The present application is a 35 U.S.C. §§371 national phase conversion of PCT/JP2007/066040, filed Aug. 17, 2007, which claims priority of Japanese Patent Application No. 2006-256726, filed Sep. 22, 2006. The PCT International Application was published in the Japanese language.
The present invention relates to an optical recording medium for reproducing information by irradiating laser light onto a recording mark, in particular, to an optical recording medium having an additional structure for reproducing a recording mark smaller than the resolution limit.
For example, an optical recording medium such as a digital video disc and a blu-ray disc is such that in a reproduction optical system with a laser light of wavelength λ and a numerical aperture NA of an objective lens, the length of a reproducible recording mark is greater than or equal to the resolution limit (λ/4NA) with respect to a recording mark sequence in which the length of the recording mark is equal to the length of an adjacent non-recorded space.
As a method of reproducing a recording mark smaller than the resolution limit in such an optical recording medium, there has been investigated a technique for practically increasing the NA within a medium by adding, to the optical recording medium, a signal reproducing functional layer having a function to reduce the size of a laser light spot.
For example, there has been known a technique for obtaining super resolution reproduction at high carrier to noise ratio (CNR), which serves as an index of reproduction performance, with use of Ge2Sb2Te5 as a signal reproducing functional layer material, and with utilization of a variation in the refractive index due to liquid phase formation of this material (refer to Patent Document 1). Super resolution reproduction can be experimentally obtained in the case where the power of laser light irradiation for reproduction is increased.
Super resolution reproduction at similarly high CNR can be experimentally achieved also by use of a signal reproducing functional layer material of another composition containing Sb and Te, not limited to Ge2Sb2Te5. However, in any of these cases, there is a problem in that reproduction durability is insufficient for practical use when performing super resolution reproduction, as a result of the influence of temperature increase within the medium due to the increased power of laser light irradiation.
An object of the present invention is to record and reproduce, or only reproduce, a mark smaller than the resolution limit; obtain a high level of reproduction performance (CNR and the like); and realize a high level of reproduction durability.
An optical recording medium that performs super resolution reproduction, for example, as shown in
The above mentioned reaction occurs in the case where a composition (ZnS—SiO2) of ZnS and SiO2 is used as a material for the protecting layer for example. However, from a viewpoint of a high level of its light transmission characteristic, a low level of its thermal conductivity characteristic, and a low level of its thermal expansion characteristic, ZnS—SiO2 is an often used material for the protecting layer in write-once type and rewritable type optical recording media.
As shown in the sectional view of
Incidentally, there has been widely known a method of introducing a new protecting layer adjacent to a phase change recording layer in order to improve the number of repeatable rewritings on the phase change recording layer (refer to Patent Document 2). This differs from the present invention in the configuration of the optical recording medium because of the following reason due to difference in the purpose.
As for the material to be used for the signal reproducing functional layer in the present invention, the amorphous phase portion thereof becomes crystallized when irradiating a laser light for super resolution reproduction, and therefore this cannot be used as a phase change recording layer.
Moreover, there has been reported that super resolution reproduction can be performed also in a structure with Ge2Sb2Te5 sandwiched by protecting layers (refer to Non Patent Document 1). According to the Non Patent Document 1, it is reported that when reproducing a 100 nm recording mark, which is smaller than the resolution limit, with use of an optical system of λ=403 nm and NA=0.6, the obtained CNR was no more than 15 dB. Also in the case of using the structure disclosed in Patent Document 2, a reproduction CNR characteristic similar to that in Non Patent Document 1 is expected to be found.
That is to say, the phase change recording layer portion of Patent Document 2, in addition to its use as a conventional recording layer, can be applied as a signal reproducing functional layer for super resolution reproduction. However, it cannot sufficiently exert its function for both recording and super resolution reproduction at the same time, and it cannot serve as an optical recording medium for practical super resolution reproduction at least in its single use. In the present invention, the configuration is such that the phase change recording layer is utilized only as a signal reproducing functional layer for super resolution reproduction, and is combined with another appropriate recording portion. The recording portion specifically refers to a write-once type recording layer or preliminarily formed phase recording pits.
In the present invention there is provided a super resolution reproduction optical recording medium in which new layers are provided before and after a signal reproducing functional layer for super resolution reproduction and these are combined with an appropriate recording portion, to thereby: obtain an effect of satisfying both a high level of reproduction performance and a high level of reproduction durability; and, as a result thereof, enable its practical application.
Hereunder, a best mode for carrying out the present invention is illustrated.
Preferred materials for the signal reproducing functional layer include Sb or Te (meaning Sb, Te, or (Sb and Te) in the present specification), and specific examples thereof include Sb—Te, Ge—Te, Ge—Sb—Te, and Zn—Sb. Furthermore, these materials may contain Ag, In, Ge, or the like as an impurity.
The preferred material for the protecting layer is ZnS—SiO2, and the preferred mixture ratio of ZnS and SiO2 (ZnS:SiO2) falls in a range between 90 mol %:10 mol % and 60 mol %:40 mol %.
The material for the diffusion preventing layer essentially needs to be able to prevent or suppress reactions between the signal reproducing functional layer and the protecting layer due to temperature increase, and therefore various kinds of thermally stable materials may be used therefor. Specific examples of the preferred material include nitride, oxide, and carbide materials of Ge, Zr, Ce, Cr, Si, Al, Ti, and Ta.
The diffusion preventing layers before and after the signal reproducing functional layer do not necessarily have to be formed with the same material, and may be respectively formed with materials selected from the materials listed above.
One of the primary roles of the reflecting layer is to adjust reflectance of the optical recording medium, and therefore various kinds of metallic materials such as Ag, Al, Au, Cu, Pt, Pd, Ti, W, and Mo, or an alloyed metal of these materials may be used therefor. Moreover, the reflecting layer does not necessarily have to be formed.
In
Any material that has an optical constant that is irreversibly changed by laser light irradiation, and that does not allow loss of recordings formed on the recording layer at the time of laser light irradiation for super resolution reproduction, may be used as a material for the recording layer.
The material for the substrate is not limited in particular, and glass, plastic, or the like may be used therefor. In the case where recording or reproduction with laser light is not to be performed through the substrate, the substrate may be optically opaque to the laser light.
Without forming the recording layer in
As shown in
As a comparative example, as shown in
Measurements for the working example 1 and the comparative example 1 were both performed with use of an optical disc tester (DDU-1000 manufactured by Pulstec Industrial Co., Ltd.) with an optical system of λ=405 nm and NA=0.65.
On the optical recording media formed in these ways, a 100 nm mark (200 nm cycle), which is smaller than the resolution limit, was recorded at a linear velocity 4.4 m/s with laser light power 9.5 mW in the working example 1, and with laser light power 10.0 mW in the comparative example 1.
Recording is realized as a result of deformation within the medium due to primarily PtOx among the composition of PtOx and SiO2, being thermally decomposed into platinum and oxygen, and this recording can be performed only once.
Laser light power for reproduction was irradiated onto the recorded optical recording media. As a result, in both of the working example 1 and the comparative example 1, super resolution reproduction became possible with laser light power just above 2.0 mW, and the CNR observed in the proximity of laser light power 3.0 mW was approximately 44 dB as shown in
Super resolution reproduction was repeatedly performed, and the number of times of performing super resolution reproduction until the CNR was reduced by 3 dB from the initial value, was measured. The results showed, as shown in
Next, a sequence of compounded marks including a 100 nm (200 nm cycle) mark and a 350 nm mark (700 nm cycle) was recorded. In order to perform super resolution reproduction on a 100 nm mark portion, the reproduction laser light power the same as that in the above case of
An optical recording medium was formed in which the material of the diffusion preventing layer seen in the structure of the working example 1 was changed to zirconium oxide (Zr—O). Also in the present working example 2, the aforementioned optical disc tester with an optical system of λ=405 nm and NA=0.65 was used, and a 100 nm mark (200 nm cycle), which is smaller than the resolution limit, was recorded at a linear velocity 6 m/s, with laser light power 10.5 mW.
Laser light power for super resolution reproduction was irradiated onto the recorded optical recording medium, and approximately 42 dB of CNR at 3.2 mW was obtained as a result. This reproduction was repeatedly performed, and the number of times of performing super resolution reproduction until the CNR was reduced by 3 dB from the initial value, was measured. The result of this was approximately 190,000 times. This is an improvement of more than 2.5 times that observed in the comparative example 1.
On a substrate having recording pits preliminarily formed, there were formed: a 93 nm protecting layer formed with (ZnS)85(SiO2)15; a 7 nm diffusion preventing layer formed with cerium oxide (Ce—O); a 15 nm signal reproducing functional layer formed with Ag6.0In4.4Sb61.0Te28.6; a 7 nm diffusion preventing layer formed with Ce—O; and a 93 nm protecting layer formed with (ZnS)85(SiO2)15, in this order.
An optical recording medium for super resolution reproduction that included no diffusion preventing layers, was formed. On a substrate having recording pits preliminarily formed, there were formed: a 100 nm protecting layer formed with (ZnS)85(SiO2)15; a 15 nm signal reproducing functional layer formed with Ag6.0In4.4Sb61.0Te28.6; and a 100 nm protecting layer formed with (ZnS)85(SiO2)15, in this order.
Measurement for both of the working example 3 and the comparative example 2 were performed with use of an optical disc tester (DDU-1000 manufactured by Pulstec Industrial Co., Ltd.) with an optical system of λ=635 nm and NA=0.60.
In the working example 3 and the comparative example 2, laser light power for super resolution reproduction was irradiated onto a 200 nm recording pit (400 nm cycle), which is smaller than the resolution limit, at a linear velocity of 6 m/s, and in both of the examples, the observed CNR was 43 dB at 3.4 mW.
This reproduction was repeatedly performed, and the number of times of performing reproduction until the CNR was reduced by 3 dB from the initial value, was measured. The result of this showed approximately 8,000 times in the comparative example 2 and approximately 20,000 times in the working example 3. That is to say, introduction of the diffusion preventing layers resulted in an improvement in reproduction durability in super resolution reproduction by 2.5 times compared to conventional reproduction durability.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2006-256726 | Sep 2006 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP2007/066040 | 8/17/2007 | WO | 00 | 3/17/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2008/035522 | 3/27/2008 | WO | A |
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