This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from the prior Japanese Patent Application No. 2008-23488 filed on Feb. 4, 2008, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present application describes techniques for stably reproducing information on a bit-patterned recording medium that use a recording layer in which magnetic substances are discontinuously formed according to recording bits of information.
2. Description of the Related Art
As shown generally in
The recording capacity of a hard disk approximately doubles annually. In recent years, the recording density has been further improved by a vertical magnetic recording scheme, such as that shown in
Furthermore, attention is given to a BPR (Bit-Patterned Recording) scheme as a future candidate for high-density magnetic recoding. The BPR scheme during uses a recording layer in which, as shown in
Since a BPR medium is fabricated by transferring bit patterns formed on a master, media having the same bit patterns can be produced in large quantity. By using this feature, as shown in
In recent years, the capacities of OSes (Operating Systems), software, moving image content, etc., have increased to approximately several tens of gigabytes. Particularly for moving images, due to the proliferation of high-vision televisions, etc., saving of high-quality images is required, and thus, a required recording capacity has increased. However, a large number of media are required to distribute such content via CD-ROM or DVD. In such a situation, use of the BPR-ROM medium is the optimum choice for content distribution because bit patterns can be easily replicated.
However, since the BPR-ROM has fixed patterns, there are problems of asymmetry of a reproduction waveform and crosstalk from an adjacent track.
First, asymmetry will be described. When different patterns, specifically, patterns with different recording bit lengths, are reproduced during reproduction of a BPR medium, as shown as 2001 and 2002 in
Crosstalk is a phenomenon in which when an adjacent track is considerably offset and approaches a reproduction track, a signal from the adjacent track leaks into the reproduction track, and is observed as a crosstalk waveform, such as that shown as 2101 in
In a waveform with large asymmetry as described above, it is difficult to set threshold values (e.g., 2003, 2004, and 2005 in
Crosstalk can be improved by adding a track offset in a direction in which the aforementioned crosstalk of a reproduction signal is reduced when information is recorded, and then re-recording the information.
In the case of a so-called rewritable BPR medium, for an information sector where error has occurred due to the aforementioned asymmetry or crosstalk, an alternate sector is prepared and information is recorded in the alternate sector, whereby the problem can be avoided.
However, in a BPR-ROM, since information is detected from patterns that are fixedly recorded in advance in a factory, there is a problem of difficulty in improving reproduction characteristics by rewriting information, and in performing additional recording into an alternate sector, such as those described above.
in one aspect, asymmetry caused by fixed bit patterns and crosstalk from an adjacent track in a BPR-ROM that uses a bit-patterned recording medium is improved.
According to one of an embodiment, an information reproducing method manages an average magnetization state of each sector on a bit-patterned recording medium as sector management information and sets an information reproduction condition for the sector on the bit-patterned recording medium, based on the sector management information.
The above-described embodiments of the present invention are intended as examples, and all embodiments of the present invention are not limited to including the features described above.
Reference may now be made in detail to embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout.
The best mode of the present invention will be described in detail below with reference to the drawings.
A NiCr alloy layer is formed on a substrate 101 as a base layer 102 (S201 and S202) after the glass substrate 101 is polished. Any Material other than a NiCr alloy can be used for the base layer as long as the material is a metal that enhances film adhesion and has corrosion resistance.
A soft magnetic under layer (SUL) 103 is deposited on the base layer 102. A Ru alloy layer with a subnanometer thickness is inserted between FeCoCrB alloy layers of the soft magnetic underlayer 103. Magnetizations of the upper and lower FeCoCrB alloy layers are antiparallelly coupled through the Ru alloy layer (S203).
A Ta alloy layer and a Ru alloy layer are deposited on the soft magnetic under layer 103 as an intermediate layer 104 (S204).
A vertical magnetic recording layer 106 is deposited on the intermediate layer 104 (S205). The vertical magnetic recording layer 106 uses a CoCrPt alloy. An artificial lattice film having formed therein multiple Co/Pt thin films can be used for the vertical magnetic recording layer 106 with no problem.
A carbon (C) layer is deposited on the vertical magnetic recording layer 106 as a protective layer 107 (S206).
A deposition medium is produced in the above-described manner.
Meanwhile, independently of the above-described process, a master is fabricated by processes of resist application (S216), servo pattern electron beam exposure (S217), development (S218), cleaning (S219), and completion (S220).
Patterns of the master thus fabricated are transferred (S208) and fixed (S209) onto the deposition medium. The deposition medium is further subjected to a polymer application process (S207) after being fabricated at the aforementioned S201 to S206.
Subsequently, in the deposition medium having bit patterns transferred thereonto, bit patterns are formed in the vertical magnetic recording layer 106 by a Reactive Ion Etching (RIE) method.
Thereafter, cleaning is performed to remove residual polymer, etc. (S211). A non-magnetic layer 105 of an alloy with high corrosion resistance, such as a Ta alloy, is deposited to cover the bit patterns of the vertical magnetic recording layer 106 (S212). A protective layer 107 (S213) and a lubricating layer 108 (S214) are sequentially deposited on the non-magnetic layer 105, whereby a bit-patterned medium (BPM) is completed (S215).
Next, an embodiment of the present invention will be described that relates to an information recording and reproducing apparatus using a BPR-ROM medium fabricated in the above-described manner.
First,
A BPR-ROM medium 401 (which is the same as 305 in
A magnetic head 403 and a suspension 404 supporting the magnetic head 403 can access a predetermined medium radius location by a voice coil motor 405.
The BPR-ROM medium 401 has servo patterns formed thereon in advance (see S217 in
The rotation of the BPR-ROM medium 401 and access to a predetermined track and sector are performed by a servo controller 410 controlling the spindle motor 402, the voice coil motor 405, the suspension 404, and the magnetic head 403 under monitoring by a main controller unit 407.
An information signal read from the BPR-ROM medium 401 by the magnetic head 403 is inputted to the main controller unit 407 through a preamplifier 406.
A data buffer memory 408 temporarily records a reproduced information signal and, for example, DMA transfers the signal to an external device, if necessary.
A flash memory 409 records sector management information according to the present invention. The sector management information is read, when information is reproduced, from the flash memory 409 to the main controller unit 407, as control information.
First, a desired sector (an mth sector) on the BPR-ROM medium 401 is accessed to perform reproduction of information (S501). Then, it is determined whether a sector error has occurred (S502).
If a sector error has not occurred, i.e., the determination at operation S502 is NO, then the sector number m is incremented by one (S503) and a next sector is accessed (S503->S501).
If an error has occurred in the mth sector, i.e., the determination at operation S502 is YES, then a byte error rate (BER) is obtained as a reproduction characteristic parameter and a value obtained by DA (digital analog) converting the BER is held as BER0 in, for example, a register (not shown) included in the main controller unit 407 (S504).
Thereafter, the main controller unit 407 waits for the spindle motor 402 to perform a single rotation or an integral multiple number of rotations. Then the mth sector is accessed again to reverse the vertical magnetization polarities (magnetization directions) of all bit patterns in the mth sector, using the magnetic field application element 303 (see
Subsequently, the mth sector is accessed again (S506) to measure a BER. The BER obtained after the polarity reversal is DA converted and the DA converted BER is held as BER1 in, for example, the register (not shown) included in the main controller unit 407 (S507).
Sector management information on the mth sector obtained by the above-described process is recorded in a sector management table shown in
Also, a gain (Gain (dB)) and an offset value (Offset (mV)) of the preamplifier 406 for when information in the mth sector is reproduced can be recorded as part of the sector management information, as shown in
Note that although in
Note also that sector management information does not necessarily need to be recorded and managed in the flash memory 409. Depending on the situation, an information recordable area may be provided on the BPR-ROM medium 401 and sector management information may be recorded and managed in the area.
Subsequent to the recording of sector management information in the flash memory 409, it is determined whether the BER0 value for Polarity=0 is greater than the BER1 value for Polarity=1 (S508).
If BER0>BER1, i.e., the determination at operation S508 is YES, then since the polarity state of the current Polarity=1 set at operation S505 has a lower error rate, Polarity=1 is recorded in the sector management table (the mth sector) shown in
On the other hand, if BER0≦BER1, i.e., the determination at operation S508 is NO, then since the polarity state of Polarity=0 which is obtained at an initial point in time at operation S501 has a lower error rate, the main controller unit 407 waits for the spindle motor 402 to perform a single rotation or an integral multiple number of rotations. Then the mth sector is accessed again to change the vertical magnetization polarities of all bit patterns in the mth sector back to Polarity=0, using the magnetic field application element 303 (see
Thereafter, the sector number m is incremented by one (S511) and a next sector is accessed (S503->S501).
As such, by changing the vertical magnetization polarity to one with better error characteristics based on the BER, the reproduction characteristics for when the same sector is reproduced next time can be improved.
In
Reasons that the asymmetry described in the Background section is improved by the polarity being able to be changed form sector to sector in the above-described manner include the following two.
The first reason is that nonlinearity of a signal detection circuit and asymmetry caused by bit patterns may be cancelled out by polarity reversal.
The second reason is that since a magnetic field to be actually received by the reproduction element 304 (see
In the above-described embodiment of the present invention, as shown in
A crosstalk phenomenon that is one of the problems with a BPR-ROM medium described previously in the Background section is primarily caused by the influence from an adjacent track. Hence, while managing the sector management table shown in
By thus managing, as sector management information, an average magnetization state, reproduction characteristics in that state, a gain and an offset of a detection system, etc., for each sector and using the sector management information when the sector is reproduced next time, a significant improvement in reproduction characteristics can be achieved.
At that time, a problem may occur due to polarity reversal. Specifically, due to an abrupt change in signal output at a location where the polarity is reversed, a signal sticking phenomenon may occur in a detection circuit, as shown as 1201 in
To avoid this phenomenon, in the embodiment of the present invention, as shown in
Furthermore, in the embodiment, as shown in
Although a few preferred embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it would be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made in these embodiments without departing from the principles and spirit of the invention, the scope of which is defined in the claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2008-23488 | Feb 2008 | JP | national |