GB2066490A - Optical recording medium - Google Patents

Optical recording medium Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2066490A
GB2066490A GB7941272A GB7941272A GB2066490A GB 2066490 A GB2066490 A GB 2066490A GB 7941272 A GB7941272 A GB 7941272A GB 7941272 A GB7941272 A GB 7941272A GB 2066490 A GB2066490 A GB 2066490A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
light
recording medium
absorbing layer
layer
information record
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.)
Granted
Application number
GB7941272A
Other versions
GB2066490B (en
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.)
RCA Corp
Original Assignee
RCA Corp
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
Application filed by RCA Corp filed Critical RCA Corp
Priority to GB7941272A priority Critical patent/GB2066490B/en
Priority to NLAANVRAGE7908829,A priority patent/NL188398C/en
Priority to FR7930240A priority patent/FR2471714A1/en
Priority to DE19792951341 priority patent/DE2951341A1/en
Publication of GB2066490A publication Critical patent/GB2066490A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2066490B publication Critical patent/GB2066490B/en
Priority to HK78386A priority patent/HK78386A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B7/00Recording or reproducing by optical means, e.g. recording using a thermal beam of optical radiation by modifying optical properties or the physical structure, reproducing using an optical beam at lower power by sensing optical properties; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B7/24Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material
    • G11B7/241Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material
    • G11B7/242Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material of recording layers
    • G11B7/244Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material of recording layers comprising organic materials only
    • G11B7/246Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material of recording layers comprising organic materials only containing dyes
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03CPHOTOSENSITIVE MATERIALS FOR PHOTOGRAPHIC PURPOSES; PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES, e.g. CINE, X-RAY, COLOUR, STEREO-PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES; AUXILIARY PROCESSES IN PHOTOGRAPHY
    • G03C1/00Photosensitive materials
    • G03C1/72Photosensitive compositions not covered by the groups G03C1/005 - G03C1/705
    • G03C1/73Photosensitive compositions not covered by the groups G03C1/005 - G03C1/705 containing organic compounds
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B7/00Recording or reproducing by optical means, e.g. recording using a thermal beam of optical radiation by modifying optical properties or the physical structure, reproducing using an optical beam at lower power by sensing optical properties; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B7/24Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material
    • G11B7/241Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material
    • G11B7/242Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material of recording layers
    • G11B7/244Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material of recording layers comprising organic materials only
    • G11B7/249Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material of recording layers comprising organic materials only containing organometallic compounds
    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B7/00Recording or reproducing by optical means, e.g. recording using a thermal beam of optical radiation by modifying optical properties or the physical structure, reproducing using an optical beam at lower power by sensing optical properties; Record carriers therefor
    • G11B7/24Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material
    • G11B7/241Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material
    • G11B7/252Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material of layers other than recording layers
    • G11B7/253Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material of layers other than recording layers of substrates
    • G11B7/2533Record carriers characterised by shape, structure or physical properties, or by the selection of the material characterised by the selection of the material of layers other than recording layers of substrates comprising resins

Abstract

A recording medium comprises a substrate 110 coated with a light reflecting layer 112 which in turn is coated with a light absorbing layer 114 consisting of a Pt complex of bis- (dithio- alpha -diketones) which have the formula: <IMAGE> wherein R is a phenyl or substituted phenyl group. During recording, portions 116 of the absorbing layer 114 are ablated, vaporized or melted by an intensity-modulated, focussed light beam, thereby exposing portions of the reflective layer 112 and recording video information as a reflective-antireflective pattern. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Optical recording medium This invention relates to a novel optical recording medium. More particularly, this invention relates to an optical recording medium for use with an AlGaAs solid state injection laser.
Spong in U. S. Patent 4,097,895, issued June 27, 1978, has described a recording medium which comprises a light reflecting material, such as aluminum or gold, coated with a light absorbing layer, such as fluorescein which is operative with an argon laser light source. The thickness of the light absorbing layer is chosen so that the structure has minimum reflectivity.
An incident light beam ablates, vaporizes or melts the light absorbing layer, leaving a hole and exposing the light reflecting layer. After recording, at the wavelength of the recording light there will be maximum contrast between the minimum reflectance of the light absorbing layer and the reflectance of the light reflecting layer. Further, when the light reflecting material is itself a thin layer on a non conductive substrate, little energy is lost either by reflection from the thin absorbing layer or by transmission through the reflecting layer. Thus, the energy absorbed from the light beam is concentrated into a very thin film and recording sensitivity is surprisingly high.
Because of its low input power requirement, small size and its capability for direct modulation of its optical output power by modulation of the electrical drive current, a solid state injection laser, in particular the AlGaAs laser which operates in the wavelength range from about 750 to 850 nanometers (nm), is a preferred light source for an optical recording system. Thus, materials which ablate, vaporize or melt at low temperatures upon absorption of optical energy in this wavelength range would be most useful in an optical recording system.
In order to be useful as a light absorbing layer for the above-described recording medium, materials must be able to be applied to a substrate in the form of a thin, smooth layer of high optical quality and a predetermined thickness; they must be absorbing at the frequency of the optical source employed; and they must ablate, vaporize or melt to form uniform holes.
In our U. K. Patent Appln. No. , entitled "Ablative Optical Recording Medium" and filed concurrently herewith, there is described an ablative optical recording medium operative with an AlGaAs laser which comprises a substrate coated with a light reflecting layer, which in turn is coated with a light absorbing layer selected from the group consisting of lead phthalocyanine, chloroaluminum phthalocyanine, vanadyl phthalocyanine, stannic phthalocyanine and chloroaiuminum chlorophthalocyanine.
These materials have the disadvantage, however, that their ablation temperature is in the range from 3000 C. to 4000 C. Materials with a lower ablation temperature would require less energy to reach this temperature and would thus be more sensitive. Thus, materials which absorb light between 750 nm and 850 nm, for specular, amorphous films and have a low melting temperature would be a significant improvement in the art.
According to the present invention, an optical recording medium comprises a light reflecting layer and a layer which absorbs light having a wavelength of about 750 nm to about 850 nm comprising a platinum complex of bis-(dithio-a-diketones) where the susbtituents on the ethylenic group are phenyl or substituted phenyl groups.
In the drawings:- FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of a recording medium embodying the invention prior to recording.
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of a recording medium embodying the invention after recording.
FIG. 3 is a schematic view of a recording and playback system in which the present recording medium can be employed.
The light reflecting layer should reflect the light used for recording. Suitable light reflecting materials include aluminum, rhodium, gold and the like. The light reflecting material has a thickness such that it reflects susbtantially all the recording light.
Generally, the light reflecting layer is applied to a substrate. The substrate should have an optically smooth, flat surface to which the subsequently applied light reflecting layer is adherent. A glass plate or disc or a plastic disc is suitable. If the light reflecting material can be formed so it is a self-sustaining layer and optically smooth, the need for a substrate may be eliminated.
Materials which we have found useful as a light absorbing layer in this recording medium are Pt complexes of bis-(dithio-a-diketones) which have the formula:
where at each occurrence R is a phenyl group or a phenyl group substituted with alkyl or alkoxy groups such as p-isopropylphenyl or p-methoxyphenyl. The preparation of these compounds has been described by Schranzer and Mayweg in J. Amer. Chem. Soc., Viol. 87. pup.1483~89 (1965).
These materials absorb at the solid state injection laser wavelengths between 750 nm and 850 nm and all can be evaporated onto a light reflecting layer to give smooth, optical quality light absorbing layers in which information can be recorded at high signal to noise ratios.
The materials of the invention can ba applied to the light reflecting layer by conventional vacuum evaporation. The material is charged to a suitable vessel fitted with a resistance heater and placed in a vacuum chamber. The heater is then connected to a source of electrical current. A substrate is positioned above the dye on a rotating holder. The substrate is then spun at about 50 rpm.
The vacuum chamber is evacuated to about 10~6 torr and current is applied to the heater to raise the temperature of the material to its evaporation temperature. Evaporation is continued until an absorbing layer of the required thickness is deposited onto the light reflecting layer, at which time the electrical current is shut off and the chamber vented.
The thickness of the evaporated layer is monitored using an optical system which measures the reflectivity of the reflecting surface coated with the material. The evaporation is stopped when the reflectivity reaches its minimum value.
The invention will be further explained by reference to the drawings.
FIG. 1 shows a recording medium embodying the invention prior to exposure to a recording light beam comprising a glass substrate 110, a light reflecting layer 112 comprising a layer of gold about 600 angstroms thick or other metal of suitable thickness, and a light absorbing layer 114 of one of the above mentioned materials.
FIG. 2 shows a recording medium embodying the invention after exposure to a recording light beam wherein the absorbing layer 114 has been ablated to leave a hole 116, exposing the light reflecting layer 112. It will be understood that a recording medium after recording contains a plurality of holes or pits 11 6 rather than the single one shown in FIG. 2.
The use of the present recording medium can be explained in greater detail by referring to FIG. 3.
For recording, the light emitted by an AlGaAs injection laser 10 is modulated directly in response to an input electrical signal 14. The modulated light beam is enlarged by recording optics 16 to increase the diameter of the intensity modulated laser beam so that it will fill the aperture of an objective lens 18 in the planes parallel and perpendicular to the plane of the laser 10. The enlarged modulated laser beam is totally reflected by a polarizing beam splitter 20 and passes through a quarterwave plate 22 to the objective lens 18. The modulated recording beam then impinges upon a recording medium 24, as described in FIG. 1, and ablates or evaporates a portion of the light absorbing layer to expose a portion of the light reflecting layer. Recording medium 24 is rotated by the turntable drive 26 at about 1800 rpm.A focus servo 28 maintains a constant distance between the objective lens 18 and the surface of the recording medium 24.
For readout, an unmodulated and less intense laser beam, that is, one that wil not cause ablation of the recording medium, follows the same path as the recording beam to the recording medium 24. The recorded reflection-antireflection pattern modulates the light reflected back through the objective lens 18 and the quarter-wave plate 22. The light, now rotated by 900 in polarization by the two passages through the quarter-wave plate 22, passes through the polarizing beam splitter 20 and is directed by playback optics 30 to a photodetector 32. The photodetector 32 converts the reflected light beam to an electrical output signal at terminal 34 which corresponds to the input signal from source 14.A tracking servo 36 monitors the light reflected through the playback optics 30 and deflects the incident light beam radially to insure that the incident light beam remains centered on the track of interest.
The invention will be further illustrated by the following Examples but the invention is not meant to be limited to the details decribed therein.
EXAMPLE 1 A vinyl disk substrate was coated by evaporating a layer of gold above 600 angstroms thick. The coated substrate was placed in a vacuum chamber above an evaporation boat containing the bis(diphenyl-dithio-a-diketone) complex of Pt and turned at 50 rpm. The vacuum chamber was evacuated to about 1 0-8 torr and a source of current was connected to the boat. The boat was heated to about 225-2750C. at which temperature the shutter was opened and the material evaporated at a rate of about 4 angstroms per second. Evaporation was continued until an absorbing layer about 600 angstroms thick was deposited over the gold layer.
A smooth, amorphous, specular and continuous layer was deposited. The real (n) and imaginary (k) parts of the dielectric constant of the Pt bis(diphenyl-dithio-a-diketone) layer at 800 nm are 2.08 and 0.5 respectively.
The resultant recording medium was exposed to a series of 50 nanosecond light pulses having a wavelength of about 800 nm from an AlGaAs injection laser in an apparatus as in FIG. 3. The absorbing material was ablated from th disk by multiple exposure with 10 milliwatts incident on the disk.
EXAMPLE II Following the general procedure of Example I, a gold coated substrate as in Example I was coated with a layer of the bis(di-p-isopropylphenyl-dithio-a-diketone) complex of Pt 1324 angstroms thick. The real Pn) and imaginary (k) parts of the dielectric constant of the Pt bis(di-p-isopropylphenyl-dithio-adiketone) layer at 800 nm are 1.75 and 0.78 respectively.
A smooth, amorphous, specular and continuous layer was deposited.
EXAMPLE Ill Following the general procedure of Example I, a gold coated susbtrate as in Example I was coated with a layer of the bis(di-p-methoxyphenyl-dithio-a-diketone) complex of Pt 1900 angstroms thick. The real (n) and imaginary (k) parts of the dielectric constant of the Pt bis(di-p-methoxyphenyl-dithio-a- diketone) layer at 800 nm are 1.61 and 0.76 respectively.
A smooth, amorphous, specular and continuous layer was deposited. This film reduced the reflectivity of the recording medium to about 7% from about 95% reflectivity of the gold layer before the absorbing layer was added.
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLES Following the general procedure of Example I, gold coated vinyl disks were coated with bis(dithioa-diketone) complexes of Pt, Pd, or Ni with the same or differing substituted aryl or alkyl gorups. The complexes belong to the class having the formula
wherein M can be Pt, Pd or Ni and Rr and R2 can be alkyl, phenyl, or alkyl- or alkoxy-substituted phenyl.
These materials produced either non-specular films or films with a poor antireflection condition upon evaporation. In almost all cases the films were initially hazy and proceeded to crystallize in a period of days. None of these dyes proved suitable for the present application. The data are summarized in Table TABLE I M R, R2 COMMENTS Pt p-CH3O-C6H4 C6H5 film crystallized Pd p-i-C3H7-C6H4 p-i-C3H7-C6H4 film cloudy Pd C6H5 C6H5 film cloudy, no absorption Ni C6H5 C6Hs film cloudy Ni p-CH3O-C6H4 C6H5 clear film, small absorption and high reflectivity Ni p-i-C3H7- C0H4 p-i-C3H2-C6H4 film cloudy Ni p-CH3O-C6H4 p-CH30-C6H4 film cloudy Ni n-C3H, n-C3H, film became hazy immediately Ni C2H5 C2H5 film became hazy immediately

Claims (12)

1. In an ablative optical recording medium, for use with a recording laser providing light of a given frequency, which comprises a light reflecting layer coated with a light absorbing layer, the improvement which comprises employing as the light absorbing layer a Pt bis (dithio-a-diketone) complex having the formula
where R is a phenyl or a substituted phenyl group.
2. A recording medium according to claim 1 where R is a phenyl group.
3. A recording medium according to claim 1 where R is a p-isopropylphenyl group.
4. A recording medium according to claim 1 where R is a p-methoxyphenyl group.
5. A recording medium according to claim 1 wherein the thickness of said absorbing layer is chosen so as to minimize the reflectivity to a light source emitting at about 750-850 nm wavelength.
6. In an information record, for use in playback apparatus employing a playback beam of light of a given frequency, which comprises a light reflecting layer coated with a light absorbing layer, with an information track formed in said absorbing layer, the improvement which comprises employing as the light absorbing layer a Pt bis (dithio-c-diketone) complex having the formula
where R is a phenyl or a substituted phenyl group.
7. An information record according to claim 6 wherein said information track comprises a succession of spaced pits in said absorbing layer which are representative of recorded information.
8. An information record according to claim 6 where R is a phenyl group.
9. An information record according to claim 6 where R is a p-isopropylphenyl group.
10. An information record according to claim 6 where R is a p-methoxyphenyl group.
11. An information record according to claim 6 wherein the thickness of said absorbing layer is chosen so as to minimize the reflectivity to a light source emitting at about 750~850 nm wavelength.
12. An information record substantially as hereinbefore described in any Example.
GB7941272A 1979-11-29 1979-11-29 Optical recording medium Expired GB2066490B (en)

Priority Applications (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7941272A GB2066490B (en) 1979-11-29 1979-11-29 Optical recording medium
NLAANVRAGE7908829,A NL188398C (en) 1979-11-29 1979-12-06 OPTICAL RECORD MEDIUM WITH A REGISTRATION LAYER OF A LIGHT-ABSORBING MATERIAL, IN WHICH AN INFORMATION TRACK OF OPENINGS CAN BE FORMED BY THE ABSORPTION OF A LIGHT BEAM AND AN INFORMATION RECORD CONTAINING THE OPTICAL REGISTRATION MEDIA WITH A DATA IN THE DATA.
FR7930240A FR2471714A1 (en) 1979-11-29 1979-12-10 ABLATION OPTICAL RECORDING MEDIUM FOR USE WITH A RECORDING LASER BEAM AND FOR USE IN A RESTITUTION DEVICE EMPLOYING A REFLECTIVE LIGHT BEAM AT A FREQUENCY GIVEN
DE19792951341 DE2951341A1 (en) 1979-11-29 1979-12-20 OPTICAL RECORD CARRIER
HK78386A HK78386A (en) 1979-11-29 1986-10-16 Optical recording medium

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7941272A GB2066490B (en) 1979-11-29 1979-11-29 Optical recording medium
NLAANVRAGE7908829,A NL188398C (en) 1979-11-29 1979-12-06 OPTICAL RECORD MEDIUM WITH A REGISTRATION LAYER OF A LIGHT-ABSORBING MATERIAL, IN WHICH AN INFORMATION TRACK OF OPENINGS CAN BE FORMED BY THE ABSORPTION OF A LIGHT BEAM AND AN INFORMATION RECORD CONTAINING THE OPTICAL REGISTRATION MEDIA WITH A DATA IN THE DATA.
FR7930240A FR2471714A1 (en) 1979-11-29 1979-12-10 ABLATION OPTICAL RECORDING MEDIUM FOR USE WITH A RECORDING LASER BEAM AND FOR USE IN A RESTITUTION DEVICE EMPLOYING A REFLECTIVE LIGHT BEAM AT A FREQUENCY GIVEN
DE19792951341 DE2951341A1 (en) 1979-11-29 1979-12-20 OPTICAL RECORD CARRIER

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2066490A true GB2066490A (en) 1981-07-08
GB2066490B GB2066490B (en) 1983-10-19

Family

ID=27432482

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB7941272A Expired GB2066490B (en) 1979-11-29 1979-11-29 Optical recording medium

Country Status (4)

Country Link
DE (1) DE2951341A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2471714A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2066490B (en)
NL (1) NL188398C (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4719170A (en) * 1985-03-02 1988-01-12 Basf Aktiengesellshaft Optical recording material

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3505751A1 (en) * 1985-02-20 1986-08-21 Basf Ag, 6700 Ludwigshafen NEW TETRAPHENYLDITHIOLE COMPLEXES AND OPTICAL RECORDING MEDIA CONTAINING THESE COMPLEXES
US4783393A (en) * 1986-10-27 1988-11-08 Eastman Kodak Company Dye mixtures and optical recording elements containing same
US5268478A (en) * 1990-11-30 1993-12-07 Teijin Limited Sulfur compound-coordinate bonded organic coloring matter, compositions of same, and photorecording media containing same

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3588216A (en) * 1966-09-02 1971-06-28 Polaroid Corp Plastic optical elements
JPS5932319B2 (en) * 1974-03-22 1984-08-08 富士写真フイルム株式会社 recording material
US4097895A (en) * 1976-03-19 1978-06-27 Rca Corporation Multilayer optical record

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4719170A (en) * 1985-03-02 1988-01-12 Basf Aktiengesellshaft Optical recording material

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2066490B (en) 1983-10-19
FR2471714A1 (en) 1981-06-19
NL188398B (en) 1992-01-16
NL188398C (en) 1992-06-16
DE2951341A1 (en) 1981-06-25
NL7908829A (en) 1981-07-01
DE2951341C2 (en) 1988-07-07
FR2471714B1 (en) 1983-07-18

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4241355A (en) Ablative optical recording medium
US4219826A (en) Optical recording medium
US4023185A (en) Ablative optical recording medium
US4101907A (en) Overcoat structure for optical video disc
US4300143A (en) Thin protective overcoat layer for optical video disc
US4315269A (en) Thick protective overcoat layer for optical video disc
US4345261A (en) Dielectric recording medium
US4814256A (en) Optical recording material
US4460636A (en) Optical information record member
US4313188A (en) Method of recording an ablative optical recording medium
US4322839A (en) Method and apparatus for recording and reproducing information on and from an optical disk
CA1135413A (en) Optical recording medium
KR20010105205A (en) Optical recording medium, reproducing apparatus, and recording and reproducing apparatus therefor
US4218689A (en) Ablatable medium for optical recording
US4242689A (en) Ablative optical recording medium
US5811217A (en) Optical information recording medium and optical information recording/reproducing method
GB1576279A (en) Optical recording medium
GB2066489A (en) Ablative optical recording medium
JPH04252440A (en) Optical information recording medium
US5151342A (en) Multilayer recording medium for optical information
US4857373A (en) Optical recording element
Bartolini Media for high-density optical recording
GB2066490A (en) Optical recording medium
JPH0436876B2 (en)
CA1131774A (en) Optical recording medium

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
732E Amendments to the register in respect of changes of name or changes affecting rights (sect. 32/1977)
PE20 Patent expired after termination of 20 years

Effective date: 19991128