The present invention relates to an objective optical system for an optical recording medium that, when recording or reproducing information, efficiently focuses light of any one of three different wavelengths onto an appropriate corresponding recording medium according to standardized characteristics such as the numerical aperture of the objective optical system used, the wavelength of the light selected, and the substrate thickness of the optical recording medium. The present invention also relates to an objective optical system for an optical recording medium where a diffractive optical element is used to diffract light in order to efficiently focus light of any one of the three wavelengths onto a corresponding one of the three optical recording media, and it also relates to an optical pickup device using such an objective optical system.
In recent years, a variety of optical recording media have been developed and optical pickup devices that carry out recording and reproducing using two alternative types of optical recording media have been known. For example, devices that carry out recording or reproducing with either a DVD (Digital Versatile Disk) or a CD (Compact Disk including CD-ROM, CD-R, CD-RW) have been practically used. For these two optical recording media, the DVD uses visible light having a wavelength of approximately 657 nm for improved recording densities while, by contrast, the CD is required to use near-infrared light having a wavelength of approximately 790 nm because there are some recording media that have no sensitivity to visible light. Accordingly, a single optical pickup device, known as a two-wavelength-type pickup device, uses incident light of these two different wavelengths. The two optical recording media described above require different numerical apertures (NA) due to their different features. For example, the DVD is standardized to use a numerical aperture of about 0.60-0.65 and the CD is standardized to use a numerical aperture in the range of 0.45-0.52. Additionally, the thicknesses of the two types of recording disks, including the thicknesses of the protective layers or substrates made of polycarbonate (PC), are different. For example, the DVD may have a substrate thickness of 0.6 mm and the CD may have a substrate thickness of 1.2 mm.
As described above, because the substrate thickness of the optical recording medium is standardized and differs according to the type of optical recording medium, the amount of spherical aberration introduced by the substrate is different based on the different standardized thicknesses of the substrates of the different recording media. Consequently, for optimum focus of each of the light beams on the corresponding optical recording medium, it is necessary to optimize the amount of spherical aberration in each light beam at each wavelength for recording and reproducing. This makes it necessary to design the objective lens with different focusing effects according to the light beam and recording medium being used.
Additionally, in response to rapid increases of the data capacity required each day, the demand for an increase in the recording capacity of recording media has been strong. It is known that the recording capacity of an optical recording medium can be increased by using light of a shorter wavelength and by increasing the numerical aperture (NA) of an objective lens. Concerning a shorter wavelength, the development of a semiconductor laser with a shorter wavelength using a GaN substrate (for example, a semiconductor laser that emits a laser beam of 408 nm wavelength) has advanced to the point where this wavelength is now practical for use.
With the development of short wavelength semiconductor lasers, research and development of AODs (Advanced Optical Disks), also known as HD-DVDs, that provide approximately 20 GB of data storage on a single layer of a single side of an optical disk by using short wavelength light is also progressing. As the AOD standard, the numerical aperture and disk thickness are selected to be about the same as those of DVDs, with the numerical aperture (NA) and disk substrate thickness for an AOD being set at 0.65 and 0.6 mm, respectively.
Furthermore, research and development of Blu-ray disk (BD) systems that use a shorter wavelength of disk illuminating light, similar to AOD systems, has progressed, and the standardized values of numerical aperture and disk thickness for these systems are completely different from the corresponding DVD and CD values, with a numerical aperture (NA) of 0.85 and a disk substrate thickness of 0.1 mm being standard. Unless otherwise indicated, hereinafter, AODs and Blu-ray disks collectively will be referred to as “AODs.”
Accordingly, this makes it necessary to design the objective lens with different focusing effects according to the light beam and recording medium being used for AODs, as well as CDs and DVDs, in order to compensate for the amounts of spherical aberration introduced by the different standardized thicknesses of the substrates of the different recording media for light beams at each wavelength for recording and reproducing.
The development of an optical pickup device that can be used for three different types of optical recording media, such as AODs, DVDs and CDs as described above, has been demanded and objective optical systems for mounting in such devices have already been proposed. For example, an objective optical system that includes a diffractive optical element with a refractive surface and a diffractive surface and a biconvex lens is described on page 1250 of Extended Abstracts, 50th Japan Society of Applied Physics and Related Societies (March, 2003). The objective optical system described in this publication is designed so that: second-order diffracted light from the diffractive optical element is used for a BD optical recording medium; first-order diffracted light from the diffractive optical element is used for a DVD optical recording medium; and also first-order diffracted light from the diffractive optical element is used for a CD optical recording medium. The spherical aberration that is created by and varies with the thickness of the protective layer (i.e., the substrate) of each optical recording medium is corrected by using a converging or diverging light to enter the diffractive optical element, and chromatic aberration is also improved relative to a single component lens by the diffractive optical element having a convergent-type diffractive surface as its front surface (namely, the surface on the light source side), and a concave surface as its rear surface.
In the technology described in the above-mentioned publication, in order to reduce the generation of coma associated with a shift of the objective optical system relative to an incident light beam, when recording or reproducing information to or from the BD, the design is such that the light incident on the diffractive optical element is converging light. Further, when recording or reproducing information to or from the DVD or the CD, the design is such that the light incident on the diffractive optical element is diverging light.
However, there presently is strong demand for a compact device that provides greater freedom in positioning the objective optical system within the recording and reproducing device. In order to achieve this, it is necessary to create a design such that collimated light, rather than diverging or converging light, be incident on the objective optical system for all three of the light beams that are being used. Additionally, if diverging or converging light is incident on the diffractive optical element, there are problems of the diffraction efficiency being reduced due to the angle of incidence of the light rays on the diffractive grooves of the diffractive optical element being tilted from the desired angle of incidence, and there are problems of the stability of the tracking being decreased.
The present invention relates to an objective optical system for optical recording media that can efficiently focus each of three light beams on a corresponding one of three optical recording media with different technical standards of the substrate thickness, the wavelengths of the three light beams, and the numerical aperture (NA) of the objective optical system for each of the three light beams. Using three collimated light beams of three different wavelengths in the objective optical system of the present invention allows for increased freedom in selecting the position of the objective optical system and improved diffraction efficiency of the light beams, and concurrently increases the stability of the tracking. The present invention further relates to such an objective optical system with the diffractive optical element being also a lens element of the objective optical system. The present invention further relates to an optical pickup device using this objective optical system.
The present invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description given below and the accompanying drawings, which are given by way of illustration only and thus are not limitative of the present invention, wherein:
The present invention relates to an objective optical system for optical recording media that can be used to focus each of three different light beams of three different wavelengths, λ1, λ2, and λ3, from a light source to a different desired position for each of the first, second and third optical recording media of substrate thicknesses, T1, T2, and T3, respectively, for recording and reproducing information.
The objective optical system includes, from the light source side: a diffractive optical element with one surface of the diffractive optical element being a diffractive surface defined by a phase function Φ, as will be discussed in detail later; and an objective lens of positive refractive power with both surfaces being rotationally symmetric aspheric surfaces. The phase function Φ is chosen so that the objective optical system is able to focus each of the three different light beams of three different wavelengths, λ1, λ2, and λ3, at a different desired position for each of the first, second and third optical recording media of substrate thicknesses, T1, T2, and T3, respectively.
The objective optical system is constructed so that collimated light of each wavelength, λ1, λ2, and λ3, diffracted by the diffractive optical element is efficiently focused onto the desired position of the corresponding optical recording media of substrate thickness, T1, T2, and T3, respectively. In order for this to occur at all three wavelengths, the diffraction order of the diffracted light of at least one wavelength must be different from the diffraction order of the diffracted light of at least one other wavelength.
Additionally, the three wavelengths, the diffraction orders of light used, the numerical apertures NA1, NA2, and NA3 of the objective optical system associated with the wavelengths λ1, λ2, and λ3, respectively, and the substrate thickness of T1, T2, and T3, respectively, of the three recording media are selected so that the numerical aperture of the objective optical system is never larger for light of a larger wavelength being used and so that the substrate thickness is never smaller for light of a larger wavelength being used.
In summary, throughout the following descriptions the following definitions apply:
Additionally, in the objective optical system of the present invention, the following conditions are satisfied:
λ1<2<λ3 Condition (1)
NA1≧NA2>NA3 Condition (2)
T1<T2<T3 Condition (3).
The invention will now be discussed in general terms with reference to
As shown in
More specifically, as shown in
The semiconductor laser 1a emits the visible laser beam having the wavelength of approximately 408 nm (λ1) for AODs. The semiconductor laser 1b emits the visible laser beam having the wavelength of approximately 658 nm (λ2) for DVDs. The semiconductor laser 1c emits the near-infrared laser beam having the wavelength of approximately 784 nm (λ3) for CDs such as CD-R (recordable optical recording media) (hereinafter the term CD generally represents CDs of all types).
The arrangement of
The collimator lens 7 is schematically shown in
In accordance with the definitions of “lens component,” and “lens element” above, lens elements may also be lens components. Thus, the present invention may variously be described in terms of lens elements or in terms of lens components. Additionally, a “lens” not otherwise limited to being a single lens element or a single lens component may be made of a plurality of lens elements or lens components, the latter of which may in turn be made of a plurality of lens elements. Thus, the collimator lens may be made up of a plurality of lens components rather than being a single lens element as shown in
Additionally, a diffractive surface may be formed on a surface of a lens element. In this case, whether the lens element with the diffractive surface has an air space on each side to thereby define a lens component or contacts the surface of another lens element with the same curvature to form part or the whole of a lens component made of a plurality of lens elements, the lens component, which includes the diffractive surface, is also herein defined as a diffractive optical element. Thus, the term “diffractive optical element” may refer to a single lens element that includes at least one diffractive surface or to a lens component that includes a plurality of lens elements and that includes at least one diffractive surface. That is, the term “diffractive optical element” may refer, based on the presence of a diffractive surface, (1) to a lens element that is also a lens component, (2) to a lens element that is one of a plurality of lens elements of a lens component, or (3) to a lens component that includes a plurality of lens elements.
In the optical pickup device of the present invention, three collimated light beams of three different wavelengths are incident onto the objective lens system 8. Each of the optical recording media 9, as shown in
In the recording region 10, pits carrying signal information are arranged in tracks. The reflected light of a laser beam 11 is made incident onto the half mirror 6 by way of the objective optical system 8 and the collimator lens 7 while carrying the signal information, and the reflected light is transmitted through the half mirror 6. The transmitted light is then incident on a four-part photodiode 13. The respective quantities of light received at each of the four parts of the four-part photodiode 13 are converted to electrical signals that are operated on by calculating circuits (not shown in the drawings) in order to obtain data signals and respective error signals for focusing and tracking.
Because the half mirror 6 is inserted into the optical path of the return light from the optical recording media 9 at a forty-five degree angle to the optical axis, the half mirror 6 introduces astigmatism into the light beam, as a cylindrical lens may introduce astigmatism, whereby the amount of focusing error may be determined according to the form of the beam spot of the return light on the four-part photodiode 13. Also, a grating may be inserted between the semiconductor lasers 1a-1c and the half mirror 6 so that tracking errors can be detected using three beams.
As shown in
Generally, when parallel light beams for two kinds of optical recording media are used, it is considered possible to converge each light beam to a prescribed desired position while obtaining satisfactory aberration correction for both light beams by using an appropriate diffractive optical element for diffractive optical element L1. For example, with specific reference to
Here, if a collimated light beam for still another kind of optical recording medium is made incident, spherical aberration of this collimated light beam may easily become excessive for the light beam, which may have a different wavelength, and it is difficult to focus this light beam to a prescribed position with satisfactory aberration correction. However, the present invention enables focusing three light beams to prescribed positions with satisfactory aberration correction for three different optical recording media with the air space between the diffractive optical component L1 and the positive lens L2 being the same. That is, namely, as shown in
When any of said optical recording media is selected, the burden of mechanical control of the objective optical system 8 can be reduced and the construction made more compact simply by constructing the objective optical system 8 so that the air spaces between the diffractive optical element L1 and the objective lens L2 become equal for all the recording media. If the diffractive optical element L1 and the objective lens L2 are constructed so as to move as a monolithic one-piece unit, a driving part becomes simpler and has a more compact construction.
According to the objective optical system 8 of the present invention, the degree of freedom in the lay-out of the optical system can be increased in order to achieve greater compactness and improve the tracking stability when recording or reproducing of information is performed for any of the optical recording media (i.e., the AOD 9a, the DVD 9b or the CD 9c) because a collimated light beam always enters the objective optical system 8. Additionally, with regard to problems related to oblique incidence of light rays into diffraction grooves of the diffractive surface of the diffractive optical element, the diffraction efficiency of the light used can be improved by using incident collimated light.
The diffractive optical element L1 can extend the working distance by having negative refractive power as a whole, which helps prevent the collision of the objective lens L2 and the recording disk.
The diffractive surface of the diffractive optical element L1 in the objective optical system 8 preferably is designed so that the diffractive optical surface diffracts light of maximum intensity for the first wavelength λ1 at a diffraction order that is different from the diffraction order of maximum intensity for the second wavelength λ2 and that is different from the diffraction order of maximum intensity for the third wavelength λ3. The three light beams can be focused to appropriate desired diffraction efficiency by setting the diffraction orders of maximum intensity diffracted light as described above.
Even more preferably, the diffractive optical surface is designed so that it diffracts light of the first wavelength λ1 with maximum intensity in a second-order diffracted beam, diffracts light of the second wavelength λ2 with maximum intensity in a first-order diffracted beam, and diffracts light of the third wavelength λ3 with maximum intensity in a first-order diffracted beam. By selecting the diffraction orders in this manner, the diffraction grooves of the diffractive optical surface can be made shallow, and all three light beams can be converged with high diffraction efficiency without applying an excessive burden on metal mold processing and/or the shaping of the refractive surfaces.
For example, in an objective optical system 8 for optical recording media described more specifically later, the diffractive surface is designed so as to maximize the quantity of second-order diffracted light for a light beam of wavelength 408 nm (λ1) corresponding to AOD 9a, to maximize the quantity of first-order diffracted light for a light beam of wavelength 658 nm (λ2) corresponding to DVD 9b, and to maximize the quantity of first-order diffracted light for a light beam of wavelength 784 nm (λ3) corresponding to CD 9c.
In an optical pickup device described in Japanese Laid-Open Patent Application 2001-195769, a construction using collimated light beams entering the objective optical system for all the light beams being used with the optical recording media of the next generation of high-density optical disks, such as AODs, DVDs and CD, by using an objective lens of one-piece construction having a diffractive surface on at least one face has been proposed as a well known approach. This construction can use the three collimated light beams entering the objective optical system to illuminate the three optical recording media with a single objective lens of simple construction. This construction enables improving the correction of spherical aberration associated with differences in substrate thicknesses of the optical recording media and the chromatic aberration generated in this objective lens. However, it becomes very difficult to improve the diffraction efficiency of the diffracted light used because the diffraction order of each diffracted light beam diffracted by the diffractive optical element is not specifically considered, and thus diffracted light of the same diffraction order are used as the focused light beams for all the recording media. In contrast, according to the present invention, a high diffraction efficiency can be achieved by the diffraction orders of the three light beams being used not being all the same, and thus the present invention is highly practical.
Moreover, it is preferable that the diffractive surface of the objective optical system 8 of the present invention be formed as a diffractive structure on a ‘virtual plane’, herein defined as meaning that the surface where the diffractive structure is formed would be planar but for the diffractive structures of the diffractive surface, and that the virtual plane be perpendicular to the optical axis. Preferably, the cross-sectional configuration of the diffractive surface is serrated so as to define a so-called kinoform.
The diffractive surface adds a difference in optical path length equal to m·λ·Φ/(2π) to the diffracted light, where λ is the wavelength, Φ is the phase function of the diffractive optical surface, and m is the order of the diffracted light that is focused on a recording medium 9. The phase function Φ is given by the following equation:
Φ=ΣWi·Y2i Equation (A)
where
The specific heights of the serrated steps of the diffractive surface of the diffractive optical element L1 are based on ratios of diffracted light of each order for the light beams of different wavelengths λ1, λ2, and λ3. Additionally, the outer diameter of the diffractive surface can be determined by taking into consideration the numerical aperture (NA) of the objective optical system 8 and the beam diameter of the incident laser beam 11 of each of the three wavelengths.
It is preferable that at least one surface of the objective optical system 8 of the present invention, including the objective lens L2, be an aspheric surface. It is also preferable that the aspheric surfaces of the objective optical system 8 of the present invention be rotationally symmetric aspheric surfaces defined using the following aspherical equation in order to improve aberration correction for all the recording media 9a, 9b, and 9c and in order to assure proper focusing during both recording and reproducing operations:
Z=[(C·Y2)/{1+(1−K·C2·Y2)1/2}]+ΣAi·Y2i Equation (B)
where
It is preferable that the diffractive surface formed on the diffractive optical element L1 and the rotationally symmetric aspheric surface formed on the objective lens L2 are determined to focus each of the three beams of light with the three wavelengths, λ1, λ2, and λ3, on a corresponding recording region 10, as shown in
Additionally, in the objective optical system 8 of the present invention, the diffractive optical element L1 and the objective lens L2 may either one or both be made of plastic. Making these optical elements of plastic is advantageous in reducing manufacturing costs and making manufacturing easier, and in making the system lighter, which may assist in high speed recording and reproducing. In particular, using a mold makes manufacture of the diffractive optical element much easier than many other processes of manufacturing.
Alternatively, one or both of the diffractive optical element L1 and the objective lens L2 may be made of glass. Glass is advantageous for several reasons: it generally has optical properties that vary less with changing temperature and humidity than for plastic; and appropriate glass types are readily available for which the light transmittance decreases less than for plastic, even at relatively short wavelengths over a long duration of time.
An embodiment of the objective optical system 8 of the present invention will now be set forth in detail.
As indicated in
Table 1 below lists the surface #, in order from the light source side, the surface type or radius of curvature (in this case, the radii of curvature are given for planar surfaces, which have a radius of curvature of infinity), the on-axis distance (in mm) between surfaces for the three used wavelengths (λ1=408 nm for the AOD 9a, λ2=658 nm for the DVD 9b, and λ3=784 nm for the CD 9c), and the refractive indexes at the three used wavelengths.
Table 2 below lists, for each used wavelength, the diaphragm diameter DD (in mm), the focal length f (in mm), the numerical aperture NA, the apparent light source position, and the diffraction order of the diffracted light that is used for the objective optical system of Table 1.
The diffractive optical surface of the diffractive optical element L1 includes concentric gratings with a serrated cross-section, and, as described above, is formed so as to maximize the quantity of diffracted light of second-order for a laser beam of wavelength λ1 of 408 nm for use with an AOD, so as to maximize the quantity of diffracted light of first-order for a laser beam of wavelength λ2 of 658 nm for use with a DVD, and so as to maximize the quantity of diffracted light of first-order for a laser beam of wavelength λ3 of 784 nm for use with a CD.
Table 3 below lists the values of the curvature C, the eccentricity K, and the aspheric coefficients A2-A5 for each aspheric surface of this embodiment, in order from the light source side that are used in Equation (B) above. An “E” in the data indicates that the number following the “E” is the exponent to the base 10. For example, “1.0E-2” represents the number 1.0×10−2. Aspheric coefficients that are not listed in Table 3 are zero.
Table 4 below lists the values of the phase function coefficients W1-W5 that are used in Equation (A) above for the first surface (i.e., the surface on the light source side) that forms a diffractive surface of the objective optical system of this embodiment. Phase function coefficients not listed in Table 4 are zero. Once again, an “E” in the data indicates that the number following the “E” is the exponent to the base 10.
The objective optical system for optical recording media of the present invention being thus described, it will be obvious that it may be varied in many ways.
For example, in the objective optical system for optical recording media of the present invention, the diffractive optical element L1 and the objective lens L2 are separated at equal distances during recording and reproducing at all three wavelengths, as described above. However, the air space between the diffractive optical element L1 and the objective lens L2 may be varied in order, for example, to obtain fine adjustment from this reference position for better correction of spherical aberration associated with variations in substrate thicknesses due to tolerances of substrate thicknesses in individual optical recording media or associated with different substrate thicknesses, such as with multilayer recording media disks with different substrate thicknesses.
Additionally, the diffractive optical element and/or the objective lens may be supported so that it can be inclined relative to the optical axis in order to compensate, for example, for inclination of an optical recording medium.
Furthermore, the diffractive optical element of the embodiment described above has a diffractive structure arranged on a virtual plane on the light source side and a rotationally symmetric aspheric surface on the optical recording medium side, but the diffractive optical element is not limited to such a construction. For example, the diffractive surface may be formed on a convex or concave surface having refractive power and may be formed on an aspheric surface. The surface of the diffractive optical element on the light source side may be a rotationally symmetric aspheric surface and the surface of the diffractive optical element on the optical recording medium side may be a diffractive surface. In the embodiment of the present invention described above, a rotationally symmetric aspheric surface is used as the surface that is not the diffractive surface, but it may also be changed and be a planar surface, a spherical surface, or a non-rotationally symmetric aspheric surface. It is also possible that the diffractive surface be formed on a surface having refractive power and the other surface of the diffractive optical element be planar. Both surfaces of the diffractive optical component may also be diffractive surfaces.
The diffractive optical surface of the objective optical system should be constructed so as to output a considerable quantity of diffracted light of the desired orders of diffracted light for the appropriate wavelengths, with 100% diffracted light of each appropriate order being the ideal. Additionally, the structure of the diffractive optical element is not limited to the serrated one, but, for example, a stair stepped structure may also be used.
Additionally, the objective lens of the objective optical system is not limited to a construction wherein both the surface on the light source side and the surface on the optical recording medium side are rotationally symmetric aspheric surfaces, or to the objective lens having a meniscus shape. For example, planar, spherical, or non-rotationally symmetric aspheric surfaces may be used in general.
Furthermore, the optical recording media to be recorded and reproduced in the optical pickup device of the present invention are not restricted to an AOD, a DVD and a CD. The present invention relates generally to use with the optical recording media where Conditions (1)-(3) are satisfied. For example, instead of a design based on AOD recording and reproducing at one of the three wavelengths, a design may be based on Blu-ray technology, which may be used with a numerical aperture of 0.85, a Blu-ray disk substrate thickness of 0.1 mm and a light beam having a wavelength of 405 nm. The present invention can be used in an objective optical system for optical recording media to converge light beams to desirable positions for each of the first optical recording medium corresponding to the first numerical aperture and the first wavelength, the second optical recording medium corresponding to the second numerical aperture and the second wavelength, and the third optical recording medium corresponding to the third numerical aperture and the third wavelength when making the recording or reproducing of information.
Additionally, the size relationships among the used light wavelengths, the numerical apertures, and the substrate thicknesses are not limited to those of Conditions (1)-(3) described above. Even when the optical recording media being used are AODs, DVDs and CDs, as described above, the wavelengths of the light beams being used are not limited to those described in the embodiment above. Light of wavelengths other than the wavelength of 408 nm for the AOD, other than the wavelength of 658 nm for the DVD, and/or other than the wavelength of 784 nm for the CD can be used if it satisfies the recording and/or reproducing characteristics of a particular optical recording medium. Similar considerations apply to variations in numerical apertures of the objective optical system for a given light beam with a given wavelength and to variations in disk thicknesses for optical recording media used with a given light beam of a given wavelength. Probably, optical recording media with characteristics other than those described above will be developed in the future, such as, optical recording media using even shorter wavelengths, and the present invention encompasses such developments. In any case, a material having a good transmittance for light of the wavelength being used is preferable for use as the material that forms the lens elements and the diffractive optical element. For example, fluorite or quartz may be used as a lens material and a diffractive optical element material of the objective optical system for optical recording media of the present invention for light beams of appropriate wavelengths.
Also, the objective optical system for optical recording media of the present invention is readily applicable to devices using four or more optical recording media.
Additionally, although in the optical pickup device described above three light sources that output light beams having wavelengths that differ from each other are used, a single light source that outputs two light beams having wavelengths different from each other can be used as a light source. For example, light of different wavelengths may be emitted from adjacent output ports. In such a case, instead of using prisms 2a and 2b as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-148997 | May 2004 | JP | national |