The present invention relates to an optical record carrier recording apparatus and method for recording data on a phase-change optical record carrier, in particular to a small form factor optical drive, and further to a portable device, such as a mobile phone or a palmtop computer. Still further, the present invention relates to an optical record carrier provided for dual-speed recording.
For a small form factor optical (SFFO) drive which is preferably to be used in a portable device, it is desired to have a rewritable phase-change optical record carrier (disc) on which the user can record data at different speeds, at least at a low and at a high speed. Low writing speed can be used when the drive is in a low power mode, e.g. when no mains are available, and a more power consuming high-speed recording mode can be used when the drive is in a high power mode, e.g. connected to an external power supply. With this high-speed recording mode, it will be possible to download files very rapidly from a PC to an SFFO drive.
Phase-change discs can be made with excellent recording properties, but are generally only optimal for their designed recording velocity. Introducing a high-speed recording mode will generally need faster crystallizing materials which will not work properly at lower recording speeds. In other words, the velocity range of a phase-change disc is not sufficient for both a low and a high-speed recording mode.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an alternative optical record carrier recording apparatus and method as well as an optical record carrier which allow the recording of data with at least two different writing speeds.
This object is achieved according to the present invention by an optical record carrier recording apparatus as claimed in claim 1 comprising:
A corresponding method is defined in claim 13. A corresponding phase-change optical record carrier is defined in claim 15. Preferred embodiments thereof are defined in the dependent claims.
The present invention is based on the idea that on empty (fully crystalline) phase-change discs data can be recorded with a velocity much higher than the crystallization speed of the phase-change material. This can be done because the phase-change material only needs to be made amorphous by melt-quenching and no crystallization is needed, as in direct overwrite. An appropriate writing strategy for writing on a phase-change layer is, for instance, described in EP 1143427 A2.
An empty record carrier is fully crystalline, and its full user area is available for high-speed recording. When data gets written on the record carrier it is proposed according to the present invention to keep track of the location of the written areas, i.e. non-crystalline areas, and unwritten areas, i.e. crystalline areas, on the record carrier. This information is stored as state information on the record carrier and is updated each time data are recorded on the record carrier. This state information is mainly important in a high power mode when high-speed writing of data is generally possible.
Provided that storage space for high-speed writing, i.e. at least one crystalline area or even enough crystalline areas for storing all data to be written, are available on the record carrier the switching means will then, in high power mode, switch the writing means into the high-speed writing mode. At the same time the address control means ensure that in the high-speed mode data are only recorded in crystalline areas. If this area is full and more data still needs to be recorded, the remaining data will be recorded in non-crystalline areas, so that the switching means, at the same time, switch the writing means back into the low-speed writing mode. The low-speed writing mode is preferably also used if the recording apparatus is in a low power mode, e.g. supplied with power from a battery or an accumulator. However, also in low power mode the high-speed writing mode can be used if an application demands it and as long as the required power can be provided, e.g. by the battery or the accumulator.
According to a preferred embodiment simply the highest address at which data are written on the record carrier are stored as state information, and it is assumed that below this highest address all areas are non-crystalline areas and that all areas above said highest address are fully crystalline areas available for high-speed writing. Thus, if high-speed writing mode shall be used data are exclusively written above said highest address while in the low-speed writing mode data are preferably recorded below said highest address, i.e. if possible, data stored in non-crystalline areas below said highest address are overwritten if there are any overwriteble data available. Otherwise, also in low-speed writing mode data are written above said highest address.
According to another embodiment said state information is more sophisticated and comprises an address table listing the addresses of all crystalline and/or all non-crystalline areas, in particular lists all logical blocks (=physical recording units) of the record carrier and the corresponding state, i.e. the information if the logical block is crystalline or non-crystalline. Due to the low amount of logical blocks available on a small form factor optical disc, less than 4 K byte is needed to store such an address table.
In order to assure that the high-speed writing area is as large as possible, the defragmentation procedure of the file system is slightly changed according to another embodiment. Data are reallocated in such a way that their addresses are minimal and system performance is optimal.
According to a further embodiment, the area between the maximum address of the data recorded on the record carrier before reallocation and the maximum address of the data recorded on the record carrier after reallocation can be DC-erased, i.e. made crystalline, preferably after the defragmentation step mentioned above. Thereafter, the state information is updated accordingly. This procedure can be done, for example, when the batteries of the recording apparatus have to be charged, since then sufficient electrical power and idle time is available anyway.
According to a preferred embodiment writing of data on the record carrier is started from the outside of the record carrier, i.e. the optical disc comprises a reversed spiral which runs from the outside of the disc to the inside contrary to the usual layout. In this case writing is always started with the lowest rotation speed of the disc possible and a given data rate which is advantageous in the low power mode of the recording apparatus.
Preferably, OPC (Optical Power Control) parameters are also provided on the record carrier for the first (high-speed) writing mode in addition to the normal OPC parameters for optical power control during the second (low-speed) writing mode. The start values for the OPC procedure are preferably written in the disc information block (DIB) which is written in the inner zone of the lead-in area. In this DIB there is space available to put also OPC parameters for other OPC procedures.
If the recording apparatus is connected to a mains power supply then high-speed recording as well as low-speed recording is available and both OPC procedures need to be carried out while in the low power mode only the low-speed OPC procedure is needed. It might even be that no OPC procedure is needed at all for the high-speed mode since the margins on writing with high speed on crystalline phase-change materials are much broader. Standard “scaling” factors which scale the OPC values to the specific high-speed recording velocity could be sufficient.
In the embodiment where writing starts on the outside of the record carrier, i.e. where the spiral is inverted, the lead-in area and therefore its OPC area are also on the outer radii of the record carrier. This is again advantageous for the high-speed recording OPC procedures and is economic for power consumption. Furthermore, it will be very easy to write large amounts of system data and system software in the high-speed recording mode at the outer radii during disc production.
According to another preferred embodiment the switching means is adapted for detecting the power mode of the recording apparatus from the power supplied or for receiving and evaluating an information, in particular from a portable device into which the recording apparatus is incorporated, identifying the power mode of the recording apparatus. Preferably, the switching means are adapted for switching the writing means into the first (high-speed) writing mode when power is supplied from a mains power supply, and for switching the writing means into the second writing mode when power is supplied from a battery or an accumulator.
Particularly for a small form factor optical drive the notion of CAV (Constant Angular Velocity) might be implemented in the drive. CLV (Constant Linear Velocity) is preferred for streaming applications but when the drive will be used as a data drive, CAV is the preferred mode of operation. In CAV mode the linear velocity along the track will increase with the factor 2.33 from the inner radius to the outer radius of a 1 GB SFFO disc having an inner radius of 6.0 mm and an outer radius of 14 mm. The record carriers can probably marginally handle this, but need to be sensitive enough to be able to write properly at these higher speeds as well. This increased sensitivity makes repeated read of data difficult without erasing the data, certainly at the inner radii at lower linear velocities. However, it is not necessarily needed to make the disc more sensitive to make it high-speed compatible. Because the high-speed recording is done above the crystallisation velocity, the back crystallisation is minimal. Therefore, a blocked writing strategy instead of a pulsed writing strategy can be used, thereby using the laser more efficiently.
For SFFO a disc of 4.7 GB capacity is also envisaged, with the same inner hole as the 1 GB disc. The outer radius will then be about 24 mm, meaning a factor 4 between the inner and outer velocity. In this case it is certainly impossible for the moment to manufacture media that can handle this spread in linear velocity at CAV mode.
An optical record carrier recording apparatus which makes sure, in case of using the CAV mode, that data are only written in fully initialised (crystalline) areas when the linear velocity is too large is defined in claim 9, said apparatus comprising:
By this embodiment higher recording speeds are made possible without having a problem with the repeated read stability of the record carrier. Further, adapted write strategies are provided preferably. Such write strategies will then depend on the linear velocity at the current location on the disc and the state information at that location, i.e. if the material at this location is crystalline or non-crystalline. The advantage of this embodiment is that the velocity range of a corresponding record carrier as defined in claim 16 is increased drastically.
As mentioned above, the recording apparatus according to the invention is preferably applied in a portable device such as a telephone, in particular a mobile phone or a cordless phone, or a palmtop computer (PDA). Moreover, the recording apparatus is preferably a small form factor optical drive. Further portable devices comprising an optical record carrier recording apparatus may be digital camcorders, digital cameras, laptops, sub laptops and handheld devices.
The invention will now be explained in more detail with reference to the drawings in which
a, 4b show layouts of the data areas on a record carrier according to the present invention,
More details of the small form factor optical drive 5 are shown in the block diagram of
A mode switch 53 is provided to switch, depending on the power supplied at power interface 52, the read/write unit 54 between different writing modes during writing data to a record carrier 55, which is a small form factor optical disc in this embodiment.
Further, an address control means 56 is provided for controlling the addresses at which data are written on the disc 55.
The function of the recording apparatus and the recording method according to the invention shall now be explained in more detail with reference to the flowchart of
At first (S3) it is checked by the mode switch 53 in which power mode the recording apparatus 5 is. This can be done by checking the power level provided at power interface 52 or by checking an information received at the power interface 52 identifying the power mode. Alternatively, a command can also be transmitted from an external device to the mode switch instructing the mode switch 53 to switch into a certain power mode. If the recording apparatus 5 is in a low power mode, e.g. provided with power from a battery supply, the mode switch 53 switches the read/write unit 54 into a low-speed mode (S4) which means that data will be written on the record carrier 55 with a low writing speed. According the preferred embodiment the crystallization speed of the phase-change disc 55 is tuned for this low-speed writing operation.
If the recording apparatus 5 is in a high power mode, it will then be checked if a crystalline area is available on the record carrier 55 for writing the data, i.e. if there is sufficient unwritten space available on the record carrier 55 for writing at least part of the data (S5). If this is not the case, then again the low-speed mode will be used (S4) while otherwise the read/write unit 54 will be switched into the high-speed mode (S6) for writing the data on the disc 55 with a higher writing speed.
In the low-speed mode it must further be checked if there are non-crystalline areas available for overwrite, e.g. if some of the data written in non-crystalline areas can be overwritten (S7). If this is the case the data will be written (i.e. overwritten) in such non-crystalline areas with low writing speed (S8) while otherwise the data will be written in crystalline (i.e. empty) areas (S9) with low writing speed. In the high-speed mode (S6) data will also be written in crystalline areas (S9), however with high writing speed, since in high power mode sufficient power (e.g. supplied from a mains power supply) is available. Finally, in all cases the state information will be updated (S10), e.g. it will be registered which areas are non-crystalline and which are crystalline. The updated state information will also be written on the record carrier 55.
When the drive is in low power mode, the standard writing procedure is applied, i.e. writing is done with normal writing speed. After writing the data the address X is updated. When the drive is in high power mode the address X is of importance. When the user wants to write data to the disc the allocation rules of the file system change. Data will now be written above the address X in high-speed mode as long as space remains available in that high-speed area. When that area is full and more data needs to be written, the file system will switch to the free space still available below address X. However, these areas are not necessary in crystalline phase and therefore need to be written in low speed.
In another embodiment, as shown in
Another embodiment of a recording apparatus 5 is shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03100614.4 | Mar 2003 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB04/50168 | 3/1/2004 | WO | 9/6/2005 |