richard Marquardt Jr.
John L. Orehotsky
Anthony Pietrzykoski
Daniel M. Pindzola
Howard L. Price
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Wea Manufacturing Inc
Original Assignee
Wea Manufacturing Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from AU58190/98A external-priority patent/AU5819098A/en
Application filed by Wea Manufacturing Inc filed Critical Wea Manufacturing Inc
Publication of AU3141402A publication Critical patent/AU3141402A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU772323B2 publication Critical patent/AU772323B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Landscapes

  • Optical Recording Or Reproduction (AREA)

Description

I r
AUSTRALIA
Patents Act 1990 WEA MANUFACTURING, INC.
COMPLETE SPECIFICATION DIVISIONAL PATENT Invention Title: Multi-surfaced, single sided optical disc The following statement is a full description of this invention including the best method of performing it known to us:- MULTI-SURFACED. SINGLE SIDED OPTICAL DISC FIELD OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to optical storage media, specifically compact discs that contain more than one data recording surface readable from a single side of the disc.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION Compact discs are typically composite objects having a series of pits impressed into a plastic surface, usually during an injection molding process. These pits and the lands between them are arranged in a spiral pattern that can be tracked by a pickup laser beam which advances slowly along a radius of the 15 disc while the disc is spun about an axis through the center of the disc. The pit/land surface is coated with a thin reflective metal layer. The pickup laser beam is reflected from the metal layer coating the pits and lands and 20 the reflection is analyzed to observe the change in reflection intensity associated with a transition from a land to a pit or vice versa. To enhance the change in reflection intensity the wavelength of light is chosen to cause interference when the laser illuminates a pit. The interference occurs between laser light reflected from the bottom of a pit and light reflected from the areas outside the pits struck by the laser light. Therefore the wavelength of light is not chosen arbitrarily, but is typically related to the depth of the pits.
An infrared wavelength of 780-790 nm in air (503-510 nm in polycarbonate where the index of refraction n=1.55) is often used. By detecting the change in reflection intensity, the length of the pit and or land as it passes under the pickup laser is sensed by photocells and is then interpreted by the CD player's electronics. Data is encoded onto the compact disc as varying lengths of the pits and lands. The data may be analog or digital data. For example a voltage level may correspond to a pit length in an analogue recording, or the length of the pits/lands may represent strings of O's or l's for the recording of digital data.
The amount of data that can be encoded onto a disc is limited by the density of pits and lands that can be accurately reproduced, for example by an injection molding pro- 15 cedure, and that can be accurately read by a photocell sensor system. Some error rate can be tolerated if the data is placed on the disc in a redundant format that allows errors to be recognized and corrected. Thus as the pits and lands are decreased in size it becomes necessary as a practical matter to provide greater redundancy in the data until a limit is reached in the amount of data that can be stored on the disc surface.
The conventional audio compact disc stored data that was readable from only one side, the other side being used to display a label over the surface of the disc. It has been known to utilize both surfaces of the compact disc to store data, thereby doubling the amount of data that can be stored. Double sided discs have been made by fabricated two half thickness compact discs and bonding them back to back.
One drawback of such a product is that the disc must be removed from the player and inverted if there is only one pickup laser reading head within the player, or multiple reading heads must be provided. The present invention avoids the need for either multiple reading heads or disc inversion.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION A CD format using a reading beam of shorter than conventional wavelength (650 nm v. 780 nm) called DVD has been proposed. Discs for this new format would not be readable by conventional CD players. The present invention provides a way to have an optical disc medium readable by both (conventional) CD and DVD players.
According to the invention, there is provided a multi data storage medium for data optically recorded in pit and land structures having data, a portion of which is readable by light of a first frequency, and not by light of a second frequency, and a portion of which data is readable by light of a second frequency and not the first frequency, comprising: a first data surface formed as a series of pits and lands in a first plastic layer; a thin film of material forming a layer having upper and lower surfaces, the lower surface in contact with the pits and lands of the first data surface, .wherein the film passes light of the second frequency and reflects light of the first frequency, an adhesive layer in contact with the upper surface of the thin film, the adhesive layer being transparent to light of the second frequency, a second plastic layer in contact with the adhesive, the second plastic layer having a second data surface comprising a series of pits and lands remote from the adhesive, a reflective layer for the second frequency of light in contact with the second data surface, wherein the thin film comprises a semiconducting material having a large index of refraction for reflectivity with a band gap energy of approximately 1.7 eV.
More particularly, the present invention provides a double surfaced (or higher multiple surfaced) data storing compact disc for optically recorded data.
The data surfaces (one for conventional CD, one for DVD) are separated by a thin film of wavelength sensitive material that passes light of one frequency and reflects light of a second (or multiple) frequency. The thin film may provide this effect by passively relying upon the inherent interference between light signals reflected from the upper and lower surfaces of the film. In another embodiment the thin film may be fabricated from an active material that receives light of one frequency and depending upon that frequency remits light of a second frequency. Filtering optics can then distinguish the light reflected from the data surfaces. In this manner, by the proper selection of the wavelength of the illuminating light the information stored in the pits and lands of the appropriate surface is selectively recovered from the compact disc.
A further aspect of the present invention is the method for the manufacture of such a [rest of page left intentionally blank] ooeoo *t 9 e°-ooi .o:go multi-surfaced disc. The invention is a combination of the technologies of compact disc manufacture and thin film technology.
One advantage of the present invention is greater information storage on a single disc.
A second advantage is that by providing a disc with two different data formats it may allow backwards compatibility during introduction of a new DVD format.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS Figure 1 is a schematic representation of the reflection of light from a thin film.
•Figure 2 is a side cut away view showing the data recording surfaces of the present in- 15 vention.
Figure 3 is a further embodiment in which the wavelength selectable thin film comprises the adhesive bonding the CD and DVD surfaces together.
Figure 4 is a structural diagram of a preferred thin film material.
Figure 5 is a schematic view of an alternative embodiment of the present invention employing multiple data surfaces.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT Figure 1 shows the reflection of parallel rays of light from two surfaces of a thin film.
The light is shown in non-normal incidence for purposes of clarity, but in practice the light is normally incident on the film. The phase change of the ray that takes the longer path by reflection from the upper surface is 2r(2dj/Xj) where the term is included if the light is reflected from a surface having a lesser index of refraction than the material through which it is propagating. The index i identifies the layer where the reflection takes place in the event that there is more than one such layer. When the phase change is an odd multiple of r relative to the ray reflected from the lower surface, there is destructive interference and the intensity of the light reflected from the thin film as a whole is reduced and the wave propagates through the thin film. In this manner any thin film of proper thickness and index of refraction has wavelength selective properties. In one aspect of the present invention a thin film coating is used to select between the different wave- 15 lengths of the pickup lasers.
Figure 2 depicts a cross section (not tc scale) through a portion of the compact disc of the present invention. The pits and lands are present on two levels. The upper level pits and lands 11 are formed on a PCV or polycarbonate vinyl flat surface termed the CD because of its resemblance to conventional audio or CD-ROM surfaces. It is coated with a metallization layer 15 to enhance the reflectivity of light entering from below. The depths of the pits on the CD layer are such as to enhance interference effects when 780 nm radiation is incident on the pit/land surface. The lower level pits and lands 17 are formed on a PCV flat surface termed the DVD 19. The lower level pits and lands are coated with a wavelength selective reflection layer 21, also referred to as a thin film layer, thereby complet-ing the formation of the DVD. Both the DVD and the CD layers have preferred thicknesses of 0.6 mm. The thin film layer 21 is preferably a silicon carbide (SiC n=2.7) oxide or nitride deposited by sputtering onto the appropriate surface to a thickness of approximately 140 nm. The two layers are adhered together by an bonding layer which may be a transmissive photo polymer layer having a thickness of 30-40 In an alternative embodiment of the present invention depicted in Figure 3, the adhesive material may itself constitute the wavelength selective thin film.
The thin film layer 21 is reflective to wavelengths of 650 nm arnd transmissive to infrared wavelengths of 780 nfl. In the preferred embodiment the wavelength selection is a function of the thin film nature of the sputtered material and not any particular active feature of the silicon material.
In an alternative embcdiment the DVD layer 19 comprises a dye polymner layer 21, which is over 85% transissive to 780 nm light and over 15% reflective to 650 nm light. In both embodiments, the CD layer is conventionally coated (metallized) for maximum reflectivity off" over 90%. The relative efficiency of the reflectivity of the 780 rim material is 70%. The 425 data density of the DVD layer may be reduced to gigabytes to assure adequate signal to noise ratio.
This application contains three alternative embodiments of the invention using active materials. These are the use of an organic dye, the use of a semiconductor having a large index of refraction for reflectivity, and the use of a liquid crystal polymer, and the use of an emission/transmission design.
In a first alternative embodiment, a thin molecular) layer of an organic dye having the desired reflectivity at 650 nm and transmissivity at 780 nm is place on the surface of the polycarbonate disc. The two polycarbonate discs are then bonded together with an aliphatic hydrocarbon wax, strengthened by a small amount of ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA). These polymers are transmissive to 780 nm. The system is easily adaptable to largescale manufacturing. The dye may be selected from a group that are transmissive at 780 nm and reflective at 650 nm. This dyes include the anthraquinones, such as D&C green 6 (1,4di(p-toluidine)anthraquinone) available from Crompton Knowles, and solvent green 6, available from Pylam. Other useable dyes are 15 Chlorantine Fast Blue 4GL and diphenylmethine dyes such as Michler's hydrol. The structural diagrams for these preferred dyes are shown in Figure 4.
To apply the D&C green 6 dye onto the 20 surface of a polycarbonate disc the dye is dissolved in USP No. 10 mineral oil and then spin-cast onto the surface of the disc prior to adding the adhesive. The mineral oil is preferred because it is transparent at the wave- 25 lengths of interest and will flow evenly into the imprinted grooves of the disc due to its low viscosity.
Reflection occurs only at the interface between the dye and the polycarbonate disc, and therefore, only a uniform molecular layer is necessary for this embodiment to work. 5-10 Am of the dye is sufficient to cover the surface of the disc. An alternative technique to spincasting a thin layer of the dye onto the disc is to use a solvent such as butane that could be flashed evaporated. In this process, rapid heating of the solvent would leave the dye behind on the surface of the disc.
To bond the discs a strong adhesive for polycarbonate is used such as pure paraffin or micro-crystalline waxes. These have a melting temperature around 80 0 C and readily "wet" the surface of polycarbonate. In addition to their adhesive strengths, any residual hydrocarbon solvent used for dissolving the dye would be absorbed by these waxes and would concentrate the D&C green 6 into a very compact reflective layer at the surface of the disc. A small percentage of ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) should be added to the paraffin wax melt, to increase the high temperature tensile 15 strength and low temperature flexibility of the product. Adding more than 10% of EVA to the paraffin wax may cause cloud point dispersion of the light beam, which might diminish the signal intensity.
In a second preferred embodiment of the present invention a semiconductor may be used to bring about the desired wavelength selectivity. The preferred semiconductor is a (GaAs) 6 (GaP) stoichiometric III-V semicon- 25 ductor. At 500 nm, the index of refraction of this material is about 3.5, so the reflectivity is measurable at 650 nm. The index of refraction of the polycarbonate is 1.5. The reflectivity at an interface is calculate from R=(n z nl/n 2 2 Thus at a (GaAs) 6 (GaP). /air interface the reflectivity is 2 30%. At a (GaAs) 6(GaP).
4 polycarbonate interface the reflectivity is R 1.5)2/(3.5+1.5) 2 16%. Because of the reflection at the polycarbonate air interface a total reflectivity of about 10% is expected in the CD/DVD technology with this material as the filter. This 10% reflectivity represents an attenuated signal, but is expected to be serviceable for the technology provided the incident laser power is sufficiently intense, the optical detection system is sufficiently sensitive and the remaining 90% of the incident 650 nm radiation is accommodated by absorption effects and not transmissivity.
The CD/DVD technology requires a material with a very sharp change in the transmissivity at about 700 nm. This requires a change of the absorption coefficient by orders of magnitude in the immediate vicinity of 700 nm. This is satisfied by semiconducting materials with band 15 gap energies of approximately 1.7 eV. The preferred material, (GaAs) stoichiometric II-V semiconductor, has this desired band gap energy. The sharpness of the transmissivity has been evaluated from the wave- 20 length dependence of the absorption coefficient, which shows that the absorption coefficient can change by about 5 orders of magnitude over a 100 nm wavelength band centered about 700 nm. At 650 nm the internal transmissivity 25 is negligibly small. At 780 nm the internal transmissivity is 100%. The reflectivity at 780 nm is in excess of 10%, since the refractive index generally decreases with increasing wavelength.
To achieve larger reflectivity than 10% at 650 nm, a very thin (about 10 nm) partially reflective chromium layer can be deposited on the polycarbonate prior to depositing the 40 Am GaAsP layer. Increasing the reflectivity to specifications at 650 nm with a partially transmissive chromium layer will have an attenuating effect on the transmissive behavicr at 780 nm. A beneficial side-effect of employing chromium as a. reflectivity agent is that it may also be strong bonding agent between the polycarbonate and the GaAsP.
Other materials having a band gap energy at 1.7 eV is the II-VI binary compound CdSe.
However its index of refraction is about making it less suitable. Several ternary and quaternary III-V compound semiconductors exist whose binary compound components are mutually soluble in each other and whose compositions can be adjusted to achieve a 1.7 EV band gap energy. The ternary (GaAs) 1 _x(AlAs)x compounds represent alternative possibilities to the 15 preferred GaAsP system.
A still further preferred embodiment employs a liquid crystal polymer (LCP). LCPs are polymers whose optical properties are controlled by the molecular structure and the 20 post-reactor processing involving thermal, mechanical and electrical energy. The optical properties are also changed by processing the polymer by itself or with other polymers.
In the prior art, LCP's have been used for a wide variety of optical devices. These include switchable optical recording medium, gas flow optical indicator, light modulators, shutters and valves, amplitude intensifying optical filters, wave plate for 1054 nm laser, optical bandpass filter, multipage optical display as well as other applications. LCPs have been applied as films and as dispersions in other polymers including polycarbonate. The composite is a polymer dispersed liquid crystal or PDLC. The PDLC contains "droplets" of the LCP. The size, pitch and spatial orientation of these droplets provide yet another way of controlling the optical properties of the polymer-LCP composite.
A copolyamide of nylon 6 and nylon 66 with the trade name Utramid is supplied by BASF.
This contains no chopped glass reinforcing fibers, so it is useful for optical applications.
The general method of dispensing LCPs in host polymers is by extrusion. Such dispersion can be done prior to and independent of the present manufacturing line.
A still further preferred embodiment is shown in Figure 5. There, a multilayered example of the present invention is depicted in 15 which there are more that two data recording surfaces.
A particular utility for this invention is to provide a single compact disc that is readable both on a conventional CD player (where 20 the data is read using the longer wavelength light that passes through the DVD layer) and on a DVD format player. The DVD player requires a thinner plastic layer that allows the DVD data surface to be closer to the pickup laser. This is accomplished by the present invention where, as shown in Fig. 2, the DVD layer is closer to the pickup optics. The CD player, which can tolerate a greater displacement between the pickup optics and the data surface is the surface further removed from the pickup optics.
In this manner, a disc may be prepared which could be used with either a CD or DVD player by having data for the corresponding player on the corresponding layer.
While there have been shown and described and pointed out the fundamental novel features of the invention as applied to preferred 13 embodiments thereof, it will be understood that various omissions and substitutions and changes in the form and details of the device illustrated and in its operation may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the invention.
oo*

Claims (4)

1. A multi data storage medium for data optically recorded in pit and land structures having data, a portion of which is readable by light of a first frequency, and not by light of a second frequency, and a portion of which data is readable by light of a second frequency and not the first frequency, comprising: a first data surface formed as a series of pits and lands in a first plastic layer; a thin film of material forming a layer having upper and lower surfaces, said lower surface in contact with the pits and lands of said first data surface, wherein said film passes light of the second frequency and reflects light of the first frequency, ~an adhesive layer in contact with the upper surface of said thin film, said adhesive layer being transparent to light of the second frequency, 15 a second plastic layer in contact with said adhesive, said second plastic layer having a second data surface comprising a series of pits and lands remote from said adhesive, :a reflective layer for said second frequency of light in contact with the *second data surface, wherein said thin film comprises a semiconducting material having a large index of refraction for reflectivity with a band gap energy of approximately 1.7 eV. o°*
2. The multilayer data storage medium of claim 1, wherein said semiconducting material is a Ga stoichiometric semiconductor.
3. The multilayer data storage medium of claim 2 further comprising a partially reflective chromium layer between the plastic layer and the Ga semiconductor.
4. The multilayer data storage medium of claim 1, wherein said thin film comprises CdSe. A multi data storage medium substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings. Dated this third day of April 2002 WEA Manufacturing, Inc. Patent Attorneys for the Applicant: F B RICE CO *o
AU31414/02A 1997-01-10 2002-04-04 Multi-surfaced, single sided optical disc Ceased AU772323B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US08782555 1997-01-10
AU58190/98A AU5819098A (en) 1997-01-10 1998-01-09 Multi-surfaced, single sided optical disc

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU58190/98A Division AU5819098A (en) 1997-01-10 1998-01-09 Multi-surfaced, single sided optical disc

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU3141402A AU3141402A (en) 2002-05-30
AU772323B2 true AU772323B2 (en) 2004-04-22

Family

ID=32180933

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU31414/02A Ceased AU772323B2 (en) 1997-01-10 2002-04-04 Multi-surfaced, single sided optical disc

Country Status (1)

Country Link
AU (1) AU772323B2 (en)

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4450553A (en) * 1978-03-22 1984-05-22 U.S. Philips Corporation Multilayer information disc
US5608715A (en) * 1994-07-26 1997-03-04 Pioneer Electronic Corporation Multi-layered recording disk and recording/reproducing system using the same
US5627814A (en) * 1994-12-27 1997-05-06 Daewoo Electronics Co., Ltd. Optical pickup system for reading information recorded on an optical disk having multiple recording surfaces

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4450553A (en) * 1978-03-22 1984-05-22 U.S. Philips Corporation Multilayer information disc
US5608715A (en) * 1994-07-26 1997-03-04 Pioneer Electronic Corporation Multi-layered recording disk and recording/reproducing system using the same
US5627814A (en) * 1994-12-27 1997-05-06 Daewoo Electronics Co., Ltd. Optical pickup system for reading information recorded on an optical disk having multiple recording surfaces

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU3141402A (en) 2002-05-30

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US6160787A (en) Multiple layer optical recording medium for use with two different wavelength laser beams
KR100432339B1 (en) Multilayer optical disk
US5726970A (en) Multi-layer optical recording medium
JPH056571A (en) Optical type information storage medium
JP2002050053A (en) Optical information medium
JP2002063736A (en) Optical information medium and method of manufacture thereof
US6650615B1 (en) Optical recording medium and recording and/or reproducing method and apparatus employing the optical recording medium
JP3351761B2 (en) Optical recording medium having multiple recording layers and method of manufacturing the same
US6603733B2 (en) Optical information medium
EP0575176B1 (en) Optical recording medium, information recording method and information reproducing method
JPH09320117A (en) Optical disk
AU772323B2 (en) Multi-surfaced, single sided optical disc
JP2005521981A (en) Optical data storage medium and use of the medium
US20070115790A1 (en) Holographic recording medium and holographic recording process using the same
US6229783B1 (en) Optical recording device having a medium with two superimposed levels and method for reading
KR0141181B1 (en) Multilayer optical recording medium and its manufacturing method
EP0762408B1 (en) Multi-layer optical disk
JPH10172182A (en) Mutilayered structure optical information medium
KR100332054B1 (en) Optical Recording Media With Multiple Layers And Fabricating Method thereof
US7457229B2 (en) Optical recording medium
KR100334569B1 (en) Optical Recording Media With Multiple Layer And Fabricating Method thereof
KR100192250B1 (en) Double-sided recording optical disk for one-directional reproducing
JPH06195753A (en) Optical data recording medium
JPH10302314A (en) Multilayer structure optical information medium
USRE40136E1 (en) Multilayer optical disk

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
FGA Letters patent sealed or granted (standard patent)