The present invention pertains to low power laser applications and, more particularly, to conserving power in power laser applications using the laser driving circuits and mechanisms for reducing power consumption
Power consumption within portable storage systems has been and remains a major issue for these systems. The period of time that any portable device is able to run on battery power is one of the major specifications of the portable device. There are currently available numerous products that employ optical storage devices, such as CD or based DVD-systems. Additionally, future systems are currently planned for release such as portable blu-ray disc (BD). Another currently planned system is T-ROM which is an optical data card read-out system having no rotating disc wherein read-out is accomplished using an array of spots illuminating bit-marks in parallel. The illuminated bit-marks are captured with an image sensor and processed electronically. Additionally, holographic storage systems are planned that use optical readout systems. Techniques that conserve power consumption on these types of systems are significantly desirable features and good marketing tools for these storage products.
Speed, processing capabilities and the overall features of portable systems has continued to increase resulting in portable systems that require more and more power. Advances in power management have reduced to power demands of these portable systems; however, power consumption continues to be a problem that exists within the art of portable storage devices.
A number of prior art techniques have employed algorithms to modify the laser power used in reading data out of a medium; however, these algorithms are not based on power consumption. Typically, these algorithms are based on constant light power (forward sense) and best quality data readout. Since the prior art algorithms do not specifically target power concerns, their power savings are less then optimum.
U.S. Patent Publication US20030137912 is an example of a prior art reference that addresses power conservation. U.S. Patent Publication US20030137912 preserves power by signal processing techniques that reduce clock and sampling speeds. However, the most power demanding component in the system is the laser and, especially in portable applications, the laser provides that greats power drain. Therefore, there remains a need within the art for a system and method that addresses laser driving for reducing power consumption.
In view of the foregoing discussion, there remains a need in the art for techniques that reduce power consumption in portable devices.
It is an object of the invention to reduce that power consumption in optical systems that make use of a laser (or a different light source) for data readout.
It is further ran object of the invention to reduce power requirements in portable applications of optical systems.
The foregoing objects are realized by controlling laser power in response to a determination of the quality of the received data in order to optimize a reduction in power consumption. If the quality of the received data is sufficient, then the laser power can be further reduced in order to save power.
Still referring to
PLL/bit-detection 21 processes the amplified signal from detector 13 to perform bit detection and recover the clock rate that is currently being used to recover data. The PLL/bit-detection 21 determines a measure of quality 21a for the detected bits. There are various schemes, depending on the implementation, such as threshold detection, viterbi or numerous other schemes, that can provide an indication of quality 21 from processing jitter, modulation, asymmetry, detected erasures, signal-to noise ratio (SNR), or other features obtained from the reflected light. Channel decoder 22 performs processing at the recovered clock rate determined by PLL/bit-detection 21 to decode the bits within the data stream by inverse channel coding to retrieve the user bits. The channel decoder 22 could also have a quality indicator 22a to provide an indication of such parameters as a run length push back, false run lengths, etc. Quality indicator 22a is shown with a dotted outline in order to reduce complexity of the block schematic of
The quality indicators 21a, 23a and 22a can be referenced to a nominal value. In the embodiment illustrated in
The nominal values in another embodiment are bias values for each particular quality indicator. Therefore, each of quality indicators 21a, 22a, and 23a can have separate bias values. The embodiment as illustrated in
The quality indicators 21a, 22a 23a are high frequency signals due to the fact that they are extracted from high bit-rate signals. It is not desirable to allow laser 11 to react to high frequency signals because high frequency signal changes can introduce noise, oscillations or increase of power consumption of the laser 11. Therefore, power adjustment applied to laser 11 needs to be accomplished at a very low frequency in order to prevent the laser 11 from reacting to a high frequency signal. Therefore, low pass filters 27, 28 are applied to the quality indicator error values to reduce the bandwidth of the quality indicator error values to only a few hertz.
Control system 29 adapts the laser power on the basis of the quality indicator error values. The control system 29 can be implemented, for example, using a very slow Proportional (P) or Proportional Integral-acting (PI) type of controller. The functionality of control system 29 could also be performed by the servo digital signal processor (DSP) because it does not require a great deal of processing power. The first output 35 of control system 29 drives the laser driver such that the laser power is adapted in accordance with the output of the control system. The second output 37 of control system 29 drives the detector amplifier 14 to assure that the signal level of the bit detection-input remains the same. Second input 37 is a normalizing function. The detector amplifier 14 drive is inversely proportional to drive of the laser power. The output of the photo detector amplifier 14 should stay at the same level. The output power is normally fed to an ADC (not shown) and it is desirable to use the complete range of this ADC.
Inside the control system 29, functionality is provided to check if the quality indicator stays within the margins of the system. The margins are very system dependant (like the nominal values previously discussed). The margins can be calculated from the maximum read laser power levels on a disc, before a disc starts to erase data. For example, if the error rate gets too high, the system might decide to reset itself and start again from normal laser power or stay at a maximum level. Otherwise, when the laser power gets too high (e.g. on bad discs) the laser power may reach the erase level and start to erase the media.
Before the error signals can enter the control system 29, they need to be low pass filtered, so that other effects do not influence the system, like bit- or servo effects, scratches or fingerprints etc.
The control system itself is in fact a normal PI or Proportional-Integral Differential (PID) control system together with some none linear control to stay within the margins of the error signal. Because of the quite low frequencies the control system has to operate at, probably a PI controller will do.
A combination of the 2 implementations shown in
It should be noted that the weighting factors for all the PID-controllers 51 does not need to be the same. The gain factors can be adjusted by the Gain setting of each PID-controller.
The foregoing describes simple techniques whereby laser power can be reduced to a minimum level needed for good data readout, thereby, conserving power. Embodiments of the foregoing can be implemented wherein the laser power is constantly controlled during readout. Other embodiments can control laser power that is required for good readout by calibrating laser power at one or more places on the media during startup. The power values for the laser can be stored and the laser power adapted from the stored values in a lookup table during readout.
While the foregoing description details embodiments of the invention, numerous modifications to the foregoing described embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should not be restricted to the foregoing described embodiment and should be measured by the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB06/52134 | 6/27/2006 | WO | 00 | 12/28/2007 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60695656 | Jun 2005 | US |