(1) Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for receiving and restoring data from an optical recording medium exhibiting strong asymmetry in the regenerated RF signal and an apparatus for reading from and/or writing to recording media using such method. More particularly it relates to a digital partial response asymmetry compensation (DPRAC).
(2) Description of Related Art
Optical recording media such as CD, DVD, or Blu-ray disc, are now widely used almost everywhere, not only in the industry, but also in our daily life. Due to the steadily increasing recording speeds as well as the steadily increasing demands and applications of such high speed and high density recorded optical recording media, the RF signal, which is scanned from the recording medium, becomes more and more deteriorated. Especially the inter-symbol interference (ISI) and the asymmetry of the RF signal are a challenge for signal processing. Therefore, the development of a system for reliable and fast data restoring from such an optical recording medium having a strong asymmetrical RF signal, has become very important. With conventional methods it is difficult to restore the data correctly and quickly.
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to provide a method and an apparatus which solves or greatly improve the above-mentioned problem, and which increase the system performance and improve the quality and validity of processed data obtained from an optical recording medium with a strongly asymmetric signal. Though the invention is explained in the following with reference to optical recording media, the general idea can also be applied to magnetic media (type/disk) as well as to all fields based on digital baseband transmission and communication.
According to the invention, the above object is achieved by means of a method for digital partial response asymmetry compensation of an RF signal, the method comprising the steps of:
Using this method the asymmetry and the inter-symbol interference in the RF signal are greatly improved, and the quality and validity of the corresponding restored data are increased. Because of the partial response, the asymmetry compensation improves only the asymmetrical RF signal without any additional phase shift and loss of signal quality for the xT pulse signal as well as the zero-crossing signal. The RF signal without asymmetry is not influenced by the digital partial response asymmetry compensation.
For a better understanding of the invention, exemplary embodiments are specified in the following description of advantageous embodiments with reference to the figures. It is understood that the invention is not limited to these exemplary embodiments and that specified features can also expediently be combined and/or modified without departing from the scope of the present invention. In the figures:
In
In the DPRAC block 7 the asymmetry strength β is detected by an asymmetry detection block (AD) 71 based on the envelopes of a short T pulse (xT pulse) and a long T pulse (yT pulse). The upper and lower thresholds are then determined by a threshold determination block (TD) 72 based on the asymmetry strength factor β and the xT envelope. Those parts of the input signal RF, which are within the determined upper and lower thresholds, remain unchanged. However, those parts of the input signal RF, which are outside the determined upper and lower thresholds, are asymmetry compensated by an asymmetry compensation block (AC) 73. The result of this processing is a signal quality improvement in the asymmetrical parts of the input signal RF.
According to conventional methods the digitised and AC-coupled RF signal is resampled to a T-clock based RF signal and is then equalized and sliced for the Viterbi decoder 10. For a strong asymmetrical RF signal it is difficult to compensate the asymmetry only with this conventional method. By inserting the digital partial response asymmetry compensation block (DPRAC) 7 between the sampling rate converter 5 and the equalizer 8, the asymmetrical RF signal is dynamically improved for further data processing.
As shown in
β=[(IHylT+ILyT)−(IHxT+ILxT)]/[2×(IHyT−ILyT)]
The detected xT short pulse upper and lower envelopes and the calculated asymmetry factor β are then output to the threshold determination block (TD) 72.
The asymmetry detector 71 includes several components. The T-clock based input signal RF is analysed by an xT (short) pulse separator 20 and a yT (long) pulse separator 21, whereby the pulses having a pulse length equal to or smaller than xT or a pulse length equal to or greater than yT are separated from the RF signal stream, respectively, according to the zero-crossing information in the input signal RF. The maximum value and the minimum value of each separated xT and yT pulse are detected by respective upper and lower envelope measurement blocks 22, 23, 24, 25. All detected maximum values and minimum values are filtered by a low-pass filter (not shown) and constitute the xT upper and lower envelopes as well as yT upper and lower envelopes, respectively. The calculation of the asymmetry factor β is based on these envelopes. Considering the difficulty of a hardware implementation of a division, a LUT look-up table (LUT) 26 is introduced for implementing the determination of the asymmetry factor β according to
β=50×abs(a)/b
where a is the distance between the middle values of the short pulse xT and the long pulse yT and equals
a=[(IHylT+ILyT)−(IHxT+ILxT),
and b is the peak-to-peak value of the long pulse yT and equals
b=IHylT−ILyT.
Here the absolute function means that the asymmetry factor β is the same for both positive and negative asymmetrical input signal RF. Basically the asymmetry factor β is smaller than 50 and is greater than or equals 0.
The design of the xT pulse separator 20 is illustrated in
The yT pulse separator 21 works in the same way as the xT pulse separator 20. The specific design is illustrated in
The threshold determination block 72 is explained in more detail in
The working principle of the asymmetry compensator 73 is shown in
The solution according to the invention has a plurality of advantages. The asymmetry compensation is achieved in a simple and direct way, the performance of subsequent blocks (equalizer, slicer, Viterbi decoder, etc.) is hardly affected by inserting the asymmetry compensation block. This means that the parameters of these blocks are still optimised. The asymmetrical RF signal is compensated by processing only the asymmetrical parts in the RF signal in order to reduce the asymmetry. The remaining RF signal is, therefore, not influenced by this compensation.
The extent of the asymmetry compensation is adaptable to the extent of signal asymmetry through the asymmetry measurement. By means of this adaptive function, the method can be applied to any RF signal from perfect RF signal (asymmetry is zero) to a worst case RF signal (asymmetry is close to 50%).
There is no additional phase shift and loss of important information within or close to the upper and lower envelopes of the xT pulse, which refers mainly to the zero-crossing points. The inserted asymmetry compensation block causes only a 3T clock delay for clipping synchronization for the 3T clock pulse.
The measurement of the asymmetry factor β is a standard asymmetry measurement. The measurement result can be further used by the microprocessor as an indication of the disk quality. It can also be delivered to the subsequent blocks for optimising these blocks (e.g. equalizer, Viterbi decoder, etc.).
The yT upper and lower envelopes can further be used for the analog automatic gain control as well as also for the realization of the digital automatic gain control. In this way an RF signal exhibiting strong amplitude changes (e.g. from a heavy scratched disk) can be improved using this prompt gain control.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03011891 | May 2003 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2004/005245 | 5/15/2004 | WO | 00 | 11/22/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2004/107325 | 12/9/2004 | WO | A |
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