US20100103807A1 - Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data - Google Patents

Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20100103807A1
US20100103807A1 US12/587,506 US58750609A US2010103807A1 US 20100103807 A1 US20100103807 A1 US 20100103807A1 US 58750609 A US58750609 A US 58750609A US 2010103807 A1 US2010103807 A1 US 2010103807A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
layer
reproducing
recording medium
data recording
optical data
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.)
Abandoned
Application number
US12/587,506
Inventor
Hideharu Tajima
Nobuyuki Takamori
Go Mori
Masaki Yamamoto
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.)
Sharp Corp
Original Assignee
Sharp 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 Sharp Corp filed Critical Sharp Corp
Priority to US12/587,506 priority Critical patent/US20100103807A1/en
Publication of US20100103807A1 publication Critical patent/US20100103807A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

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
    • G11B7/252Record 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
    • G11B7/257Record 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 layers having properties involved in recording or reproduction, e.g. optical interference layers or sensitising layers or dielectric layers, which are protecting the recording layers
    • 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
    • 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
    • G11B7/243Record 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 inorganic materials only, e.g. ablative layers
    • 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
    • G11B7/243Record 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 inorganic materials only, e.g. ablative layers
    • G11B2007/24302Metals or metalloids
    • G11B2007/24304Metals or metalloids group 2 or 12 elements (e.g. Be, Ca, Mg, Zn, Cd)
    • 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
    • G11B7/243Record 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 inorganic materials only, e.g. ablative layers
    • G11B2007/24318Non-metallic elements
    • G11B2007/2432Oxygen
    • 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
    • G11B7/257Record 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 layers having properties involved in recording or reproduction, e.g. optical interference layers or sensitising layers or dielectric layers, which are protecting the recording layers
    • G11B2007/25705Record 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 layers having properties involved in recording or reproduction, e.g. optical interference layers or sensitising layers or dielectric layers, which are protecting the recording layers consisting essentially of inorganic materials
    • G11B2007/2571Record 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 layers having properties involved in recording or reproduction, e.g. optical interference layers or sensitising layers or dielectric layers, which are protecting the recording layers consisting essentially of inorganic materials containing group 14 elements except carbon (Si, Ge, Sn, Pb)
    • 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
    • G11B7/258Record 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 reflective layers

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to (i) an optical data recording medium for recording or reproduction of data, and (ii) a method for reproducing data from the optical data recording medium.
  • optical data recording medium having bigger storage capacity
  • an optical data recording medium has been developed which enables reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark length shorter than a mark length of resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus.
  • the optical data recording medium is referred as a “super-resolution optical data recording medium.”
  • the super-resolution optical data recording medium includes at least a reproducing layer and a reflective layer layered in this order on a substrate.
  • the super-resolution optical data recording medium employs a method of virtually reducing a spot size of a laser beam which reaches the reflective layer. Specifically, the spot size of the laser beam which reaches the reflective layer is reduced by irradiating a reproducing laser beam via the substrate to the reproducing layer. In this way, the reproducing layer has such an optical characteristic with respect to the reproducing laser beam that is distributed unevenly over the reproducing layer.
  • a shutter layer As an example of a layer material whose optical characteristic is changeable by light intensity, a shutter layer (a layer in which semi-conductor fine particles are dispersed in a matrix made of glass or resin) is described in Japanese Publication for Unexamined Patent Application No. 6-28713 (Tokukaihei 6-28713, published on Feb. 4, 1994).
  • the shutter layer (reproducing layer) 42 and the optical reflective layer 44 are layered on that surface of the substrate 45 which is reverse to the surface from above which the laser beam is irradiated.
  • thermochromic pigment is described in Japanese Publication for Unexamined Patent Application No. 2001-35012 (Tokukai 2001-35012, published on Feb. 9, 2001).
  • a mask layer (reproducing layer) 32 a first dielectric layer 36 , a phase change recording film 37 , a second dielectric 38 , a reflective layer 34 , and a protective resin layer 39 are layered in this order on that surface of the substrate 35 which is reverse to the surface from above which the laser beam 30 is irradiated.
  • the reproducing layer is provided on that surface (non-light-incident surface) of the substrates which is reverse to the surface (incident surface) from above which the laser beam is irradiated.
  • the reproducing layer cannot be thicker because a recording layer and a reflective layer are also provided in the optical data recording medium. Accordingly, the optical data recording medium including a further shorter mark length cannot be reproduced.
  • the reflective layer has a non-flat surface (a rise and/or a recess, for example formed by pits and/or groove, or the like).
  • a laser beam reflected from the rise part of the non-flat surface is different in quantity from one reflected from the recess part of the non-flat surface because of interference.
  • the rise and/or the recess of the reflective layer is formed by forming a non-flat surface on the substrate by using a pit and a groove, or the like, which are for storing data or for locating a reproducing point.
  • the reflective layer is layered on the substrate.
  • the reproducing layer is provided on the substrate having the rise and/or the recess, and the recording layer and the reflective layer are layered in this order on the reproducing layer. Accordingly, when the reproducing layer is too thick, the rise and/or the recess are leveled off, and thus the recording layer and the reflective layer cannot have a non-flat surface.
  • the reflective film is provided on the substrate having such leveled-off non-flat surface, no interference in the reflected light beam will be caused by the leveled-off rise and/or the leveled-off recess, whereby, data cannot be read out.
  • an inorganic film which may have a thin thickness, the same is true that there is a possibility that a thick thickness of the inorganic film will level off the rise and/or the recess.
  • the arrangement in which the thickness of the reproducing layer is thin in view of the above limitation faces the following problem: for example, in the case that the reproducing layer has a greater transmittance with a thicker thickness, the thin thickness limits how much the laser spot can be reduced, thereby prohibiting the optical data recording medium from having a better resolution limit.
  • the resolution limit of the optical data recording medium is limited by various factors apart from the limitation of the thickness of the reproducing layer.
  • An object of the present invention is to provide an optical data recording medium in which a signal can be reproduced from a mark having a shorter mark length (that is, enables reproduction of a shorter mark length), and in which data can be recorded in high-density.
  • an optical data recording medium in which irradiation of a light beam is used for recording or reproducing data, includes a reproducing layer, provided to face a light-incident surface of the substrate, the reproducing layer for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark having a mark length shorter than a mark length of a resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus for reproducing the optical data recording medium.
  • the “reproducing layer for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark length shorter than a mark length of a resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus” is a layer for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a shorter mark length smaller than a laser beam spot narrowed by the optical system of the reproducing apparatus.
  • the reproducing layer is made of a material whose transmittance increases upon reception of intensive light or high temperature, only a highly intensive part of the light beam irradiated on the reproducing layer passes through the reproducing layer, thereby giving a smaller beam spot size to the light beam emitted from the reproducing layer. This makes it possible to reproduce a signal from a mark having a shorter mark length than the beam spot narrowed by the optical system of the reproducing apparatus.
  • the reproducing layer In light of the characteristics of the material, the reproducing layer needs to be provided so that the light beam is radiated via the reproducing layer to the layers such as a layer for reflecting the laser beam. Therefore, in case where the reproducing layer is provided on a non-light-incident surface of the substrate, it is necessary that the reproducing layer be provided on the non-light-incident surface of the substrate, and the other layers such as the reproducing layer are provided on a top of the reproducing layer. On the other hand, according to this arrangement, the reproducing layer is so provided that the light is radiated from above the reproducing layer and the reproducing layer is the furthest from the substrate (except the cover layer), no matter how the other layers are provided.
  • the reproducing layer can be formed so as to face the light-incident surface of the substrate, after the other layers are provided. Therefore, the reproducing layer can have an arbitrary thickness without limitation from the shape of the other layers. For example, in the case wherein a reproducing layer is used whose greater thickness gives more greatly changeable transmittance thereof, this arrangement attains a better resolution and a smaller spot size of the light beam, thereby enabling the reproduction of the signal from a mark having a further shorter mark length. This makes it possible to provide the optical data recording medium that is more excellent in super-resolution property and enables storage/reproduction of data in higher density.
  • this arrangement attains not only freedom in designing the thickness of the reproducing layer. As described in Examples, improvement in resolution limit was observed in the optical data recording medium having this arrangement and being identical with a conventional optical data recording medium in terms of the thickness of the reproducing layer, and the like condition.
  • the optical data recording medium in which irradiation of a light beam is used for reproducing data, includes steps of (i) irradiating the light beam from above the reproducing layer, and (ii) reproducing the mark having a mark length shorter than resolution limit of the optical system of the reproducing apparatus. On account of this, it becomes possible to reproduce data from the optical data recording medium in which data is recorded in high-density.
  • FIG. 1 is a cross section view of an optical data recording medium of an embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 ( a ) and FIG. 2 ( b ) are diagrams illustrating irradiation of a reproducing laser beam to the optical data recording medium of an embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 ( a ) is a plain view illustrating a temperature distribution of the reproducing laser beam in the irradiated spot.
  • FIG. 2 ( b ) is a diagram illustrating (i) cross section of the optical data recording medium and (ii) a temperature distribution.
  • FIG. 3 is a diagram illustrating how the reproducing laser beam is irradiated to the optical data recording medium of an embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a cross section view of an optical data recording medium of a comparative example of the present invention.
  • FIG. 5 is a graph comparing (i) an optical data recording medium relating to an example of the present invention to (ii) the comparative example, in terms of dependency of C/N on mark length.
  • FIG. 6 is a graph illustrating the dependency of C/N on mark length of the optical data recording medium of the example of the present invention.
  • FIG. 7 is a cross section view of a conventional optical data recording medium.
  • FIG. 8 is a cross section view of another conventional optical data recording medium.
  • An optical data recording medium 31 of one embodiment of the present invention is a reproducing only optical data recording medium.
  • the optical data recording medium 31 is provided with a reflective layer 4 , a light absorption layer 3 , a reproducing layer 2 , a substrate 5 , and a cover layer 1 .
  • the reflective layer 4 , light absorption layer 3 , reproducing layer 2 are layered on the substrate 5 in this order.
  • the cover layer 1 is provided on the reproducing layer 2 .
  • the cover layer 1 does not completely adhere to the reproducing layer 2 , and a layer of air is formed between the cover layer 1 and the reproducing layer 2 .
  • a laser beam 30 is irradiated, from above the cover layer 1 , to the optical data recording medium 31 .
  • the laser beam passes through the cover layer 1 and the layer of air, and reaches the reproducing layer 2 .
  • the laser beam reaches the reflective layer 4 via the reproducing layer 2 and light absorption layer 3 .
  • the laser beam 30 reflected from the reflective layer 4 is converted to a signal corresponding to the rise and/or the recess of the reflective layer 4 .
  • the substrate 5 gives appropriate strength to the optical data recording medium 1 .
  • On an light-incident surface of the substrate 5 that surface of the substrate 5 from above which the laser light beam is irradiated; that is, that surface of the substrate 5 above which the reproducing layer 2 is provided, pits and grooves are provided.
  • the optical data recording medium 31 may be provided with both the pits and the grooves, or with either the pits or the grooves. However, in the arrangement in which the optical data recording medium 1 includes the guiding grooves, data can be recorded or reproduced without imposing a burden on a reproducing/recording device.
  • the material of which the substrate 5 is made can be transparent or opaque.
  • the material may be, for example, (i) glass, (ii) a thermo-flexible transparent resin such as a polycarbonate, an amorphous polyolefin, a thermoplastic polyimide, PET (polyethylene terephtalate), PEN (polyethylene naphthalate), and PES (polyether sulfone), (iii) a thermo-cured transparent resin such as a thermo-cured polyimide, and an ultraviolet radiation cured acrylic resin, (iv) a metal, or (v) the like.
  • a thermo-flexible transparent resin such as a polycarbonate, an amorphous polyolefin, a thermoplastic polyimide, PET (polyethylene terephtalate), PEN (polyethylene naphthalate), and PES (polyether sulfone)
  • a thermo-cured transparent resin such as a thermo-cured polyimide, and an ultraviolet radiation
  • the substrate 5 may be made of one of these materials solely or two or more of these materials used in combination. Also, thickness of the substrate 5 is not particularly limited. However around 0.5 mm through 1.2 mm, for example, is appropriate.
  • a pitch of the pit may be, for example, around 0.3 ⁇ m through 1.6 ⁇ m, and a depth of the pit may be, for example, around 30 nm through 200 nm. It is appropriate for a pitch of the guiding groove to be around 0.3 ⁇ m through 1.6 ⁇ m, and it is appropriate for depth of the guiding groove to be around 30 through 200 nm.
  • the reflective layer 4 reflects the laser beam which has passed through the cover layer 1 , the reproducing layer 2 , and the light absorption layer 3 .
  • the reflective layer 4 has a non-flat surface (a rise and/or a recess) because a reflective film 4 is provided on the non-flat surface of the substrate 5 .
  • a reproducing signal is produced in accordance with quantity of the light beam reflected from the reflective layer 4 (the quantity of the laser beam is variable depending on the rise and/or the recess in a laser-beam-irradiated area of the reflective layer 4 ).
  • the reflective layer 4 is a metal film having high reflectance such as an Al film, an Au film, an Ag film, or a film of an alloy of those compounds. Because the reflective layer 4 is not particularly limited in thickness, it may have any thickness to realize a desired reflectance. For example, the thickness of the reflective layer 4 may be around 20 nm through 100 nm.
  • the light absorption layer 3 by receiving the reproducing laser beam 30 , assists temperature change in the reproducing layer 2 .
  • the light absorption layer 3 is made of a material which absorbs the reproducing laser beam 30 and converts the laser beam to heat.
  • the light absorption layer 3 changes its temperature in accordance with the light intensity distribution, and conducts to the reproducing layer 2 , heat thus generated.
  • the light absorption layer 3 may be a Si (silicon) film; a Ge (germanium) film; a phase change film such as a AgInSbTe film and a GeSbTe film, and the like; a magnet-optical film such as TbFeCo film, DyFeCo film, GdFeCo film, and the like; and a metal film of an alloy of these compounds.
  • the light absorption layer 3 is the Si film, the Ge film, or a metal film of alloy of Si and Ge, because of their low cost. Film thickness of the light absorption layer 3 may be set to be appropriate depending on which material the light absorption layer 3 is made of.
  • the light absorption layer 3 has a thickness in a range of 5 nm through 300 nm.
  • the film thickness of the light absorption layer 3 is no less than 10 nm. Therefore, it is the most preferable that the light absorption layer 3 is the Si film having a thickness of no less than 10 nm.
  • the reproducing layer 2 is contiguous to the light absorption layer 3 , as shown in FIG. 1 .
  • the light absorption layer 3 can effectively raise the temperature of the reproducing layer 2 by absorbing, for example, the reproducing laser beam 30 and converting the beam to heat.
  • the reproducing layer 2 may be so arranged as not to be contiguous to the light absorption layer 3 , as long as the light absorption layer 3 and the reproducing layer 2 are close enough to allow the light absorption layer 3 to increase the temperature of the reproducing layer 2 .
  • the optical data recording medium 31 may be so arranged as not to include the light absorption layer 3 .
  • the reproducing layer 2 must be made of a material whose optical characteristic is changed only by light intensity, or the reproducing layer 2 must have light-heat converting function by containing a substance which absorbs the reproduction light and generates heat.
  • the reproducing layer 2 which is a translucent material whose transmittance is changed reversibly as a temperature changes, contains a material whose transmittance with respect to a wavelength of the reproduction laser beam 30 increases as a temperature rises.
  • transmittance is increased only in a temperature-rising part of the laser beam spot of the reproduction laser beam 30 (a smaller spot near at a center of the reproduction beam 30 ). Accordingly, the diameter of the laser beam spot of the laser beam having passed through the reproducing layer 2 becomes smaller than the diameter of the spot of the reproducing laser beam 30 . On account of this, it is possible to perform reproduction of a shorter mark length.
  • the reproducing layer 2 includes a material whose transmitting efficiency in specified wavelength area greatly changes when temperature rises.
  • the reproducing layer 2 preferably includes a material whose transmitting efficiency of the reproducing layer 2 changes in the range of ⁇ 80% when temperature rises from 20° C. to a temperature in a range of 60° C. through 180° C.
  • the material may be a thermochromism substance.
  • the thermochromism substance is a substance whose transmittance changes due to a chemical structural change caused by heat absorption.
  • thermochromism substance As follows: (i) an inorganic thermochromism substance such as metal oxides and the like; and (ii) an organic thermochromism substance such as (a) a mixture of (a- 1 ) lactone or fluorane and (a- 2 ) an alkalis, (b) a mixture of leuco pigment and organic acid, and (c) the like. It is particularly preferable that, from among those substances, the thermochromism substance is a metal oxide whose transmittance of the absorption edge changes in accordance with a change in its width of forbidden band. The change in the width of forbidden band is caused by temperature change. This is because composition and shape of the reproducing layer 2 made of a metal oxide are hardly changed even after chemical structural changes due to temperature change are repeated. In other words, this metal oxide gives excellent durability to the reproducing layer 2 .
  • the metal oxide As follows: ZnO, SnO 2 , CeO 2 , CeO 2 , NiO 2 , In 2 O 3 , TiO 2 , Ta 2 O 5 , VO 2 , SrTiO 3 , and the like.
  • ZnO zinc oxide
  • the reproducing layer 2 may be made of a conventional material for reproducing layers.
  • the conventional material for reproducing layers are: a glass having semi-conductor fine grain; a resin; a thermochromic pigment layer; a phase change film; and the like.
  • Film thickness of the reproducing layer 2 may be set depending on which material the reproducing layer 2 is made of.
  • the film thickness of the reproducing layer 2 may be in a range of from 5 nm through 800 nm appropriately, and it is more appropriate that film thickness of the reproducing layer 2 is no less than 100 nm. Therefore, it is the most appropriate that the reproducing layer 2 is the ZnO film whose film thickness is no less than 100 nm.
  • the cover layer 1 is provided so that the optical system of the present embodiment of the present invention is the same as the optical system of the arrangement shown in FIG. 7 .
  • the cover layer 1 is provided to protect the optical data recording medium 31 .
  • film thickness of the cover layer 1 is in a range of from 1 ⁇ m through 100 ⁇ m.
  • the cover layer 1 needs to be transparent so that the reproducing laser beam 30 can pass through the cover layer 1 .
  • the reflective layer 4 , and the light absorption layer 3 are layered in this order on the surface of the substrate.
  • the reproducing layer 2 is layered on the top of the light absorption layer 3 .
  • the reproducing layer 2 is the top layer of the laminated layers (the layer which is the furthest from the surface of the substrate except the cover layer).
  • the reproducing layer 2 can have an arbitrary thickness without limitation from the shape of the reflective layer 4 because the reproducing layer 2 is formed after the formation of the reflective layer 4 having a rise and/or a recess faithful with the rise and/or the recess of the substrate 5 .
  • This arrangement attains a good transmittance distribution along a thickness direction, whereby it becomes possible to perform the reduction of signals from the shorter mark length. Therefore, with this arrangement, it is possible to attain a higher super resolution property and to realize an optical data recording medium in which a signal can be recorded in high density, and the signal recording in high density can be reproduced.
  • Blu-ray disc may be so arranged that a recording surface is provided on a light-incident surface of a substrate.
  • a laser beam can be irradiated to the recording surface without passing through the substrate. Therefore the laser beam can be irradiated from closer range than when in the arrangement in which the laser beam has to pass through the substrate.
  • the laser beam having smaller spot size can be irradiated by using a lens having a high NA. With this arrangement, it is possible to attain reproduction of a signal from a mark having a shorter mark length.
  • the recording layer is thus provided on the light-incident surface of the substrate, there is a limit in how much the distance between the recording surface and the laser irradiation point can be short.
  • the arrangement in which the reproducing layer is provided on the light-incident surface of the substrate as in the present embodiment makes it possible to reproduce an optical data medium having a further shorter mark length.
  • the reproduction in the optical data recording medium 31 can be carried out by detecting the light beam reflected from the light-incident surface of the substrate 5 by using an optical head (not shown) as a result of the irradiation of the reproducing laser beam 30 onto the light-incident surface from above the cover layer 1 by using a laser light source (not shown) and an optical system (such as a condenser lens). On the incident surface at least either pit or groove are provided.
  • the irradiation of the reproduction beam 30 onto the optical data recording medium 31 is carried out in such a manner that an area having higher temperature and an area having lower temperature are produced in the laser beam spot of the reproducing layer 2 .
  • the reproducing laser beam spot 11 is produced on the surface of the reproduction layer 2 .
  • the reproducing laser beam spot 11 has a temperature gradient from the center of the spot to the other area of the spot as shown in the FIG. 2 ( a ). Therefore, a higher temperature area 13 and a lower temperature area 12 appear in the reproducing laser beam spot 30 on the surface of the reproducing layer 2 .
  • the higher temperature area 13 has a temperature not less than 60° C. but less than 180° C.
  • the lower temperature area 12 has a temperature not less than 20° C. but less than 60° C. i.e., when the reproducing laser beam 30 is irradiated to the optical data recording medium 31 , temperature is the highest in the center of the laser beam spot, and a part further from the center an area has a lower temperature.
  • Transmittance of the reproducing layer 2 changes in accordance with temperature changes. Therefore, the transmittance of the reproducing layer 2 for wavelength of the reproducing laser beam 30 decreases (low transmittance state) in the higher temperature area 13 where temperature rises due to irradiation of the reproducing laser beam 30 . On the other hand, the transmittance of the reproducing layer 2 for wavelength of the reproducing laser beam 30 does not decrease in the lower temperature area 12 where temperature does not rise very much even though the reproducing laser beam 30 is irradiated thereto.
  • the laser beam irradiated to the optical data recording medium 31 (the laser beam irradiated to the lower temperature area 12 ) are shielded off by the reproducing layer 2 , and only the laser beam irradiated to the higher temperature area 13 passes through the reproducing layer 2 as shown in FIG. 3 .
  • the laser beam having passed through the reproducing layer 2 reaches the light absorption layer 3 and the reflective layer 4 . Therefore, the spot size of the laser beam produced on a surface of the reflective layer 4 is virtually reduced. Consequently, it is possible to perform reproduction of a mark having a mark length shorter than a mark length of the resolution limit of the optical system.
  • the light absorption layer 3 absorbs the reproducing laser beam 30 and converts the beam into heat. Therefore, the light absorption layer 3 produces a large amount of heat after absorbing the reproducing laser beam 30 having passed through the higher temperature area 13 . Because the heat generated in the light absorption layer 3 travels to the reproducing layer 2 located nearby (preferably contiguous to) the light absorption layer 3 , temperature in the higher temperature area 13 of the reproducing layer 2 rises more. Accordingly, the transmittance of the laser beam irradiated to the higher temperature area 13 in a reproducing layer 2 increases more. This makes it easier to attain a further smaller spot size of the laser beam on the reflective layer 4 , thereby attaining reproduction of higher quality.
  • the optical data recording medium having the reproducing layer of the embodiment of the present invention may be, but not limited to a disc-shaped optical data recording medium such as CDs (Compact Discs), CD-ROMs (Compact Disc-Read Only Memorys), CD-Rs (Compact Disc-Recordables), CD-RWs (Compact Disc-ReWritables), DVDs, DVD-ROMs, DVD-Rs, DVD-RWs, DVRs (Blu-ray Discs), DVR (Blu-ray Disc)-ROMs, and the like.
  • CDs Compact Discs
  • CD-ROMs Compact Disc-Read Only Memorys
  • CD-Rs Compact Disc-Recordables
  • CD-RWs Compact Disc-ReWritables
  • DVDs DVD-ROMs
  • DVD-Rs DVD-RWs
  • DVRs Blu-ray Discs
  • Blu-ray Discs Blu-ray Disc
  • the arrangement of the present invention is not limited to the optical data recording medium 31 .
  • the optical data recording medium may be so arranged that a resin layer having refraction index and heat conductivity similar to those of the air is provided contiguously on the reproducing layer 2 .
  • the resin layer must be absolutely adhered to the reproducing layer 2 .
  • a resin having smaller refraction index and heat conductivity than the air has does not exist at the present moment, it is believed that a maximum performance can be obtained by the arrangement in which the reproducing layer is provided contiguously to a layer of air.
  • the optical data recording medium may be so arranged as not to include the reflective layer, if that surface of (a reflective surface) the substrate 5 which faces to the reproducing layer 2 has enough reflectivity.
  • the optical data recording medium may be so arranged that the rise and/or the recess, those of which indicates a start address of data and an end address of data are not provided. However, in this case, the optical data recording medium does not indicate where recording point and/or reproducing point are.
  • the embodiment of the present invention includes a recordable optical recording medium.
  • the light absorption layer 3 of the embodiment is so arranged as to be made of a material with which the light absorption layer 3 becomes recordable, so as to have functions of converting light into heat and of recording data, thereby causing the optical data recording medium to be recordable.
  • a phase change recording material such as GeSbTe, or the like
  • a pigment such as titanium dioxide
  • a magnet-optical recording material such as TbFeCo, or the like
  • optical data recording medium of the present invention in which irradiation of a light beam is used for recording or reproducing data, includes a reproducing layer, provided to face a light-incident surface of the substrate.
  • the reproducing layer is for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark having a mark length shorter than a resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus for reproducing the optical data recording medium.
  • the “reproducing layer for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark having a mark length shorter than a resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus for reproducing the optical data recording medium” is a layer which is provided to reproduce a mark length shorter than the laser beam spot which is narrowed by the optical system of the reproducing apparatus. For example, only higher temperature area of the laser beam, which is irradiated to the reproducing layer, passes through the reproducing layer if a material which increases its transmittance when an intensive laser beam is irradiated or when temperature increases is used for the reproducing layer. As a result, the spot size of the laser beam is reduced. Accordingly, it becomes possible to reproduce a mark length shorter than the laser beam spot which is narrowed by the optical system of the reproducing apparatus.
  • the reproducing layer In light of the characteristics of the material, the reproducing layer needs to be provided above the layers—for example, such as a layer which reflects the laser beam—on the light-incident surface of the substrate. Therefore, when the reproducing layer is provided on a reverse surface to that surface of the substrate from above which the laser beam is irradiated, the reproducing layer needs to be provided firstly on the surface of the substrate.
  • the other layers are provided.
  • the reproducing layer on the top of layers (except the cover layer) on that surface of the substrate from above which the laser beam is irradiated, after the other layers, for example a layer for reflecting the laser beam, are provided.
  • the reproducing layer can be provided on that surface of the substrate from above which the laser beam is irradiated after the other layers are provided, it is possible to give the reproducing layer an arbitrary thickness, while letting the reflecting layer have a good rise and/or a good recess. On account of this, resolution is improved in case where the reproducing layer is made of a material whose transmittance is greatly changed by the thicker film thickness. Also, because the size of the laser beam becomes smaller, it becomes possible to reproduce a shorter mark length. Accordingly, because super-resolution quality is improved, an optical data recording medium in which data is recorded in high-density is obtained.
  • the film thickness of the reproducing layer is not limited but also resolution limit is improved when a conventional optical data recording medium and film thickness of the reproducing layer are arranged as above. This is described later in Examples.
  • the optical data recording medium includes (i) the substrate having the rise and/or the recess that contributes recording and/or reproduction on the light incident surface, (ii) functional layers, provided on the light incident surface of the substrate, assisting recording and reproducing data, and (iii) the reproducing layer, provided on the surface of the functional layers, having transmittance that changes in accordance with a light intensity distribution of the laser beam.
  • the functional layers assisting recording and reproducing data are one or more layers, which have functions of reflecting the laser beam, converting light to heat, recording data, or the like function. Each layer may have a single function or multiple functions. This is, the functional layer may have the function of converting light to heat and the function of recording data.
  • the reproducing layer needs to be provided so that the light is radiated via the reproducing layer to the functional layer. Therefore, in case where the reproducing layer is provided on the reverse surface to the non-light-incident surface of the substrate, it is necessary that the reproducing layer be provided on the non-light-incident surface of the substrate, and the functional layer is provided on the reproducing layer. On the other hand, according to the foregoing arrangement, the reproducing layer is provided on the top of layers layered on the substrate (the furthest layer from the substrate except the cover layer).
  • the rise and/or the recess indicative of data or reproduction position formed on the substrate includes a groove for recording a start address and an end address of the data, in addition to the pit or groove for recording the data.
  • the groove for recording the start address and end address of data indicates, after recording the data, where the reproduction point of the data is.
  • the optical data recording medium is so arranged that the reproducing layer includes a material whose transmittance changes in accordance with temperature. Because the transmittance of the reproducing layer changes in accordance with temperature, it becomes possible to attain a smaller size of the light beam spot desirably.
  • the optical data recording medium at least a part of that surface of the reproducing layer to which the light beam is irradiated is exposed to air.
  • the arrangement because at least a part of the surface of the reproducing layer to which the laser beam is irradiated is exposed to air, it is possible to attain a desirable difference between refractive index of the air and refractive index of the reproducing layer in irradiating the light beam onto the reproducing layer. On the account of this, it becomes easier to irradiate the laser beam to the reproducing layer.
  • the recording layer has a transmittance that is changeable by heat distribution caused by the light beam
  • conduction of the heat from the reproducing layer to the other layers is minimized.
  • the optical data recording medium includes that light absorption layer for converting the light beam to heat, which is contiguous to the reproducing layer.
  • the reproducing layer In those cases wherein an optical data recording medium of the present invention does not include the light absorption layer, the reproducing layer must have an light-heat converting function. In order to provide an light-heat converting function with the reproducing layer, the reproducing layer should be made of (i) a material whose optical characteristics are changeable only in accordance with light intensity distribution, or (ii) a material which converts light to heat.
  • the light beam having passed through the reproducing layer can be converted into heat thereby changing the temperature of the reproducing layer by the light beam efficiently with such a simple arrangement. Therefore, it is possible to change the temperature of the reproducing layer without providing a variety of functions with the reproducing layer. On the account of this, a super-resolution optical data recording medium, which costs less and is easier to be fabricated, can be obtained.
  • the optical data recording medium includes a reflective layer for reflecting the light beam as one of the functional layers, which is provided between the substrate and the reproducing layer.
  • the reproduction layer is formed after the reflecting layer is formed so as to have the rise and/or the recess well corresponding to the rise and/or the recess of the reflecting layer.
  • the reproducing layer it is possible to give the reproducing layer an arbitrary thickness, while letting the reflecting layer have a good rise and/or a good recess.
  • the transmittance of the reproducing layer is distributed desirably in a thickness direction of the reproducing layer, thereby making it possible to attain the reproduction of the signal from the shorter mark length. This gives the optical data recording medium a higher super-resolution property.
  • the optical data recording medium can be effectively reproduced even when the reproducing layer does not have enough reflectance.
  • the super-resolution optical data recording medium which costs less and possesses high reliability is obtained.
  • the optical data recording medium includes the reproduction layer that is made of a metal oxide. Because the reproducing layer is made of a metal oxide, the super-resolution optical data recording medium of the present invention costs less and possesses higher reliability than heretofore was the case.
  • the optical data recording medium includes the reproducing layer that is made of a zinc oxide. Because the reproducing layer is made of zinc oxide, it is possible to read the non-flat surface having shorter mark length and to write data in high density in the optical data recording medium.
  • the optical data recording medium includes a light absorption layer made of one of silicon, germanium or an alloy of silicon and germanium. Because the light absorption layer is made of one of silicon, germanium or an alloy of silicon and germanium, it is possible to attain an optical data recoding medium having a reproducing layer whose temperature can be changed desirably by using the light beam, while keeping the low cost of the optical data recording medium.
  • the reproducing method of an optical recording medium includes the steps of (i) irradiating the laser beam from above the reproducing layer, and (ii) reproducing the mark having a mark length shorter than resolution limit of the optical system of the reproducing apparatus. On the account of this, it becomes possible to reproduce data recorded in the high-density optical data recording medium.
  • the present invention can be structured as follows.
  • a first optical data recording medium in which irradiation of a light beam is used for recording or reproducing data, at least includes (i) a substrate and (ii) a reproducing layer, provided to face a light-incident surface of the substrate, for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark having a mark length shorter than a resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus for reproducing the optical data recording medium, wherein the reproducing layer is provided on a surface of the substrate to which a laser beam is irradiated.
  • a second optical data recording medium is, in addition to the arrangement of the first optical data recording medium, arranged such that the substrate has a rise and/or a recess on its surface that is to face the reproducing layer, the rise and/or the recess contributing to recording and/or reproduction of data.
  • a third optical data recording medium is, in addition to the arrangement of the first or second optical data recording medium, wherein at least a part of the surface of the reproducing layer, to which the laser beam is irradiated, of the first or the second optical data recording medium is exposed to the air.
  • a fourth optical data recording medium in addition to the arrangement of any one of the first through the third optical data recording media, includes an light absorption layer between the reproducing layer and the substrate.
  • a fifth optical data recording medium wherein the light absorption layer of the forth optical data recording medium is made of a silicon or a germanium or an alloy of a silicon and a germanium.
  • a sixth optical data recording medium wherein the reproducing layer of any one of the first through the fifth optical data recording media is made of a metal oxide.
  • a seventh optical data recording medium wherein the reproducing layer of any one of the first through the fifth optical data recording media is made of a zinc oxide.
  • An eighth optical data recording medium wherein any one of the first through the seventh optical data recording media includes a reflective layer between the light absorption layer and the substrate.
  • a reproducing method of any one of the first through the eighth optical data recording media includes a step of reproducing a shorter mark length signal than resolution limit of optical system of the reproducing apparatus.
  • Example 1 disc an optical data recording medium having the following arrangement was produced (hereinafter, referred as “Example 1 disc”).
  • Example 1 disc pits creating a non-flat surface are provided on polyolefin-based resin substrate 5 having a 0.5 mm thickness. The pits corresponded to recorded data.
  • an Al layer 4 (30 nm in thickness) used as a reflective layer, as Si layer 4 (50 nm in thickness) used as an light absorption layer, and a ZnO film 2 (225 nm in thickness) used as a reproducing layer were formed in this order.
  • glass 1 0.5 mm in thickness
  • an optical data recording medium with following arrangement was produced (hereinafter referred as “conventional disc”).
  • pits creating a non-flat surface were provided on a polyolefin-based resin substrate 25 having 0.5 mm thickness.
  • a ZnO film 22 225 nm in thickness
  • a Si layer 23 used as an light absorption layer 23 (50 nm in thickness)
  • an Al layer 24 (30 nm in thickness) were layered in this order.
  • Example 1 disc By using the Example 1 disc and the conventional disc, the correlation between a mark length and signal quality was measured.
  • a wavelength of a reproducing laser beam 30 was set at 408 nm
  • an aperture NA of a lens was 0.65
  • a linear velocity of scanning the reproducing laser beam was set at 3.0 (m/s).
  • the layers having the same functions were identical in material and in thickness, in order to perform the comparison between the discs more accurately.
  • the same measuring apparatus was used to compare the Example 1 disc and the conventional disc (so that optical systems until the light reached the reproducing layers were identical in both the discs)
  • the conventional disc included a glass 1 which was as thick as the glass 1 which the Example 1 disc included.
  • Example 1 disc As to the Example 1 disc, measurement of a C/N (appraisal standard of signal quality) of pits having 0.1 ⁇ m through 0.5 ⁇ m mark length (pit length), and C/N obtained by irradiation of the reproducing laser beam 30 onto the Example 1 disc from above the glass. The result is graphed in a solid line in FIG. 5 .
  • the horizontal axis shows the pit length
  • the vertical axis is OTF (optical transfer function) showing C/N (appraisal standard of signal quality) and dependency of C/N on recording mark length.
  • the vertical axis shows super-resolution quality.
  • the Example 1 disc had a very high C/N values of 40 to 45 dB for the mark lengths (pit length) down to about 0.14 ⁇ m.
  • the C/N value of the Example 1 disc were still high, for example, the C/N value was 35 dB when the pit length was around 0.12 ⁇ m.
  • a C/N value needs to be no less than 40 dB in order to reproduce data finely. Therefore, in Example 1 disc used, it was possible to reproduce data finely for the pit lengths down to 0.14 ⁇ m.
  • the C/N value decreased dramatically for the mark length shorter than 0.2 ⁇ m.
  • the C/N of the Example 1 disc was around 40 dB and the C/N of the conventional disc was 17 dB. Also, for the pit length 0.2 ⁇ m or less, the C/N of the conventional disc decreased dramatically to a value lower than 40 dB. Therefore, for the conventional disc, the limit of the pit length was 0.20 ⁇ m for fine reproduction. As described above, the comparison showed that the arrangement of the present invention attained dramatically high super-resolution quality and the reproduction of the signal from the shorter mark length with high signal quality.
  • Example 2 a material of the reproducing layer was examined.
  • Example 2 disc An optical data recording medium (hereinafter Example 2 disc) used in Example 2 was identical with the Example 1 disc in the Example 1, except that the reproducing layer of the Example 2 disc was made of, instead of ZnO, SnO2. Correlation between mark lengths for signals, and qualities of the signals was measured for the Example 1 disc and Example 2 disc. The measurement was carried out as in Example 1. That is, the measurement of a C/N (appraisal standard of signal quality) of pits having 0.1 ⁇ m through 0.5 ⁇ m mark length (pit length) was carried out.
  • C/N appraisal standard of signal quality
  • the results of the measurements of the Example 1 disc and the Example 2 disc are graphed in FIG. 6 .
  • the solid line is the result of the Example 1 disc
  • the broken line is the result of the Example 2 disc.
  • the horizontal axis shows the pit length
  • the vertical axis is OTF (optical transfer function) showing C/N (appraisal standard of signal quality) and dependency of C/N on recording mark length. In other words, the vertical axis shows super-resolution quality.
  • a C/N of the Example 1 disc made of ZnO was 5 to 10 dB higher than a CN of the Example 2 disc made of SnO 2 . This explains that the arrangement in which the reproducing layer is made of ZnO enables reproduction of a signal from a mark having a shorter mark length.

Abstract

An optical data recording medium, in which irradiation of a light beam is used for recording and/or reproducing data includes (i) a substrate having an a rise and/or a recess which are a light-incident surface, (ii) a reflective layer, provided on the light-incident surface of the substrate, for reflecting the light beam, (iii) a light absorption layer for converting, to heat, a light of the light beam to heat on the surface of the reflective layer, (iv) a reproducing layer, provided on the surface of the heat-light converting layer, having a transmittance that changes in accordance with a light intensity distribution of the light beam. The optical data recording medium is excellent in super-resolution property, and enables reproduction of a shorter mark length.

Description

  • This Nonprovisional application is a Divisional application of prior copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/824,926, filed on Apr. 14, 2004, entitled OPTICAL DATA RECORDING MEDIUM AND METHOD FOR REPRODUCING RECORDED DATA by Hideharu Tajima, Nobuyuki Takamori, Go Mori and Masaki Yamamoto (the same inventors as the inventors of this divisional application).
  • This Nonprovisional application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(a) on Patent Application No. 2003/155668 filed in Japan on May 30, 2003, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
  • FIELD OF THE INVENTION
  • The present invention relates to (i) an optical data recording medium for recording or reproduction of data, and (ii) a method for reproducing data from the optical data recording medium.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • In order to obtain an optical data recording medium having bigger storage capacity, there has been a demand for a technique to record and reproduce a signal in accordance with a further shorter mark length (pit length) in the optical data recording medium. Recently, an optical data recording medium has been developed which enables reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark length shorter than a mark length of resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus. Hereinafter, the optical data recording medium is referred as a “super-resolution optical data recording medium.”
  • The super-resolution optical data recording medium includes at least a reproducing layer and a reflective layer layered in this order on a substrate. The super-resolution optical data recording medium employs a method of virtually reducing a spot size of a laser beam which reaches the reflective layer. Specifically, the spot size of the laser beam which reaches the reflective layer is reduced by irradiating a reproducing laser beam via the substrate to the reproducing layer. In this way, the reproducing layer has such an optical characteristic with respect to the reproducing laser beam that is distributed unevenly over the reproducing layer.
  • In other words, light intensity in the spot of the reproducing laser beam irradiated to the reproducing layer is unevenly distributed. Because of this, temperature is also distributed unevenly therein spontaneously. Therefore, in such an arrangement wherein the reproducing layer is made of a material whose optical characteristics (mainly transmittance) are changed by temperature or light intensity distribution, it is possible to increase only the transmittance of that part of the reproducing layer which is at the center of the laser beam spot because temperature is high and light intensity is high in the part at the center of the laser beam spot. When transmittance is increased only in that part of the reproducing layer which is at the center of the laser beam spot, the reflection layer receives only the light of the center of the laser spot. That is, the laser beam spot irradiated on the surface of the reflective layer is virtually reduced. Therefore, in the super-resolution optical data recording medium, it is possible to reproduce a mark having a mark length shorter than a mark of resolution limit of the optical system.
  • As an example of a layer material whose optical characteristic is changeable by light intensity, a shutter layer (a layer in which semi-conductor fine particles are dispersed in a matrix made of glass or resin) is described in Japanese Publication for Unexamined Patent Application No. 6-28713 (Tokukaihei 6-28713, published on Feb. 4, 1994). In the arrangement of the patent application, as shown in FIG. 7, the shutter layer (reproducing layer) 42 and the optical reflective layer 44 are layered on that surface of the substrate 45 which is reverse to the surface from above which the laser beam is irradiated.
  • Incidentally, as an example of a raw material whose transmittance is increased by high temperature, a thermochromic pigment is described in Japanese Publication for Unexamined Patent Application No. 2001-35012 (Tokukai 2001-35012, published on Feb. 9, 2001). In the optical data recording medium described in the patent application, as shown in FIG. 8, a mask layer (reproducing layer) 32, a first dielectric layer 36, a phase change recording film 37, a second dielectric 38, a reflective layer 34, and a protective resin layer 39 are layered in this order on that surface of the substrate 35 which is reverse to the surface from above which the laser beam 30 is irradiated.
  • As described above, in each conventional super-resolution optical data recording medium, the reproducing layer is provided on that surface (non-light-incident surface) of the substrates which is reverse to the surface (incident surface) from above which the laser beam is irradiated.
  • However, in the conventional optical data recording media, resolution limit is not enough. Therefore, there is a demand for an optical data recording medium having a greater resolution limit.
  • In the arrangement in which a reproducing layer is provided on the non-light-incident surface, the reproducing layer cannot be thicker because a recording layer and a reflective layer are also provided in the optical data recording medium. Accordingly, the optical data recording medium including a further shorter mark length cannot be reproduced.
  • Specifically, in the conventional optical data recording medium, generally the reflective layer has a non-flat surface (a rise and/or a recess, for example formed by pits and/or groove, or the like). When the laser beam is irradiated to the non-flat surface, a laser beam reflected from the rise part of the non-flat surface is different in quantity from one reflected from the recess part of the non-flat surface because of interference. By using the difference, tracking on grooves, and signal reproduction are performed. The rise and/or the recess of the reflective layer is formed by forming a non-flat surface on the substrate by using a pit and a groove, or the like, which are for storing data or for locating a reproducing point. The reflective layer is layered on the substrate. Therefore, in the conventional arrangement, the reproducing layer is provided on the substrate having the rise and/or the recess, and the recording layer and the reflective layer are layered in this order on the reproducing layer. Accordingly, when the reproducing layer is too thick, the rise and/or the recess are leveled off, and thus the recording layer and the reflective layer cannot have a non-flat surface.
  • In the above-mentioned Japanese Publication for Unexamined Patent Application No. 6-28713, there is an example that the rise and/or the recess of the substrate are leveled off because the reproducing layer layered on the substrate is too thick. In the example, a resin layer is used as the reproducing layer, and the resin is so adhesive that it is very difficult to attain a thin thickness of the resin layer. Thus, there is a high possibility that the formation of the resin layer will level off the non-flat surface of the substrate, the rise and/or the recess being a source of data. In case the reflective film is provided on the substrate having such leveled-off non-flat surface, no interference in the reflected light beam will be caused by the leveled-off rise and/or the leveled-off recess, whereby, data cannot be read out. Moreover, as to an inorganic film, which may have a thin thickness, the same is true that there is a possibility that a thick thickness of the inorganic film will level off the rise and/or the recess.
  • Therefore, there is a limit in how thick the reproducing layer can be.
  • The arrangement in which the thickness of the reproducing layer is thin in view of the above limitation faces the following problem: for example, in the case that the reproducing layer has a greater transmittance with a thicker thickness, the thin thickness limits how much the laser spot can be reduced, thereby prohibiting the optical data recording medium from having a better resolution limit.
  • Also, it is considered that the resolution limit of the optical data recording medium is limited by various factors apart from the limitation of the thickness of the reproducing layer.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • The present invention is made in light of the foregoing problems. An object of the present invention is to provide an optical data recording medium in which a signal can be reproduced from a mark having a shorter mark length (that is, enables reproduction of a shorter mark length), and in which data can be recorded in high-density.
  • To achieve the object, an optical data recording medium, in which irradiation of a light beam is used for recording or reproducing data, includes a reproducing layer, provided to face a light-incident surface of the substrate, the reproducing layer for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark having a mark length shorter than a mark length of a resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus for reproducing the optical data recording medium.
  • The “reproducing layer for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark length shorter than a mark length of a resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus” is a layer for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a shorter mark length smaller than a laser beam spot narrowed by the optical system of the reproducing apparatus. For example, with an arrangement in which the reproducing layer is made of a material whose transmittance increases upon reception of intensive light or high temperature, only a highly intensive part of the light beam irradiated on the reproducing layer passes through the reproducing layer, thereby giving a smaller beam spot size to the light beam emitted from the reproducing layer. This makes it possible to reproduce a signal from a mark having a shorter mark length than the beam spot narrowed by the optical system of the reproducing apparatus.
  • In light of the characteristics of the material, the reproducing layer needs to be provided so that the light beam is radiated via the reproducing layer to the layers such as a layer for reflecting the laser beam. Therefore, in case where the reproducing layer is provided on a non-light-incident surface of the substrate, it is necessary that the reproducing layer be provided on the non-light-incident surface of the substrate, and the other layers such as the reproducing layer are provided on a top of the reproducing layer. On the other hand, according to this arrangement, the reproducing layer is so provided that the light is radiated from above the reproducing layer and the reproducing layer is the furthest from the substrate (except the cover layer), no matter how the other layers are provided.
  • In other words, the reproducing layer can be formed so as to face the light-incident surface of the substrate, after the other layers are provided. Therefore, the reproducing layer can have an arbitrary thickness without limitation from the shape of the other layers. For example, in the case wherein a reproducing layer is used whose greater thickness gives more greatly changeable transmittance thereof, this arrangement attains a better resolution and a smaller spot size of the light beam, thereby enabling the reproduction of the signal from a mark having a further shorter mark length. This makes it possible to provide the optical data recording medium that is more excellent in super-resolution property and enables storage/reproduction of data in higher density.
  • Note that this arrangement attains not only freedom in designing the thickness of the reproducing layer. As described in Examples, improvement in resolution limit was observed in the optical data recording medium having this arrangement and being identical with a conventional optical data recording medium in terms of the thickness of the reproducing layer, and the like condition.
  • To achieve the object of the present invention, the optical data recording medium, in which irradiation of a light beam is used for reproducing data, includes steps of (i) irradiating the light beam from above the reproducing layer, and (ii) reproducing the mark having a mark length shorter than resolution limit of the optical system of the reproducing apparatus. On account of this, it becomes possible to reproduce data from the optical data recording medium in which data is recorded in high-density.
  • For a fuller understanding of the nature and advantages of the invention, reference should be made to the ensuing detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1 is a cross section view of an optical data recording medium of an embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 (a) and FIG. 2 (b) are diagrams illustrating irradiation of a reproducing laser beam to the optical data recording medium of an embodiment of the present invention. FIG. 2 (a) is a plain view illustrating a temperature distribution of the reproducing laser beam in the irradiated spot. FIG. 2 (b) is a diagram illustrating (i) cross section of the optical data recording medium and (ii) a temperature distribution.
  • FIG. 3 is a diagram illustrating how the reproducing laser beam is irradiated to the optical data recording medium of an embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a cross section view of an optical data recording medium of a comparative example of the present invention.
  • FIG. 5 is a graph comparing (i) an optical data recording medium relating to an example of the present invention to (ii) the comparative example, in terms of dependency of C/N on mark length.
  • FIG. 6 is a graph illustrating the dependency of C/N on mark length of the optical data recording medium of the example of the present invention.
  • FIG. 7 is a cross section view of a conventional optical data recording medium.
  • FIG. 8 is a cross section view of another conventional optical data recording medium.
  • DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
  • Hereinafter, an embodiment of the present invention is explained with reference to figures.
  • An optical data recording medium 31 of one embodiment of the present invention is a reproducing only optical data recording medium. As shown in FIG. 1, the optical data recording medium 31 is provided with a reflective layer 4, a light absorption layer 3, a reproducing layer 2, a substrate 5, and a cover layer 1. The reflective layer 4, light absorption layer 3, reproducing layer 2 are layered on the substrate 5 in this order. On the reproducing layer 2, the cover layer 1 is provided. In the optical data recording media 31, the cover layer 1 does not completely adhere to the reproducing layer 2, and a layer of air is formed between the cover layer 1 and the reproducing layer 2.
  • A laser beam 30 is irradiated, from above the cover layer 1, to the optical data recording medium 31. The laser beam passes through the cover layer 1 and the layer of air, and reaches the reproducing layer 2. Then the laser beam reaches the reflective layer 4 via the reproducing layer 2 and light absorption layer 3. The laser beam 30 reflected from the reflective layer 4 is converted to a signal corresponding to the rise and/or the recess of the reflective layer 4.
  • The substrate 5 gives appropriate strength to the optical data recording medium 1. On an light-incident surface of the substrate 5 (that surface of the substrate 5 from above which the laser light beam is irradiated; that is, that surface of the substrate 5 above which the reproducing layer 2 is provided), pits and grooves are provided. The pits, which form the rise and/or the recess, correspond to recorded data, and the grooves are used for guiding, that is, for recording a start address and end address of recording. The optical data recording medium 31 may be provided with both the pits and the grooves, or with either the pits or the grooves. However, in the arrangement in which the optical data recording medium 1 includes the guiding grooves, data can be recorded or reproduced without imposing a burden on a reproducing/recording device.
  • Optical characteristics of the material of which the substrate 5 is made are not particularly limited. Thus, the material of which the substrate 5 is made can be transparent or opaque. The material may be, for example, (i) glass, (ii) a thermo-flexible transparent resin such as a polycarbonate, an amorphous polyolefin, a thermoplastic polyimide, PET (polyethylene terephtalate), PEN (polyethylene naphthalate), and PES (polyether sulfone), (iii) a thermo-cured transparent resin such as a thermo-cured polyimide, and an ultraviolet radiation cured acrylic resin, (iv) a metal, or (v) the like. The substrate 5 may be made of one of these materials solely or two or more of these materials used in combination. Also, thickness of the substrate 5 is not particularly limited. However around 0.5 mm through 1.2 mm, for example, is appropriate. A pitch of the pit may be, for example, around 0.3 μm through 1.6 μm, and a depth of the pit may be, for example, around 30 nm through 200 nm. It is appropriate for a pitch of the guiding groove to be around 0.3 μm through 1.6 μm, and it is appropriate for depth of the guiding groove to be around 30 through 200 nm.
  • The reflective layer 4 reflects the laser beam which has passed through the cover layer 1, the reproducing layer 2, and the light absorption layer 3. Here, the reflective layer 4 has a non-flat surface (a rise and/or a recess) because a reflective film 4 is provided on the non-flat surface of the substrate 5. A reproducing signal is produced in accordance with quantity of the light beam reflected from the reflective layer 4 (the quantity of the laser beam is variable depending on the rise and/or the recess in a laser-beam-irradiated area of the reflective layer 4).
  • It is preferable that the reflective layer 4 is a metal film having high reflectance such as an Al film, an Au film, an Ag film, or a film of an alloy of those compounds. Because the reflective layer 4 is not particularly limited in thickness, it may have any thickness to realize a desired reflectance. For example, the thickness of the reflective layer 4 may be around 20 nm through 100 nm.
  • The light absorption layer 3, by receiving the reproducing laser beam 30, assists temperature change in the reproducing layer 2. The light absorption layer 3 is made of a material which absorbs the reproducing laser beam 30 and converts the laser beam to heat. The light absorption layer 3 changes its temperature in accordance with the light intensity distribution, and conducts to the reproducing layer 2, heat thus generated.
  • The light absorption layer 3 may be a Si (silicon) film; a Ge (germanium) film; a phase change film such as a AgInSbTe film and a GeSbTe film, and the like; a magnet-optical film such as TbFeCo film, DyFeCo film, GdFeCo film, and the like; and a metal film of an alloy of these compounds. Especially, it is the most preferable that the light absorption layer 3 is the Si film, the Ge film, or a metal film of alloy of Si and Ge, because of their low cost. Film thickness of the light absorption layer 3 may be set to be appropriate depending on which material the light absorption layer 3 is made of. For example, it is appropriate that the light absorption layer 3 has a thickness in a range of 5 nm through 300 nm. However, it is preferable that the film thickness of the light absorption layer 3 is no less than 10 nm. Therefore, it is the most preferable that the light absorption layer 3 is the Si film having a thickness of no less than 10 nm.
  • It is preferable that the reproducing layer 2 is contiguous to the light absorption layer 3, as shown in FIG. 1. With this arrangement, the light absorption layer 3 can effectively raise the temperature of the reproducing layer 2 by absorbing, for example, the reproducing laser beam 30 and converting the beam to heat. However, the reproducing layer 2 may be so arranged as not to be contiguous to the light absorption layer 3, as long as the light absorption layer 3 and the reproducing layer 2 are close enough to allow the light absorption layer 3 to increase the temperature of the reproducing layer 2.
  • In addition, the optical data recording medium 31 may be so arranged as not to include the light absorption layer 3. In this case, however, the reproducing layer 2 must be made of a material whose optical characteristic is changed only by light intensity, or the reproducing layer 2 must have light-heat converting function by containing a substance which absorbs the reproduction light and generates heat.
  • The reproducing layer 2, which is a translucent material whose transmittance is changed reversibly as a temperature changes, contains a material whose transmittance with respect to a wavelength of the reproduction laser beam 30 increases as a temperature rises. With this arrangement, transmittance is increased only in a temperature-rising part of the laser beam spot of the reproduction laser beam 30 (a smaller spot near at a center of the reproduction beam 30). Accordingly, the diameter of the laser beam spot of the laser beam having passed through the reproducing layer 2 becomes smaller than the diameter of the spot of the reproducing laser beam 30. On account of this, it is possible to perform reproduction of a shorter mark length.
  • It is appropriate that the reproducing layer 2 includes a material whose transmitting efficiency in specified wavelength area greatly changes when temperature rises. Specifically, the reproducing layer 2 preferably includes a material whose transmitting efficiency of the reproducing layer 2 changes in the range of ±80% when temperature rises from 20° C. to a temperature in a range of 60° C. through 180° C. The material may be a thermochromism substance. The thermochromism substance is a substance whose transmittance changes due to a chemical structural change caused by heat absorption.
  • It is possible to raise specific examples of the thermochromism substance as follows: (i) an inorganic thermochromism substance such as metal oxides and the like; and (ii) an organic thermochromism substance such as (a) a mixture of (a-1) lactone or fluorane and (a-2) an alkalis, (b) a mixture of leuco pigment and organic acid, and (c) the like. It is particularly preferable that, from among those substances, the thermochromism substance is a metal oxide whose transmittance of the absorption edge changes in accordance with a change in its width of forbidden band. The change in the width of forbidden band is caused by temperature change. This is because composition and shape of the reproducing layer 2 made of a metal oxide are hardly changed even after chemical structural changes due to temperature change are repeated. In other words, this metal oxide gives excellent durability to the reproducing layer 2.
  • It is possible to raise specific examples of the metal oxide as follows: ZnO, SnO2, CeO2, CeO2, NiO2, In2O3, TiO2, Ta2O5, VO2, SrTiO3, and the like. Of these metal oxides, it is the most preferable that the reproducing layer 2 is made of ZnO (zinc oxide) as described in Example 2 below.
  • This is because reproduction from a mark having a further shorter mark length is possible in case that the reproducing layer 2 is made of ZnO. The reproducing layer 2 may be made of a conventional material for reproducing layers. Examples of the conventional material for reproducing layers are: a glass having semi-conductor fine grain; a resin; a thermochromic pigment layer; a phase change film; and the like.
  • Film thickness of the reproducing layer 2 may be set depending on which material the reproducing layer 2 is made of. The film thickness of the reproducing layer 2 may be in a range of from 5 nm through 800 nm appropriately, and it is more appropriate that film thickness of the reproducing layer 2 is no less than 100 nm. Therefore, it is the most appropriate that the reproducing layer 2 is the ZnO film whose film thickness is no less than 100 nm.
  • The cover layer 1 is provided so that the optical system of the present embodiment of the present invention is the same as the optical system of the arrangement shown in FIG. 7. Generally, the cover layer 1 is provided to protect the optical data recording medium 31. It is preferable that film thickness of the cover layer 1 is in a range of from 1 μm through 100 μm. Also, the cover layer 1 needs to be transparent so that the reproducing laser beam 30 can pass through the cover layer 1.
  • In this arrangement, the reflective layer 4, and the light absorption layer 3 are layered in this order on the surface of the substrate. On the top of the light absorption layer 3, the reproducing layer 2 is layered. In this way, the reproducing layer 2 is the top layer of the laminated layers (the layer which is the furthest from the surface of the substrate except the cover layer).
  • Therefore, the reproducing layer 2 can have an arbitrary thickness without limitation from the shape of the reflective layer 4 because the reproducing layer 2 is formed after the formation of the reflective layer 4 having a rise and/or a recess faithful with the rise and/or the recess of the substrate 5. This arrangement attains a good transmittance distribution along a thickness direction, whereby it becomes possible to perform the reduction of signals from the shorter mark length. Therefore, with this arrangement, it is possible to attain a higher super resolution property and to realize an optical data recording medium in which a signal can be recorded in high density, and the signal recording in high density can be reproduced.
  • Incidentally, Blu-ray disc (BD) may be so arranged that a recording surface is provided on a light-incident surface of a substrate. In this type of recording medium, a laser beam can be irradiated to the recording surface without passing through the substrate. Therefore the laser beam can be irradiated from closer range than when in the arrangement in which the laser beam has to pass through the substrate. On the account of this, the laser beam having smaller spot size can be irradiated by using a lens having a high NA. With this arrangement, it is possible to attain reproduction of a signal from a mark having a shorter mark length. However, even though the recording layer is thus provided on the light-incident surface of the substrate, there is a limit in how much the distance between the recording surface and the laser irradiation point can be short. In this case, the arrangement in which the reproducing layer is provided on the light-incident surface of the substrate as in the present embodiment makes it possible to reproduce an optical data medium having a further shorter mark length.
  • Hereinafter, a method of reproducing the optical data recording medium 31 is explained with reference to FIG. 2 (a) and FIG. 2 (b)
  • The reproduction in the optical data recording medium 31 can be carried out by detecting the light beam reflected from the light-incident surface of the substrate 5 by using an optical head (not shown) as a result of the irradiation of the reproducing laser beam 30 onto the light-incident surface from above the cover layer 1 by using a laser light source (not shown) and an optical system (such as a condenser lens). On the incident surface at least either pit or groove are provided.
  • Here, the irradiation of the reproduction beam 30 onto the optical data recording medium 31 is carried out in such a manner that an area having higher temperature and an area having lower temperature are produced in the laser beam spot of the reproducing layer 2. For example, when the reproducing laser beam 30 is irradiated from above the cover layer 1 to the reproducing-only optical data recording medium 31, the reproducing laser beam spot 11 is produced on the surface of the reproduction layer 2. The reproducing laser beam spot 11 has a temperature gradient from the center of the spot to the other area of the spot as shown in the FIG. 2 (a). Therefore, a higher temperature area 13 and a lower temperature area 12 appear in the reproducing laser beam spot 30 on the surface of the reproducing layer 2. For example, the higher temperature area 13 has a temperature not less than 60° C. but less than 180° C., and the lower temperature area 12 has a temperature not less than 20° C. but less than 60° C. i.e., when the reproducing laser beam 30 is irradiated to the optical data recording medium 31, temperature is the highest in the center of the laser beam spot, and a part further from the center an area has a lower temperature.
  • Transmittance of the reproducing layer 2 changes in accordance with temperature changes. Therefore, the transmittance of the reproducing layer 2 for wavelength of the reproducing laser beam 30 decreases (low transmittance state) in the higher temperature area 13 where temperature rises due to irradiation of the reproducing laser beam 30. On the other hand, the transmittance of the reproducing layer 2 for wavelength of the reproducing laser beam 30 does not decrease in the lower temperature area 12 where temperature does not rise very much even though the reproducing laser beam 30 is irradiated thereto.
  • Accordingly, most of the laser beam irradiated to the optical data recording medium 31 (the laser beam irradiated to the lower temperature area 12) are shielded off by the reproducing layer 2, and only the laser beam irradiated to the higher temperature area 13 passes through the reproducing layer 2 as shown in FIG. 3. On account of this, only the laser beam having passed through the reproducing layer 2 reaches the light absorption layer 3 and the reflective layer 4. Therefore, the spot size of the laser beam produced on a surface of the reflective layer 4 is virtually reduced. Consequently, it is possible to perform reproduction of a mark having a mark length shorter than a mark length of the resolution limit of the optical system.
  • Note that when the reproducing laser beam 30 having the higher temperature area and the lower temperature area is irradiated, the light absorption layer 3 absorbs the reproducing laser beam 30 and converts the beam into heat. Therefore, the light absorption layer 3 produces a large amount of heat after absorbing the reproducing laser beam 30 having passed through the higher temperature area 13. Because the heat generated in the light absorption layer 3 travels to the reproducing layer 2 located nearby (preferably contiguous to) the light absorption layer 3, temperature in the higher temperature area 13 of the reproducing layer 2 rises more. Accordingly, the transmittance of the laser beam irradiated to the higher temperature area 13 in a reproducing layer 2 increases more. This makes it easier to attain a further smaller spot size of the laser beam on the reflective layer 4, thereby attaining reproduction of higher quality.
  • The optical data recording medium having the reproducing layer of the embodiment of the present invention may be, but not limited to a disc-shaped optical data recording medium such as CDs (Compact Discs), CD-ROMs (Compact Disc-Read Only Memorys), CD-Rs (Compact Disc-Recordables), CD-RWs (Compact Disc-ReWritables), DVDs, DVD-ROMs, DVD-Rs, DVD-RWs, DVRs (Blu-ray Discs), DVR (Blu-ray Disc)-ROMs, and the like.
  • Also, the arrangement of the present invention is not limited to the optical data recording medium 31. For example, instead of providing the cover layer 1 made of glass on a surface of the reproducing layer 2, the optical data recording medium may be so arranged that a resin layer having refraction index and heat conductivity similar to those of the air is provided contiguously on the reproducing layer 2. (The resin layer must be absolutely adhered to the reproducing layer 2.) Because a resin having smaller refraction index and heat conductivity than the air has does not exist at the present moment, it is believed that a maximum performance can be obtained by the arrangement in which the reproducing layer is provided contiguously to a layer of air.
  • Moreover, the optical data recording medium may be so arranged as not to include the reflective layer, if that surface of (a reflective surface) the substrate 5 which faces to the reproducing layer 2 has enough reflectivity.
  • The optical data recording medium may be so arranged that the rise and/or the recess, those of which indicates a start address of data and an end address of data are not provided. However, in this case, the optical data recording medium does not indicate where recording point and/or reproducing point are.
  • Note that the embodiment of the present invention includes a recordable optical recording medium.
  • In order to obtain the recordable optical data recording medium, the light absorption layer 3 of the embodiment is so arranged as to be made of a material with which the light absorption layer 3 becomes recordable, so as to have functions of converting light into heat and of recording data, thereby causing the optical data recording medium to be recordable. It is possible to raise examples of the materials with which the light absorption layer 3 becomes recordable as follows: a phase change recording material (such as GeSbTe, or the like), a pigment, and a magnet-optical recording material (such as TbFeCo, or the like).
  • As described above, that optical data recording medium of the present invention, in which irradiation of a light beam is used for recording or reproducing data, includes a reproducing layer, provided to face a light-incident surface of the substrate. The reproducing layer is for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark having a mark length shorter than a resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus for reproducing the optical data recording medium.
  • The “reproducing layer for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark having a mark length shorter than a resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus for reproducing the optical data recording medium” is a layer which is provided to reproduce a mark length shorter than the laser beam spot which is narrowed by the optical system of the reproducing apparatus. For example, only higher temperature area of the laser beam, which is irradiated to the reproducing layer, passes through the reproducing layer if a material which increases its transmittance when an intensive laser beam is irradiated or when temperature increases is used for the reproducing layer. As a result, the spot size of the laser beam is reduced. Accordingly, it becomes possible to reproduce a mark length shorter than the laser beam spot which is narrowed by the optical system of the reproducing apparatus.
  • In light of the characteristics of the material, the reproducing layer needs to be provided above the layers—for example, such as a layer which reflects the laser beam—on the light-incident surface of the substrate. Therefore, when the reproducing layer is provided on a reverse surface to that surface of the substrate from above which the laser beam is irradiated, the reproducing layer needs to be provided firstly on the surface of the substrate.
  • Then, above the reproducing layer, the other layers are provided. On the other hand, according to the foregoing arrangement, it is possible to provide the reproducing layer on the top of layers (except the cover layer) on that surface of the substrate from above which the laser beam is irradiated, after the other layers, for example a layer for reflecting the laser beam, are provided.
  • Because the reproducing layer can be provided on that surface of the substrate from above which the laser beam is irradiated after the other layers are provided, it is possible to give the reproducing layer an arbitrary thickness, while letting the reflecting layer have a good rise and/or a good recess. On account of this, resolution is improved in case where the reproducing layer is made of a material whose transmittance is greatly changed by the thicker film thickness. Also, because the size of the laser beam becomes smaller, it becomes possible to reproduce a shorter mark length. Accordingly, because super-resolution quality is improved, an optical data recording medium in which data is recorded in high-density is obtained.
  • Note that in the arrangement, not only the film thickness of the reproducing layer is not limited but also resolution limit is improved when a conventional optical data recording medium and film thickness of the reproducing layer are arranged as above. This is described later in Examples.
  • To achieve the object of the present invention, the optical data recording medium includes (i) the substrate having the rise and/or the recess that contributes recording and/or reproduction on the light incident surface, (ii) functional layers, provided on the light incident surface of the substrate, assisting recording and reproducing data, and (iii) the reproducing layer, provided on the surface of the functional layers, having transmittance that changes in accordance with a light intensity distribution of the laser beam.
  • “The functional layers assisting recording and reproducing data” are one or more layers, which have functions of reflecting the laser beam, converting light to heat, recording data, or the like function. Each layer may have a single function or multiple functions. This is, the functional layer may have the function of converting light to heat and the function of recording data.
  • The reproducing layer needs to be provided so that the light is radiated via the reproducing layer to the functional layer. Therefore, in case where the reproducing layer is provided on the reverse surface to the non-light-incident surface of the substrate, it is necessary that the reproducing layer be provided on the non-light-incident surface of the substrate, and the functional layer is provided on the reproducing layer. On the other hand, according to the foregoing arrangement, the reproducing layer is provided on the top of layers layered on the substrate (the furthest layer from the substrate except the cover layer).
  • Therefore, with this arrangement, it is possible to give the reproducing layer an arbitrary thickness, while letting the reflecting layer have a good rise and a good recess. On account of this, resolution is improved in those cases wherein the reproducing layer is made of a material whose transmittance is greatly changed by the thicker film thickness. Also, it becomes possible to reproduce a shorter mark length. Accordingly, this gives the optical data recording medium a higher super-resolution property, and a high-density optical data recording medium is obtained.
  • Note that it is desirable that “the rise and/or the recess indicative of data or reproduction position” formed on the substrate includes a groove for recording a start address and an end address of the data, in addition to the pit or groove for recording the data. (The groove for recording the start address and end address of data indicates, after recording the data, where the reproduction point of the data is.) With this arrangement, the recording and reproducing of the data can be carried out without imposing a burden on the reproducing/recording apparatus. Thus, it is possible to reproduce the recorded data in higher density.
  • To achieve the object of the present invention, the optical data recording medium is so arranged that the reproducing layer includes a material whose transmittance changes in accordance with temperature. Because the transmittance of the reproducing layer changes in accordance with temperature, it becomes possible to attain a smaller size of the light beam spot desirably.
  • To achieve the object of the present invention, the optical data recording medium, at least a part of that surface of the reproducing layer to which the light beam is irradiated is exposed to air.
  • According to the arrangement, because at least a part of the surface of the reproducing layer to which the laser beam is irradiated is exposed to air, it is possible to attain a desirable difference between refractive index of the air and refractive index of the reproducing layer in irradiating the light beam onto the reproducing layer. On the account of this, it becomes easier to irradiate the laser beam to the reproducing layer.
  • Furthermore, in the arrangement in which the recording layer has a transmittance that is changeable by heat distribution caused by the light beam, conduction of the heat from the reproducing layer to the other layers is minimized. Thus, it is possible to heat the reproducing layer by the light beam efficiently.
  • Therefore, according to the foregoing arrangement, not only is it possible to prevent heat from transmitting from the reproducing layer, but also it is possible to increase a quantity of the reflected light beam. Accordingly, it is possible to obtain the optical data recording medium in which data is recorded in high density can be reproduced with better quality.
  • To achieve the object of the present invention, the optical data recording medium includes that light absorption layer for converting the light beam to heat, which is contiguous to the reproducing layer.
  • In those cases wherein an optical data recording medium of the present invention does not include the light absorption layer, the reproducing layer must have an light-heat converting function. In order to provide an light-heat converting function with the reproducing layer, the reproducing layer should be made of (i) a material whose optical characteristics are changeable only in accordance with light intensity distribution, or (ii) a material which converts light to heat.
  • On the other hand, according to the foregoing arrangement, the light beam having passed through the reproducing layer can be converted into heat thereby changing the temperature of the reproducing layer by the light beam efficiently with such a simple arrangement. Therefore, it is possible to change the temperature of the reproducing layer without providing a variety of functions with the reproducing layer. On the account of this, a super-resolution optical data recording medium, which costs less and is easier to be fabricated, can be obtained.
  • To achieve an object of the present invention, the optical data recording medium includes a reflective layer for reflecting the light beam as one of the functional layers, which is provided between the substrate and the reproducing layer.
  • In the arrangement in which the reflective layer is provided between the substrate and the reproducing layer, the reproduction layer is formed after the reflecting layer is formed so as to have the rise and/or the recess well corresponding to the rise and/or the recess of the reflecting layer.
  • Therefore, with this arrangement, it is possible to give the reproducing layer an arbitrary thickness, while letting the reflecting layer have a good rise and/or a good recess. As a result, the transmittance of the reproducing layer is distributed desirably in a thickness direction of the reproducing layer, thereby making it possible to attain the reproduction of the signal from the shorter mark length. This gives the optical data recording medium a higher super-resolution property.
  • Because the reflective layer is provided in the optical data recording medium, the optical data recording medium can be effectively reproduced even when the reproducing layer does not have enough reflectance. Thus, the super-resolution optical data recording medium which costs less and possesses high reliability is obtained.
  • To achieve the object of the present invention, the optical data recording medium includes the reproduction layer that is made of a metal oxide. Because the reproducing layer is made of a metal oxide, the super-resolution optical data recording medium of the present invention costs less and possesses higher reliability than heretofore was the case.
  • To achieve the object of the present invention, the optical data recording medium includes the reproducing layer that is made of a zinc oxide. Because the reproducing layer is made of zinc oxide, it is possible to read the non-flat surface having shorter mark length and to write data in high density in the optical data recording medium.
  • To achieve an object of the present invention, the optical data recording medium includes a light absorption layer made of one of silicon, germanium or an alloy of silicon and germanium. Because the light absorption layer is made of one of silicon, germanium or an alloy of silicon and germanium, it is possible to attain an optical data recoding medium having a reproducing layer whose temperature can be changed desirably by using the light beam, while keeping the low cost of the optical data recording medium.
  • To achieve the object of the present invention, the reproducing method of an optical recording medium includes the steps of (i) irradiating the laser beam from above the reproducing layer, and (ii) reproducing the mark having a mark length shorter than resolution limit of the optical system of the reproducing apparatus. On the account of this, it becomes possible to reproduce data recorded in the high-density optical data recording medium.
  • The invention being thus described, it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. All such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the following claims.
  • Furthermore, the present invention can be structured as follows.
  • A first optical data recording medium, in which irradiation of a light beam is used for recording or reproducing data, at least includes (i) a substrate and (ii) a reproducing layer, provided to face a light-incident surface of the substrate, for reproduction of a signal from a mark having a mark having a mark length shorter than a resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus for reproducing the optical data recording medium, wherein the reproducing layer is provided on a surface of the substrate to which a laser beam is irradiated.
  • A second optical data recording medium is, in addition to the arrangement of the first optical data recording medium, arranged such that the substrate has a rise and/or a recess on its surface that is to face the reproducing layer, the rise and/or the recess contributing to recording and/or reproduction of data.
  • A third optical data recording medium is, in addition to the arrangement of the first or second optical data recording medium, wherein at least a part of the surface of the reproducing layer, to which the laser beam is irradiated, of the first or the second optical data recording medium is exposed to the air.
  • A fourth optical data recording medium, in addition to the arrangement of any one of the first through the third optical data recording media, includes an light absorption layer between the reproducing layer and the substrate.
  • A fifth optical data recording medium, wherein the light absorption layer of the forth optical data recording medium is made of a silicon or a germanium or an alloy of a silicon and a germanium.
  • A sixth optical data recording medium, wherein the reproducing layer of any one of the first through the fifth optical data recording media is made of a metal oxide.
  • A seventh optical data recording medium, wherein the reproducing layer of any one of the first through the fifth optical data recording media is made of a zinc oxide.
  • An eighth optical data recording medium, wherein any one of the first through the seventh optical data recording media includes a reflective layer between the light absorption layer and the substrate.
  • A reproducing method of any one of the first through the eighth optical data recording media includes a step of reproducing a shorter mark length signal than resolution limit of optical system of the reproducing apparatus.
  • EXAMPLES Example 1
  • As an Example 1, an optical data recording medium having the following arrangement was produced (hereinafter, referred as “Example 1 disc”). As shown in the FIG. 1, pits creating a non-flat surface are provided on polyolefin-based resin substrate 5 having a 0.5 mm thickness. The pits corresponded to recorded data. On that surface of the polyolefin-based resin substrate 5 on which the pits are formed, an Al layer 4 (30 nm in thickness) used as a reflective layer, as Si layer 4 (50 nm in thickness) used as an light absorption layer, and a ZnO film 2 (225 nm in thickness) used as a reproducing layer were formed in this order. On a top surface of the reproducing layer 2, glass 1 (0.5 mm in thickness) as a cover layer was placed.
  • Also, as a Comparative Example, an optical data recording medium with following arrangement was produced (hereinafter referred as “conventional disc”). As shown in FIG. 4, pits creating a non-flat surface were provided on a polyolefin-based resin substrate 25 having 0.5 mm thickness. On the surface of the polyolefin-based resin substrate having the pits, a ZnO film 22 (225 nm in thickness) used as a reproducing layer, a Si layer 23 used as an light absorption layer 23 (50 nm in thickness), and an Al layer 24 (30 nm in thickness) were layered in this order.
  • By using the Example 1 disc and the conventional disc, the correlation between a mark length and signal quality was measured. In the measurement, a wavelength of a reproducing laser beam 30 was set at 408 nm, an aperture NA of a lens was 0.65, and a linear velocity of scanning the reproducing laser beam was set at 3.0 (m/s).
  • Note that in both the discs, the layers having the same functions were identical in material and in thickness, in order to perform the comparison between the discs more accurately. Moreover, because the same measuring apparatus was used to compare the Example 1 disc and the conventional disc (so that optical systems until the light reached the reproducing layers were identical in both the discs), the conventional disc included a glass 1 which was as thick as the glass 1 which the Example 1 disc included.
  • As to the Example 1 disc, measurement of a C/N (appraisal standard of signal quality) of pits having 0.1 μm through 0.5 μm mark length (pit length), and C/N obtained by irradiation of the reproducing laser beam 30 onto the Example 1 disc from above the glass. The result is graphed in a solid line in FIG. 5. In FIG. 5, the horizontal axis shows the pit length, and the vertical axis is OTF (optical transfer function) showing C/N (appraisal standard of signal quality) and dependency of C/N on recording mark length. In other words, the vertical axis shows super-resolution quality.
  • As to the conventional disc, a measurement of a C/N (appraisal standard of signal quality) of a pit having 0.1 through 0.5 μm mark length (pit length) was carried out. The result is graphed in a broken line in FIG. 5.
  • According to FIG. 5, the Example 1 disc had a very high C/N values of 40 to 45 dB for the mark lengths (pit length) down to about 0.14 μm. (In addition, even for the pit length shorter than 0.14 μm, the C/N value of the Example 1 disc were still high, for example, the C/N value was 35 dB when the pit length was around 0.12 μm). In general, a C/N value needs to be no less than 40 dB in order to reproduce data finely. Therefore, in Example 1 disc used, it was possible to reproduce data finely for the pit lengths down to 0.14 μm. On the other hand, in the conventional disc, the C/N value decreased dramatically for the mark length shorter than 0.2 μm.
  • For the pit length 0.14 μm, the C/N of the Example 1 disc was around 40 dB and the C/N of the conventional disc was 17 dB. Also, for the pit length 0.2 μm or less, the C/N of the conventional disc decreased dramatically to a value lower than 40 dB. Therefore, for the conventional disc, the limit of the pit length was 0.20 μm for fine reproduction. As described above, the comparison showed that the arrangement of the present invention attained dramatically high super-resolution quality and the reproduction of the signal from the shorter mark length with high signal quality.
  • Example 2
  • In Example 2, a material of the reproducing layer was examined.
  • An optical data recording medium (hereinafter Example 2 disc) used in Example 2 was identical with the Example 1 disc in the Example 1, except that the reproducing layer of the Example 2 disc was made of, instead of ZnO, SnO2. Correlation between mark lengths for signals, and qualities of the signals was measured for the Example 1 disc and Example 2 disc. The measurement was carried out as in Example 1. That is, the measurement of a C/N (appraisal standard of signal quality) of pits having 0.1 μm through 0.5 μm mark length (pit length) was carried out.
  • The results of the measurements of the Example 1 disc and the Example 2 disc are graphed in FIG. 6. In FIG. 6, the solid line is the result of the Example 1 disc, whereas the broken line is the result of the Example 2 disc. In FIG. 6, the horizontal axis shows the pit length, and the vertical axis is OTF (optical transfer function) showing C/N (appraisal standard of signal quality) and dependency of C/N on recording mark length. In other words, the vertical axis shows super-resolution quality.
  • According to FIG. 6, especially for the pit length of 0.14 μm or less, a C/N of the Example 1 disc made of ZnO was 5 to 10 dB higher than a CN of the Example 2 disc made of SnO2. This explains that the arrangement in which the reproducing layer is made of ZnO enables reproduction of a signal from a mark having a shorter mark length.
  • The invention being thus described, it will be obvious that the same way may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the following claims.

Claims (13)

1-18. (canceled)
19. An optical data recording medium, in which irradiation of a light beam is used for reproducing data, comprising:
a substrate;
pits indicative of reproduction position, provided in a light incident side of the substrate, the pits having a mark length shorter than a resolution limit of an optical system of a reproducing apparatus for reproducing the optical data recording medium; and
a reproducing layer, provided on the light incident side of the substrate, the reproducing layer for reproduction by the reproducing apparatus of a signal from a mark having a mark length shorter than a resolution limit of the optical system of the reproducing apparatus.
20. The optical data recording medium as set forth in claim 19, wherein
the reproducing layer is a most farthest layer from the substrate, among layers formed on the light incident side of the substrate.
21. The optical data recording medium as set forth in claim 19, wherein
the reproducing layer changes in transmittance in accordance with the light beam thus irradiated.
22. The optical data recording medium as set forth in claim 19, further comprising
a reflective surface provided between the substrate and the reproducing layer, the reflective surface for reflecting light transmitted through the reproducing layer.
23. The optical data recording medium as set forth in claim 22, further comprising
a reflective layer provided between the substrate and the reproducing layer, the reflective layer forming a reflective surface.
24. The optical data recording medium as set forth in claim 19, wherein:
the reproducing layer is made of a material whose transmittance changes in accordance with temperature.
25. The optical data recording medium as set forth in claim 19, wherein:
at least a part of a light-incident surface of the reproducing layer is exposed to air.
26. The optical data recording medium as set forth in claim 19, further comprising:
a light absorption layer for converting an incident light beam directed toward said light incident surface of said substrate to heat, the light absorption layer being contiguous to the reproducing layer.
27. The optical data recording medium as set forth in claim 19, further comprising:
a reflective layer for reflecting an incident light beam directed toward said light incident side of said substrate, the reflective layer being provided between said light incident side of said substrate and said reproducing layer.
28. The optical data recording medium as set forth in claim 19, wherein:
the reproducing layer is made of a metal oxide.
29. The optical data recording medium as set forth in claim 28, wherein:
the reproducing layer is made of a zinc oxide.
30. The optical data recording medium as set forth in claim 26, wherein:
the light absorption layer is made of one of silicon, germanium and an alloy of silicon and germanium.
US12/587,506 2003-05-30 2009-10-08 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data Abandoned US20100103807A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/587,506 US20100103807A1 (en) 2003-05-30 2009-10-08 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP2003-155668 2003-05-30
JP2003155668A JP2004355783A (en) 2003-05-30 2003-05-30 Optical information recording medium and its reproducing method
US10/824,926 US9111554B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2004-04-14 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US12/587,506 US20100103807A1 (en) 2003-05-30 2009-10-08 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/824,926 Division US9111554B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2004-04-14 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20100103807A1 true US20100103807A1 (en) 2010-04-29

Family

ID=33447901

Family Applications (6)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/824,926 Expired - Fee Related US9111554B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2004-04-14 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US11/981,974 Expired - Fee Related US8576688B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2007-11-01 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US12/587,506 Abandoned US20100103807A1 (en) 2003-05-30 2009-10-08 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US12/802,672 Abandoned US20100254247A1 (en) 2003-05-30 2010-06-11 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US12/802,671 Abandoned US20100329106A1 (en) 2003-05-30 2010-06-11 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US12/802,667 Expired - Fee Related US8194513B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2010-06-11 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data

Family Applications Before (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/824,926 Expired - Fee Related US9111554B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2004-04-14 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US11/981,974 Expired - Fee Related US8576688B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2007-11-01 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data

Family Applications After (3)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/802,672 Abandoned US20100254247A1 (en) 2003-05-30 2010-06-11 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US12/802,671 Abandoned US20100329106A1 (en) 2003-05-30 2010-06-11 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US12/802,667 Expired - Fee Related US8194513B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2010-06-11 Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (6) US9111554B2 (en)
JP (1) JP2004355783A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040240374A1 (en) * 2003-05-30 2004-12-02 Hideharu Tajima Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US20080279080A1 (en) * 2007-05-09 2008-11-13 Victor Company Of Japan, Ltd. Optical storage medium and method of producing optical storage medium

Families Citing this family (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP4298374B2 (en) 2002-11-18 2009-07-15 シャープ株式会社 Optical information recording medium, and recording method, reproducing method, optical information recording apparatus, and optical information reproducing apparatus using the same
JP3832659B2 (en) 2003-06-06 2006-10-11 シャープ株式会社 Optical information recording medium, recording method, reproducing method, optical information recording apparatus, and optical information reproducing apparatus using the same
JP4647241B2 (en) * 2003-08-04 2011-03-09 シャープ株式会社 Optical recording medium master manufacturing method, optical recording medium stamper manufacturing method, and optical recording medium manufacturing method
JP2005302275A (en) 2004-03-18 2005-10-27 Sharp Corp Optical information recording medium, recording and reproducing method, and recording and reproducing device
US7270891B2 (en) * 2004-11-17 2007-09-18 Northrop Grumman Corporation Mixed germanium-silicon thermal control blanket
JP4837415B2 (en) * 2005-03-24 2011-12-14 シャープ株式会社 Optical information recording medium and optical information recording medium reproducing apparatus
US8859184B2 (en) * 2005-07-28 2014-10-14 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Write-once-read-many optical disk having low-to-high recording property accommodating short wavelength recording
JP2007172701A (en) 2005-12-20 2007-07-05 Tdk Corp Super resolution optical recording medium, and method for recording information in super resolution optical recording medium
WO2009051246A1 (en) * 2007-10-19 2009-04-23 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Reproducing device for optical information recording medium, and optical information recording medium

Citations (54)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5006387A (en) * 1988-10-05 1991-04-09 Fujii Photo Film Co., Ltd. Information recording medium
US5170390A (en) * 1988-08-22 1992-12-08 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical recording element and driving system
US5177727A (en) * 1989-04-27 1993-01-05 Teac Corporation Rotary recording medium having a guide track and recording and reproducing apparatus therefor
US5244706A (en) * 1991-02-27 1993-09-14 Tdk Corporation Optical recording disk
US5252262A (en) * 1992-02-11 1993-10-12 Nestle S.A. Method of attaching a haptic to an optic of an intraocular lens
US5371730A (en) * 1989-11-29 1994-12-06 Hitachi, Ltd. Optical memory and information processing apparatus
US5410525A (en) * 1992-12-28 1995-04-25 Alpine Electronics, Inc. Disk reproducing method and apparatus including track jump compensation
US5448552A (en) * 1992-09-29 1995-09-05 Pioneer Electronic Corporation Super resolution information reproduction by tracking address information in normal resolution
US5470628A (en) * 1993-12-13 1995-11-28 Tdk Corporation Optical recording medium
US5488552A (en) * 1992-10-07 1996-01-30 Hiroshi Sakamoto Inverter power supply
US5503890A (en) * 1992-12-31 1996-04-02 Cheil Synthetics Inc. Optical recording medium
US5569517A (en) * 1994-06-23 1996-10-29 Tdk Corporation Optical information medium
US5610879A (en) * 1993-03-05 1997-03-11 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. Optical reproducing device, optical reproducing method using the same, and optical record medium used in the same
US5615185A (en) * 1993-06-25 1997-03-25 Kabushiki Kaisha Kenwood Optical disk recording and reproducing apparatus with data recorded and reproducing apparatus with data recorded on wobbled grooves and lands
US5635267A (en) * 1992-09-17 1997-06-03 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Optical information recording medium of phase change type having variably grooved tracks depending on their radial locations
US5688789A (en) * 1989-04-14 1997-11-18 State Of Oregon, Acting By And Through The Oregon State Board Of Higher Education, Acting For And On Behalf Of The Oregon Health Sciences University And The University Of Oregon PCP receptor ligands and the use thereof
US5691072A (en) * 1994-03-15 1997-11-25 Fujitsu Limited Magneto-optical recording medium and method of reproducing information recorded on such medium
US5708652A (en) * 1995-02-28 1998-01-13 Sony Corporation Multi-layer recording medium and method for producing same
US5817389A (en) * 1995-10-31 1998-10-06 Sony Corporation Optical disk
US5844882A (en) * 1996-03-25 1998-12-01 Sony Corporation Recording medium, address recording method and apparatus, and recording/reproducing method and apparatus for reducing crosstalk of addressing signals
US6071587A (en) * 1997-10-01 2000-06-06 Tdk Corporation Optical recording medium and its recording method
US6128272A (en) * 1996-04-10 2000-10-03 Sony Corporation Recording medium
US6233219B1 (en) * 1997-05-28 2001-05-15 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Recording medium and reproducing apparatus therefor
US6246656B1 (en) * 1997-04-25 2001-06-12 Sony Corporation Reduced thickness of a light transmissive layer for a high density optical disc
US6329036B1 (en) * 1998-12-09 2001-12-11 Tdk Corporation Optical recording medium and use
US20020009037A1 (en) * 2000-05-16 2002-01-24 Sakuya Tamada Optical recording medium, reproducing apparatus, and recording and reproducing apparatus therefor
US20020015377A1 (en) * 1993-12-09 2002-02-07 Osamu Koyama Optical recording/reproducing apparatus including a mask device for masking marginal rays, in a direction perpendicular to a recording medium track, of a light beam returned from the recording medium
US20020021644A1 (en) * 1996-10-22 2002-02-21 Takeshi Maeda Information recording medium which indicates information according to the wobbling of a track and information recording and reproducing apparatus
US20020024909A1 (en) * 2000-03-17 2002-02-28 Yuichi Kamioka Semiconductor laser driving apparatus and optical disc apparatus including the same
US20020060965A1 (en) * 1997-06-19 2002-05-23 Minoru Tobita Optical disc and optical drive
US20020168588A1 (en) * 2001-05-14 2002-11-14 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical information recording medium
US20020191527A1 (en) * 2001-04-20 2002-12-19 Tdk Corporation Readout method and apparatus for optical information medium
US20030002411A1 (en) * 2001-06-14 2003-01-02 Kazuo Kuroda Information reproducing apparatus, method of correcting reproducing program, and information recording medium
US20030103429A1 (en) * 2001-10-11 2003-06-05 Susumu Senshu Disc recording medium, disc drive apparatus, and reproduction method
US20030107977A1 (en) * 2001-10-15 2003-06-12 Tdk Corporation Readout method and apparatus for optical information medium
US20030156502A1 (en) * 2000-05-31 2003-08-21 Motoyashi Murakami Magneto optical recording medium, manufacturing method for the same, and method and apparatus for reading the same
US20030193862A1 (en) * 1995-02-14 2003-10-16 Harukazu Miyamoto Optical reproducing method for optical medium with aligned prepit portion
US20030202430A1 (en) * 2002-04-24 2003-10-30 Koichiro Nishikawa Domain wall displacement type magneto-optical recording medium and method of producing same
US20030214901A1 (en) * 2002-05-20 2003-11-20 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Optical recording medium having servo area and groove section
US20040013080A1 (en) * 2000-02-28 2004-01-22 Fujitsu Limited & Sony Corp. Optical disk
US20040017736A1 (en) * 2002-04-26 2004-01-29 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Magneto-optical recording/reproducing apparatus capable of setting reproducing/recording laser power
US20040071074A1 (en) * 2002-10-07 2004-04-15 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Optical disk and optical disk apparatus
US20040076083A1 (en) * 2001-04-19 2004-04-22 Koichiro Nishikawa Magneto-optical record medium
US20040170842A1 (en) * 1997-06-09 2004-09-02 Hiroki Yamamoto Glass material
US20040190432A1 (en) * 2003-01-20 2004-09-30 Katsutaro Ichihara Optical recording medium and optical recording-reproducing method
US20040197517A1 (en) * 2001-12-28 2004-10-07 Hiroki Yamamoto Nonlinear optical thin film, optical recording medium using nonlinear optical film and optical switch
US20050028184A1 (en) * 2001-07-02 2005-02-03 Sony Corporation Optical information recording medium, original disc for optical information recording medium, and method of manufacturing the same
US20050237912A1 (en) * 1999-07-02 2005-10-27 Tdk Corporation Optical information medium and reading method
USRE39811E1 (en) * 1994-08-11 2007-09-04 Yamaha Corporation Musical information recording and reproducing technique for use with a recording medium having a UTOC area
US7457215B2 (en) * 2003-10-31 2008-11-25 National Institute Of Advanced Industrial Science And Technology Method for reproducing data and an apparatus for recording and reproducing data
US20100014407A1 (en) * 2006-07-27 2010-01-21 Masaki Yamamoto Optical information recording medium, reproducing device for optical information recording medium, and reproducing method for optical information recording medium
US20100046333A1 (en) * 2007-06-01 2010-02-25 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical information recording medium and optical information processing apparatus
US20100091639A1 (en) * 2007-09-21 2010-04-15 National Institute Of Advanced Industrial Science And Technology Optical recording medium for performing super resolution reproduction and optical recording and reproduction method thereof
US8194513B2 (en) * 2003-05-30 2012-06-05 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data

Family Cites Families (51)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2002A (en) * 1841-03-12 Tor and planter for plowing
JP2601903B2 (en) * 1989-04-25 1997-04-23 株式会社東芝 Semiconductor storage device
US5350506A (en) * 1992-01-30 1994-09-27 Navistar International Transporation Corporation Anti-drain fluid filter
JPH0628713A (en) 1992-07-13 1994-02-04 Pioneer Electron Corp Optical disk
DE69434692T2 (en) * 1993-01-06 2007-03-29 Sony Corp. Recording method for recording medium
US5764619A (en) 1995-04-07 1998-06-09 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Optical recording medium having two separate recording layers
US5780652A (en) * 1995-11-09 1998-07-14 Rohm And Haas Company Process for chroman carboxylates
US5698093A (en) 1996-05-31 1997-12-16 Eagle Filter Corporation Gasoline filter with automatic shut off
JP2001035012A (en) 1999-07-27 2001-02-09 Victor Co Of Japan Ltd Optical recording medium
US6426656B1 (en) * 2000-04-19 2002-07-30 Velio Communications, Inc. High speed, low-power inter-chip transmission system
US20030000411A1 (en) * 2001-06-29 2003-01-02 Cernocky Edward Paul Method and apparatus for detonating an explosive charge
JP2003173619A (en) * 2001-12-05 2003-06-20 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Optical disk reproducing device
JP2003308630A (en) 2002-02-15 2003-10-31 Sony Corp Rewritable optical information recording medium and recording/reproducing method, recording/reproducing device
JP2003318598A (en) * 2002-04-25 2003-11-07 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Component feeder
JP4298374B2 (en) * 2002-11-18 2009-07-15 シャープ株式会社 Optical information recording medium, and recording method, reproducing method, optical information recording apparatus, and optical information reproducing apparatus using the same
KR100580244B1 (en) * 2003-01-23 2006-05-16 삼성전자주식회사 A handoff method in wirelessLAN
JP3832659B2 (en) * 2003-06-06 2006-10-11 シャープ株式会社 Optical information recording medium, recording method, reproducing method, optical information recording apparatus, and optical information reproducing apparatus using the same
JP2005018964A (en) * 2003-06-06 2005-01-20 Sharp Corp Optical information recording medium, reproducing method using the same, and optical information processing device
US7515541B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2009-04-07 Intel Corporation Transmission of data with feedback to the transmitter in a wireless local area network or the like
US7394858B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2008-07-01 Intel Corporation Systems and methods for adaptive bit loading in a multiple antenna orthogonal frequency division multiplexed communication system
US7373112B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2008-05-13 Intel Corporation Trained data transmission for communication systems
US7039412B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2006-05-02 Intel Corporation Method and apparatus for transmitting wireless signals on multiple frequency channels in a frequency agile network
US7826798B2 (en) * 2003-11-20 2010-11-02 Intel Corporation Trained data transmission for communication systems
US7460494B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2008-12-02 Intel Corporation Adaptive signaling in multiple antenna systems
US8824582B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2014-09-02 Intel Corporation Base station and method for channel coding and link adaptation
US7286609B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2007-10-23 Intel Corporation Adaptive multicarrier wireless communication system, apparatus and associated methods
US20050136910A1 (en) * 2003-12-18 2005-06-23 Qinghua Li Multicast SDMA training polls
US7408908B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2008-08-05 Intel Corporation Variable SDMA ACK timeout
US7213197B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2007-05-01 Intel Corporation Adaptive bit loading with low density parity check forward error correction
US20050129101A1 (en) * 2003-12-15 2005-06-16 Stephens Adrian P. SDMA communications with non-immediate block acknowledgment
US7321614B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2008-01-22 Intel Corporation Apparatus and methods for communicating using symbol-modulated subcarriers
US20050144307A1 (en) * 2003-12-15 2005-06-30 Qinghua Li Back-end alignment to avoid SDMA ACK time-out
US20050147115A1 (en) * 2003-12-24 2005-07-07 Qinghua Li SDMA training operations
US7245879B2 (en) * 2003-08-08 2007-07-17 Intel Corporation Apparatus and associated methods to perform intelligent transmit power control with subcarrier puncturing
CN1849769B (en) * 2003-09-15 2010-06-16 英特尔公司 Multiple antenna systems and methods using high-throughput space-frequency block codes
US7769097B2 (en) * 2003-09-15 2010-08-03 Intel Corporation Methods and apparatus to control transmission of a multicarrier wireless communication channel through multiple antennas
US7315577B2 (en) * 2003-09-15 2008-01-01 Intel Corporation Multiple antenna systems and method using high-throughput space-frequency block codes
US7440510B2 (en) * 2003-09-15 2008-10-21 Intel Corporation Multicarrier transmitter, multicarrier receiver, and methods for communicating multiple spatial signal streams
US8699508B2 (en) * 2003-12-18 2014-04-15 Intel Corporation Response scheduling for multiple receivers
US7440423B2 (en) * 2004-01-12 2008-10-21 Intel Corporation Channel specification apparatus, systems, and methods
US7395495B2 (en) * 2004-01-12 2008-07-01 Intel Corporation Method and apparatus for decoding forward error correction codes
US7570953B2 (en) * 2004-01-12 2009-08-04 Intel Corporation Multicarrier communication system and methods for link adaptation using uniform bit loading and subcarrier puncturing
US7665008B2 (en) * 2004-01-12 2010-02-16 Intel Corporation Method and apparatus for implementing a low density parity check code in a wireless system
US7333556B2 (en) * 2004-01-12 2008-02-19 Intel Corporation System and method for selecting data rates to provide uniform bit loading of subcarriers of a multicarrier communication channel
US7324605B2 (en) * 2004-01-12 2008-01-29 Intel Corporation High-throughput multicarrier communication systems and methods for exchanging channel state information
US7345989B2 (en) * 2004-01-12 2008-03-18 Intel Corporation Adaptive channelization scheme for high throughput multicarrier systems
US7289585B2 (en) * 2004-01-12 2007-10-30 Intel Corporation Multicarrier receivers and methods for separating transmitted signals in a multiple antenna system
US20050152330A1 (en) * 2004-01-12 2005-07-14 Stephens Adrian P. Clock recovery methods and apparatus
US7423968B2 (en) * 2004-01-12 2008-09-09 Intel Corporation Systems and methods to convey additional signaling information in a wireless local area network
US7474608B2 (en) * 2004-01-12 2009-01-06 Intel Corporation Method for signaling information by modifying modulation constellations
CN1832440A (en) * 2005-03-10 2006-09-13 朗迅科技公司 IMS network access using existing equipment

Patent Citations (55)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5170390A (en) * 1988-08-22 1992-12-08 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical recording element and driving system
US5006387A (en) * 1988-10-05 1991-04-09 Fujii Photo Film Co., Ltd. Information recording medium
US5688789A (en) * 1989-04-14 1997-11-18 State Of Oregon, Acting By And Through The Oregon State Board Of Higher Education, Acting For And On Behalf Of The Oregon Health Sciences University And The University Of Oregon PCP receptor ligands and the use thereof
US5177727A (en) * 1989-04-27 1993-01-05 Teac Corporation Rotary recording medium having a guide track and recording and reproducing apparatus therefor
US5371730A (en) * 1989-11-29 1994-12-06 Hitachi, Ltd. Optical memory and information processing apparatus
US5244706A (en) * 1991-02-27 1993-09-14 Tdk Corporation Optical recording disk
US5252262A (en) * 1992-02-11 1993-10-12 Nestle S.A. Method of attaching a haptic to an optic of an intraocular lens
US5635267A (en) * 1992-09-17 1997-06-03 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Optical information recording medium of phase change type having variably grooved tracks depending on their radial locations
US5448552A (en) * 1992-09-29 1995-09-05 Pioneer Electronic Corporation Super resolution information reproduction by tracking address information in normal resolution
US5488552A (en) * 1992-10-07 1996-01-30 Hiroshi Sakamoto Inverter power supply
US5410525A (en) * 1992-12-28 1995-04-25 Alpine Electronics, Inc. Disk reproducing method and apparatus including track jump compensation
US5503890A (en) * 1992-12-31 1996-04-02 Cheil Synthetics Inc. Optical recording medium
US5516568A (en) * 1992-12-31 1996-05-14 Cheil Synthetics, Inc. Optical recording medium
US5610879A (en) * 1993-03-05 1997-03-11 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. Optical reproducing device, optical reproducing method using the same, and optical record medium used in the same
US5615185A (en) * 1993-06-25 1997-03-25 Kabushiki Kaisha Kenwood Optical disk recording and reproducing apparatus with data recorded and reproducing apparatus with data recorded on wobbled grooves and lands
US20020015377A1 (en) * 1993-12-09 2002-02-07 Osamu Koyama Optical recording/reproducing apparatus including a mask device for masking marginal rays, in a direction perpendicular to a recording medium track, of a light beam returned from the recording medium
US5470628A (en) * 1993-12-13 1995-11-28 Tdk Corporation Optical recording medium
US5691072A (en) * 1994-03-15 1997-11-25 Fujitsu Limited Magneto-optical recording medium and method of reproducing information recorded on such medium
US5569517A (en) * 1994-06-23 1996-10-29 Tdk Corporation Optical information medium
USRE39811E1 (en) * 1994-08-11 2007-09-04 Yamaha Corporation Musical information recording and reproducing technique for use with a recording medium having a UTOC area
US20030193862A1 (en) * 1995-02-14 2003-10-16 Harukazu Miyamoto Optical reproducing method for optical medium with aligned prepit portion
US5708652A (en) * 1995-02-28 1998-01-13 Sony Corporation Multi-layer recording medium and method for producing same
US5817389A (en) * 1995-10-31 1998-10-06 Sony Corporation Optical disk
US5844882A (en) * 1996-03-25 1998-12-01 Sony Corporation Recording medium, address recording method and apparatus, and recording/reproducing method and apparatus for reducing crosstalk of addressing signals
US6128272A (en) * 1996-04-10 2000-10-03 Sony Corporation Recording medium
US20020021644A1 (en) * 1996-10-22 2002-02-21 Takeshi Maeda Information recording medium which indicates information according to the wobbling of a track and information recording and reproducing apparatus
US6246656B1 (en) * 1997-04-25 2001-06-12 Sony Corporation Reduced thickness of a light transmissive layer for a high density optical disc
US6233219B1 (en) * 1997-05-28 2001-05-15 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Recording medium and reproducing apparatus therefor
US20040170842A1 (en) * 1997-06-09 2004-09-02 Hiroki Yamamoto Glass material
US20020060965A1 (en) * 1997-06-19 2002-05-23 Minoru Tobita Optical disc and optical drive
US6071587A (en) * 1997-10-01 2000-06-06 Tdk Corporation Optical recording medium and its recording method
US6329036B1 (en) * 1998-12-09 2001-12-11 Tdk Corporation Optical recording medium and use
US20050237912A1 (en) * 1999-07-02 2005-10-27 Tdk Corporation Optical information medium and reading method
US20040013080A1 (en) * 2000-02-28 2004-01-22 Fujitsu Limited & Sony Corp. Optical disk
US20020024909A1 (en) * 2000-03-17 2002-02-28 Yuichi Kamioka Semiconductor laser driving apparatus and optical disc apparatus including the same
US20020009037A1 (en) * 2000-05-16 2002-01-24 Sakuya Tamada Optical recording medium, reproducing apparatus, and recording and reproducing apparatus therefor
US20030156502A1 (en) * 2000-05-31 2003-08-21 Motoyashi Murakami Magneto optical recording medium, manufacturing method for the same, and method and apparatus for reading the same
US20040076083A1 (en) * 2001-04-19 2004-04-22 Koichiro Nishikawa Magneto-optical record medium
US20020191527A1 (en) * 2001-04-20 2002-12-19 Tdk Corporation Readout method and apparatus for optical information medium
US20020168588A1 (en) * 2001-05-14 2002-11-14 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical information recording medium
US20030002411A1 (en) * 2001-06-14 2003-01-02 Kazuo Kuroda Information reproducing apparatus, method of correcting reproducing program, and information recording medium
US20050028184A1 (en) * 2001-07-02 2005-02-03 Sony Corporation Optical information recording medium, original disc for optical information recording medium, and method of manufacturing the same
US20030103429A1 (en) * 2001-10-11 2003-06-05 Susumu Senshu Disc recording medium, disc drive apparatus, and reproduction method
US20030107977A1 (en) * 2001-10-15 2003-06-12 Tdk Corporation Readout method and apparatus for optical information medium
US20040197517A1 (en) * 2001-12-28 2004-10-07 Hiroki Yamamoto Nonlinear optical thin film, optical recording medium using nonlinear optical film and optical switch
US20030202430A1 (en) * 2002-04-24 2003-10-30 Koichiro Nishikawa Domain wall displacement type magneto-optical recording medium and method of producing same
US20040017736A1 (en) * 2002-04-26 2004-01-29 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Magneto-optical recording/reproducing apparatus capable of setting reproducing/recording laser power
US20030214901A1 (en) * 2002-05-20 2003-11-20 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Optical recording medium having servo area and groove section
US20040071074A1 (en) * 2002-10-07 2004-04-15 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Optical disk and optical disk apparatus
US20040190432A1 (en) * 2003-01-20 2004-09-30 Katsutaro Ichihara Optical recording medium and optical recording-reproducing method
US8194513B2 (en) * 2003-05-30 2012-06-05 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US7457215B2 (en) * 2003-10-31 2008-11-25 National Institute Of Advanced Industrial Science And Technology Method for reproducing data and an apparatus for recording and reproducing data
US20100014407A1 (en) * 2006-07-27 2010-01-21 Masaki Yamamoto Optical information recording medium, reproducing device for optical information recording medium, and reproducing method for optical information recording medium
US20100046333A1 (en) * 2007-06-01 2010-02-25 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical information recording medium and optical information processing apparatus
US20100091639A1 (en) * 2007-09-21 2010-04-15 National Institute Of Advanced Industrial Science And Technology Optical recording medium for performing super resolution reproduction and optical recording and reproduction method thereof

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040240374A1 (en) * 2003-05-30 2004-12-02 Hideharu Tajima Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US20080130476A1 (en) * 2003-05-30 2008-06-05 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US20100254247A1 (en) * 2003-05-30 2010-10-07 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US20100329106A1 (en) * 2003-05-30 2010-12-30 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US20110044148A1 (en) * 2003-05-30 2011-02-24 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US8194513B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2012-06-05 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US8576688B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2013-11-05 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US9111554B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2015-08-18 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US20080279080A1 (en) * 2007-05-09 2008-11-13 Victor Company Of Japan, Ltd. Optical storage medium and method of producing optical storage medium
US7864656B2 (en) * 2007-05-09 2011-01-04 Victor Company Of Japan, Ltd. Optical storage medium and method of producing optical storage medium

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US8194513B2 (en) 2012-06-05
US20100329106A1 (en) 2010-12-30
US20040240374A1 (en) 2004-12-02
US8576688B2 (en) 2013-11-05
US20110044148A1 (en) 2011-02-24
JP2004355783A (en) 2004-12-16
US20080130476A1 (en) 2008-06-05
US20100254247A1 (en) 2010-10-07
US9111554B2 (en) 2015-08-18

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US8194513B2 (en) Optical data recording medium and method for reproducing recorded data
US7276274B2 (en) Optical recording medium and method for recording and reproducing data
JP4667491B2 (en) Reproduction method of optical information recording medium
JP4676565B2 (en) Recording device
EP1484757B1 (en) Optical information recording medium, recording and readout methods using the same, optical information recording device, and optical information readout device
US7651832B2 (en) Optical information recording medium, recording/reproducing method, and recording/reproducing device
US7436755B2 (en) Optical information recording medium, recording and reproduction methods using the same, optical information recording device, and optical information reproduction device
JP4298667B2 (en) Optical information recording medium, reproducing method using the same, and optical information processing apparatus
US7556912B2 (en) Optical information recording medium, reproducting method using the same, and optical information processing device
KR20020071937A (en) Optical recording medium and optical disk device
US20020168588A1 (en) Optical information recording medium
US20030108709A1 (en) High-density optical disk with a polymer film featuring thermochromism
JP2005339795A (en) Optical information recording medium, reproducing method for optical information recording medium, and optical information reproducing device
JP4668297B2 (en) Optical information recording medium and reproducing method thereof
JP4668298B2 (en) Optical information recording medium, reproducing method, and recording method
JPH1031844A (en) Maltilayered optical information medium
JP2004206854A (en) Optical information recording medium
JPH11120594A (en) Method and device for initializing optical disk

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION