1. Field of Invention
The present invention relates to an optical disc drive apparatus, and more particularly, to high-speed reproduction of an optical disc using the optical disc drive apparatus.
2. Description of the Related Art
A conventional optical disc drive apparatus uses a semiconductor laser as a light source of its optical pickup. The power of a semiconductor laser that is used to reproduce data from an optical disc (reproduction power) is typically low. Thus, returned light or changes in the power of the semiconductor laser beam due to variation in the temperature of the semiconductor laser are not negligible. This causes relatively large noise to be generated in reproduction signals of the optical pickup. To reduce such noise in the reproduction signals, a high-frequency current may be superimposed on a laser driving current. The semiconductor laser is stabilized during reproduction of the optical disc by controlling the intensity and frequency of the high-frequency current. As a result, the noise in the reproduction signals is reduced (see, for example, Patent Document 1).
The driving current of the semiconductor laser is set low particularly when data is to be reproduced from a recordable or rewritable optical disc. This sets the reproduction power to such a level that signals recorded on the optical disc are not erased by the energy of the laser beam irradiating the optical disc (see, for example, Patent Document 2).
In recent years, optical disc drive apparatuses that record and reproduce data to and from optical discs have been developed to record and reproduce at speeds many times higher than normal speeds. To achieve higher-speed recording and reproduction of data, optical disc drive apparatuses are required to rotate an optical disc at a higher speed, to use a signal processing circuit that has a wider frequency band, and to use a semiconductor laser that has a higher output. However, conventional optical disc drive apparatuses have difficulties in reproducing data at such higher speeds for the reasons described below.
A signal processing circuit typically has greater noise in its output as its clock frequency has a wider frequency band. Therefore, when the signal processing circuit has a wide frequency band, the S/N ratio (signal-to-noise ratio) required to reproduce data with a high quality is difficult to realize. As one method to improve the S/N ratio, the reproduction power of the optical disc drive apparatus may be set high. In such a case, the level of a reproduction signal rises with respect to the level of noise. This in principle improves the S/N ratio. However, if the reproduction power is set too high with respect to a recordable or rewritable optical disc, signals recorded on the optical disc may be erased even during the reproduction operation. In particular, the power of the laser beam has a high peak when a high-frequency current has been superimposed on the laser driving current. To prevent signals recorded on the optical disc from being erased, the reproduction power needs to be set high but not to exceed a value 1.5 times the normal reproduction power. Therefore, improving the S/N ratio solely by increasing the reproduction power is substantially unrealistic.
The frequency of a reproduction signal that is read from a rapidly rotating optical disc is higher as the optical disc rotates at a higher speed. Here, the reproduction signal typically contains a high-frequency component, whose frequency is about twice the frequency of a shortest mark signal. When the frequency of such a high-frequency component is as high as about half of the frequency of the high-frequency current that has been superimposed on the laser driving current, a high-frequency component that appears in the reproduction signal in association with the superimposed high-frequency current may interfere with the inherent high-frequency component of the reproduction signal (such interference may generate aliasing noise). This may lower the quality of the reproduction signal. To prevent such interference, for example, the frequency of a high-frequency current may be raised in accordance with a higher speed of the optical disc rotation. However, the frequency of the high-frequency current, which is superimposed on the laser driving current to reduce noise in the reproduction signal, has already been optimized according to the level of noise of the reproduction signal that the high-frequency current intends to reduce. Moreover, when the frequency of the high-frequency current is set higher than or as high as the frequency of the high-frequency current used in the conventional optical disc drive apparatus, the optical disc drive apparatus will have difficulties in reducing its consumption power further or in reducing its EMI (Electro Magnetic Interference) further. Thus, it is substantially difficult to raise the frequency of a high-frequency current in accordance with the speed of the optical disc rotation.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an optical disc drive apparatus that improves the S/N ratio during high-speed reproduction of an optical disc and enables data to be reproduced with a high quality through high-speed reproduction of the optical disc.
An optical disc drive apparatus of the present invention rotates an optical disc on which information is recorded at a predetermined rotation speed, superimposes a high-frequency component having a predetermined level on a laser beam having a predetermined power and irradiates the optical disc with the laser beam, and obtains a reproduction signal based on a laser beam reflected from the optical disc. This optical disc drive apparatus particularly sets (preferably using an internal integrated circuit) the rotation speed of the optical disc higher in a high-speed reproduction mode than in a normal reproduction mode, sets the power of the laser beam that is used to irradiate the optical disc higher in the high-speed reproduction mode than in the normal reproduction mode, and sets the level of the high-frequency component to be superimposed on the laser beam used to irradiate the optical disc lower in the high-speed reproduction mode than in the normal reproduction mode. It is more preferable that the optical disc drive apparatus sets the level of the high-frequency component to zero in the high-speed reproduction mode. More specifically, the optical disc drive apparatus sets the level of the high-frequency component to be superimposed on the laser beam low or eliminates the high-frequency component in the high-speed reproduction mode. As a result, even when the reproduction target optical disc is a recordable or rewritable optical disc, the reproduction power is set as high as to a value close to an upper limit value at which recorded signals are not erased. This improves the S/N ratio to a satisfactory high level. Further, the high-frequency component to be superimposed on the laser beam is set low during high-speed reproduction. In this case, interference (aliasing noise) occurring between a high-frequency component of a reproduction signal appearing in association with the superimposed high-frequency component and an inherent high-frequency component of the reproduction signal is sufficiently negligible. As a result, the reproduction signal in high-speed reproduction will have a higher quality.
The optical disc drive apparatus of the present invention preferably includes a motor operable to rotate the optical disc at the predetermined rotation speed, an optical pickup including a semiconductor laser as a light source and operable to irradiate the optical disc with the laser beam and obtain the reproduction signal based on the laser beam reflected from the optical disc, a laser driving unit operable to control a driving current of the semiconductor laser to a predetermined level and superimpose the high-frequency current having the predetermined level on the driving current, and a control unit operable to control the motor and the laser driving unit, and set the rotation speed of the optical disc higher in the high-speed reproduction mode than in the normal reproduction mode, and set the level of the driving current of the semiconductor laser higher in the high-speed reproduction mode than in the normal reproduction mode, and set the level of the high-frequency current lower in the high-speed reproduction mode than in the normal reproduction mode. More preferably, the control unit sets the high-frequency current to ON in the normal reproduction mode and sets the high-frequency current to OFF in the high-speed reproduction mode. Here, the laser driving unit may include a high-frequency superimposition circuit operable to superimpose the high-frequency current on the driving current of the semiconductor laser.
The optical disc drive apparatus of the present invention may further include a linear speed detection unit operable to detect a linear speed of a spot of the laser beam irradiating the optical disc. In that case, the control unit preferably controls the laser driving unit based on the linear speed detected by the linear speed detection unit. This optimizes the reproduction power in real time according to the actual rotation speed of the optical disc when, for example, the reproduction mode of the optical disc drive apparatus is switched between the normal reproduction mode and the high-speed reproduction mode. This prevents signals recorded on the optical disc from being erroneously erased, reliably improves the S/N ratio to a satisfactory high level, and further reliably prevents aliasing noise from being generated.
As described above, the optical disc drive apparatus of the present invention sets the high-frequency current that is superimposed on the driving current of the semiconductor laser lower in the high-speed reproduction mode in accordance with the increase of the optical disc rotation speed. This structure raises the highest possible reproduction power to a level close to an upper limit value at which signals recorded on the optical disc are not erased. This optical disc drive apparatus can set the reproduction power higher than the conventional apparatus. As a result, the optical disc drive apparatus improves the S/N ratio more than the conventional apparatus. Further, the high-frequency component to be superimposed is set lower during high-speed reproduction to reduce its negative effect on the reproduction signal. As a result, the optical disc drive apparatus achieves higher-speed reproduction while maintaining the high quality of the reproduction signal. The optical disc drive apparatus of the present invention is particularly useful when used as, for example, a high-performance external storage device of a computer or a video recorder device that can record and reproduce data at a high speed.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the drawings.
The optical disc drive apparatus 100 according to the first embodiment preferably functions not only to reproduce data but also to record data on an optical disc. More specifically, the optical disc drive apparatus 100 further includes a recording signal processing circuit 14. When the optical disc 1 is recordable or rewritable, the recording signal processing circuit 14 controls the laser driving unit 8 according to a recording signal input from an external circuit. As a result, the power of the laser beam 5, which is emitted from the optical pickup 3 and irradiates the optical disc 1, is modulated according to the recording signal, and data represented by the recording signal is recorded onto the optical disc 1. Alternatively, the optical disc drive apparatus may have a reproduction-only function. In this case, the optical disc drive apparatus 100 may not include the recording signal processing circuit 14.
A more specific example is given assuming that the optical disc 1 is a dual-layer Blu-ray disc (with a capacity of 50 GB), which is recordable using a blue laser beam.
A normal reproduction mode will be described first. The control unit 12 sets the rotation speed for the motor 2 to adjust the linear speed at which the spot of the laser beam 5, which has been focused on the optical disc 1, scans on the optical disc 1 to 4.92 m/s. The control unit 12 turns on the high-frequency superimposition circuit 10, and sets the frequency of the high-frequency current 11 to 400 MHz. The control unit 12 further sets, for the laser driving unit 8, the level of the driving current 9 to adjust the average value of the power of the laser beam 5 to 0.6 mW.
A high-speed reproduction mode will be described next. The control unit 12 sets the rotation speed for the motor 2 to adjust the linear speed at which the spot of the laser beam 5, which has been focused on the optical disc 1, scans on the optical disc 1 to the speed four times the linear speed set in the normal reproduction mode (to 19.68 m/s). The control unit 12 sets, for the high-frequency superimposition circuit 10, the level of the high-frequency current 11 to the level lower than the level of the high-frequency current 11 set in the normal reproduction mode. More preferably, the control unit 12 turns off the high-frequency superimposition circuit 10 to set the level of the high-frequency current 11 to zero. The control unit 12 further sets, for the laser driving unit 8, the level of the driving current 9 to adjust the average value of the power of the laser beam 5 to 1.0 mW, which is higher than the average value of the power set in the normal reproduction mode.
To explain that the setting described above effectively solves the problems to be solved by the present invention, the relationship between the power of the semiconductor laser 4 and the resulting noise will be described. The characteristic diagram of
The optical disc drive apparatus of the first embodiment sets the reproduction power to a value at which turning on the high-frequency superimposition circuit 10 will effectively reduce the relative noise (e.g., to 0.6 mW in
An optical disc drive apparatus according to a second embodiment of the present invention differs from the apparatus according to the first embodiment in its reproduction condition used in the high-speed reproduction mode. The other structure of the optical disc drive apparatus according to the second embodiment of the present invention is identical to the corresponding structure of the apparatus of the first embodiment, and will not be described in detail in the present embodiment.
The optical disc drive apparatus of the second embodiment uses the same setting as the setting used in the apparatus of the first embodiment in the normal reproduction mode. More specifically, the control unit 12 sets the rotation speed for the motor 2 to adjust the linear speed at which the spot of the laser beam 5, which has been focused on the optical disc 1, scans on the optical disc 1 to 4.92 m/s. The control unit 12 turns on the high-frequency superimposition circuit 10 and sets the frequency of the high-frequency current 11 to 400 MHz. The control unit 12 further sets, for the laser driving unit 8, the level of the driving current 9 to adjust the average power value of the laser beam 5 to 0.6 mW.
In the high-speed reproduction mode, the control unit 12 sets the rotation speed for the motor 2 to adjust the linear speed at which the spot of the laser beam 5, which has been focused on the optical disc 1, scans on the optical disc 1 to the speed eight times the linear speed set in the normal reproduction mode (to 39.36 m/s). The control unit 12 further sets, for the high-frequency superimposition circuit 10, the level of the high-frequency current 11 to the level lower than the level set in the normal reproduction mode. More preferably, the control unit 12 turns off the high-frequency superimposition circuit 10, and sets the level of the high-frequency current 11 to zero. The control unit 12 further sets, for the laser driving unit 8, the level of the driving current 9 to adjust the average power value of the laser beam 5 to 1.2 mW, which is higher than the average power value set in the normal reproduction mode.
To explain that the setting described above effectively solves the problems to be solved by the present invention, the relationship between the frequency component of the reproduction signal 7 and the frequency of the high-frequency current 11 will be described. The reproduction signal 7, which is read from the optical disc 1, typically contains a high-frequency component, which is about 1.5 to 2 times the frequency of a shortest mark signal. To enable data to be reproduced with a high quality, the reproduction signal 7 needs to be processed without degrading its high-frequency component. When, for example, the optical disc 1 is a Blu-ray disc, the reproduction signal 7 in the normal reproduction mode contains an inherent frequency component of 20 to 30 MHz, which is based on the signals recorded on the optical disc 1 and which is equal to or higher than a value 1.5 times the frequency of 16.5 MHz of a shortest mark signal of the optical disc 1. When a high-frequency current 11 having a high level is superimposed on the driving current 9 of the semiconductor laser 4, the laser beam 5 substantially blinks at the frequency of the high-frequency current 11. Thus, the sampling frequency of an actual reproduction signal 7 output from the optical pickup 3 is the frequency of the high-frequency current 11. According to the Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem, the sampling frequency typically needs to be at least two times the frequency component of information contained in an input signal to sample the input signal without degrading the information. To prevent the reproduction signal 7 from being degraded by sampling, the frequency of the high-frequency current 11 needs to be set at least two times the frequency of the reproduction signal 7, and also needs to be set at least four times the frequency of the shortest mark signal recorded on the optical disc 1. When the Blu-ray disc as the optical disc 1 is subjected to 8× speed reproduction, the reproduction signal 7 contains a high-frequency component of 160 to 240 MHz based on a signal recorded on the optical disc 1. When the frequency of the high-frequency current 11 is about 400 MHz, a high-frequency component superimposed on the reproduction signal 7 in association with the high-frequency current 11 interferes with an inherent high-frequency component contained in the reproduction signal from the signal recorded on the optical disc 1. As a result, the reproduction signal 7 is degraded (or aliasing noise is generated).
The optical disc drive apparatus of the second embodiment of the present invention performs reproduction in the high-speed reproduction mode at the speed as high as eight times the reproduction speed of the normal reproduction mode. Thus, the signal processing circuit (e.g., the reproduction signal processing circuit 13) having a wide frequency band corresponding to such high-speed reproduction inevitably has a high level of noise in its output. To reduce such noise, the reproduction power needs to be set higher during the 8× speed reproduction. However, the conventional optical disc drive apparatus, which maintains the high-frequency superimposition circuit 10 to be ON, can increase the reproduction power only to about 1.0 mW. The conventional optical disc apparatus can improve the S/N ratio to a certain level but not to a satisfactory high level. In contrast, the optical disc drive apparatus of the second embodiment of the present invention sets the level of the high-frequency current 11 lower in the high-speed reproduction mode than in the normal reproduction mode (more preferably turns off the high-frequency superimposition circuit 10). This sets the reproduction power in the high-speed reproduction mode to a value two times the reproduction power set in the normal reproduction mode (to 1.2 mW). The optical disc drive apparatus of the second embodiment consequently improves the S/N ratio by 6 dB. With this structure, the optical disc drive apparatus of the second embodiment enables data to be reproduced with a higher quality through high-speed reproduction. Further, the high-frequency current 11 is set low in the high-speed reproduction mode (preferably set to zero) and the laser beam 5 blinks little at that frequency. The little blinking of the laser beam 5 (i.e., sampling) does not degrade the reproduction signal 7 (does not generate aliasing noise).
An optical disc drive apparatus according to a third embodiment of the present invention differs from the apparatus according to the first embodiment in additionally including a linear speed detection unit 15 as shown in
The linear speed detection unit 15 detects the linear speed of the spot of the laser beam 5, which illuminates the optical disc 1. More specifically, the linear speed detection unit 15 preferably detects the actual rotation speed of the motor 2, and calculates the linear speed based on the detected rotation speed. Alternatively, the linear speed detection unit 15 may calculate the linear speed based on servo information detected by a servo control circuit (not shown) of the optical pickup 3. More preferably, the control unit 12 controls the laser driving unit 8 based on the linear speed detected by the linear speed detection unit 15. As a result, when the reproduction mode of the optical disc drive apparatus is switched between the normal reproduction mode and the high-speed reproduction mode, the reproduction power of the laser beam 5 is optimized in real time according to the actual rotation speed of the optical disc 1. As a result, the optical disc drive apparatus of the third embodiment reliably prevents the reproduction erasure from occurring on the optical disc 1, reliably maintains the S/N ratio to be high for the reproduction signal processing circuit 13, and further reliably prevents aliasing noise from being generated in the reproduction signal 7.
The above embodiments of the present invention describe, as specific examples, their reproduction conditions used when the optical disc 1 is a recordable Blu-ray disc. However, the application of the present invention should not be limited to such reproduction conditions. More specifically, the present invention is applicable to optical disc drive apparatuses that differ from the above optical disc drive apparatuses in, for example, the ratio of the reproduction speed or the reproduction power set in the normal reproduction mode and in the high-speed reproduction mode, or in the relationship between the frequency of the high-frequency current 11 and the frequency of the shortest mark signal, or is also applicable to other typical optical discs. For example, the present invention is obviously applicable to an apparatus that reproduces data from a rewritable optical disc. The present invention, which has the advantageous effects of improving the S/N ratio and preventing EMI (Electro Magnetic Interference) associated with high-frequency superimposition, is applicable even to an optical disc apparatus that sets a high-speed reproduction mode for a read-only optical disc, which has no possibility of the reproduction erasure. In this way, application of the present invention should not be limited.
The present invention relates to the optical disc drive apparatus and is useful in high-speed reproduction of an optical disc as described above. Therefore, the present invention is obviously industrially applicable.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2005-290692 | Oct 2005 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP2006/319860 | 10/4/2006 | WO | 00 | 4/3/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/043406 | 4/19/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4819242 | Kaku et al. | Apr 1989 | A |
5467337 | Matsumoto | Nov 1995 | A |
5495456 | Oka et al. | Feb 1996 | A |
5572155 | Tamayama | Nov 1996 | A |
6011663 | Inoue et al. | Jan 2000 | A |
6013959 | Hoppie | Jan 2000 | A |
6031959 | Hamai et al. | Feb 2000 | A |
6421314 | Maruyama | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6567440 | Hirata et al. | May 2003 | B1 |
6580737 | Hirata et al. | Jun 2003 | B1 |
6731584 | Nagara | May 2004 | B1 |
7038989 | Asada et al. | May 2006 | B2 |
7406012 | Kamei | Jul 2008 | B2 |
7768885 | Kitagaki et al. | Aug 2010 | B2 |
20010005390 | Hirata et al. | Jun 2001 | A1 |
20050286392 | Kamei | Dec 2005 | A1 |
20080279058 | Sasaki et al. | Nov 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 614 176 | Sep 1994 | EP |
0 645 766 | Mar 1995 | EP |
1 626 399 | Feb 2006 | EP |
62-119743 | Jun 1987 | JP |
03-025732 | Feb 1991 | JP |
11-54826 | Feb 1999 | JP |
2001-14679 | Jan 2001 | JP |
2003-289171 | Oct 2003 | JP |
2006-221706 | Aug 2006 | JP |
2006-303332 | Nov 2006 | JP |
2007-4914 | Jan 2007 | JP |
2004038711 | May 2004 | WO |
2004105006 | Dec 2004 | WO |
2007145124 | Dec 2007 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100172230 A1 | Jul 2010 | US |