The present invention refers to optical drives for reading or writing data from/to optical discs. Particularly, the invention has as an object to optimise the detectors used for read-out of information stored as pits in tracks of optical discs. An object of the invention is to make high frequency and low noise detection of the read-out possible.
Digital information is read from an optical disc or written on an optical disc along a track on the optical disc by use of an optical drive. A focus actuator in the optical drive is used to focus a laser beam to a spot onto the optical disc. The laser beam is focused by means of an object lens, which focuses the laser beam to a spot onto a data storing layer of the disc. As an example, a focusing actuator coil drives the object lens so that the object lens is focusing a focal point of the laser beam to form said spot on the data storing layer of the disc. A second coil, a tracking actuator coil, drives a tracking object lens, so that the spot is traced along the track of the disc.
In an optical drive a servo system is used to focus the focal point of the laser beam onto the data storing layer of the disc. A control loop for controlling said servo system is called the focus control loop. To guarantee a proper optical drive performance the focus control loop must be closed. An error signal for controlling the guidance of the laser beam in the servo system can be obtained from light reflected back from the data storing layer to a detector on a sledge carrying a light source for the laser beam. To capture focus the actuator is moved towards the disc. During the movement towards the disc, a reflected signal, called central aperture (CA) is monitored. If the signal exceeds a certain threshold level the actuator is close to the focussing point and a focus error signal is then monitored and controlled by the servo to preserve the laser beam focused.
In conventional optical storage devices the data is transferred to pits, which are arranged in a linear fashion (although curved in tracks, circular or in a spiral) on the optical disc. Information stored as data is read-out by means of a single spot from the track of pits. A two-dimensional (2D) encoded disc is different. The data is on a 2D encoded disc arranged in a two dimensional pattern of pits, wherein the data is read-out by means of multiple spots at the same time.
In a single track read-out system the detector is designed to read the arrangements of pits along the track and to convert the reading to an information carrying HF signal. At the same time, the detector is further designed as, for example, a quadrant or a split detector for generating an error signal to be used for tracking by the servo system.
The difference between one-track read-out and read-out of data from the 2D-optical storage (abbreviated to TwoDOS from 2 Dimension Optical Storage) is illustrated in
US 2003/0206503 A1 discloses a multi-element detector for the use of reading multiple tracks of optical discs having different formats. The multi-element of said detector comprises detector elements, each of which detects light reflected from a corresponding track of an optical disc. It is shown in the disclosure that the multi-element detector includes a central detector element and a number of side detector elements. Each of the side detector elements has an elongated shape and is of a larger area than the central element.
Small detectors have a low capacitance, which makes detection of high frequency and low noise detection possible. Thus, it is a drawback to the read-out of data from an optical disc by use of a multi-element detector according to the disclosure of the prior art device as said detector elements will have comparatively high capacitances.
One object of the invention is to present a device and a method, which provides a multi-element detector having small detector elements and thus low capacitances enabling the use of said multi-element detector for high frequency and low noise detection of TwoDOS optical discs.
According to one aspect of the invention there is disclosed a device as specified in the independent device claim.
According to a further aspect of the present invention there is disclosed a method as specified in the independent method claim.
The detector needs to be able to generate a number N of CA signals (Centre Aperture signals), wherein N is the number of read-out laser beam spots. This is achieved by means of detector elements detecting the total power of light reflected back to the detector element from a spot. One or two of these detector elements must contain a quadrant or a split detector in order to generate the focus error signal.
The spots are normally arranged in a row, so the detector elements are also in a row. Of course other configurations like squares or a circle-like distribution of detector elements, are possible
Conventionally relative large (large refers to light detection area) detector elements are used because of alignment tolerances. This is especially valid for, for example, a quadcel detector element constituting a detector element having segmented detector elements delivering an error signal to the focus error control system, wherein the position of the centre of a spot is measured in relation to the position of the different detector segments. Such large detectors always suffer from a high parasitic capacitance, which leads to a lower bandwidth in the data reading signal and more electronic noise. For detection of the CA signals it is advantageous to have small detector elements. It is only useful to detect the CA signal from an allotted spot, when said spot is actually correctly focused on the disc, whereby said spot is as small as possible. This means that it is not necessary to use large area detector elements for those detector elements, whose only purpose is to detect the CA signals from the allotted spot. This fact is used according to the invention, wherein the detector elements are made as small as possible in relation to their respective task.
It is hence advantageous, according to an aspect of the present invention, to provide a photo detector of multi-element type, wherein small elements for the CA signals are combined with large detector element(s) used for servo control purposes.
These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiment(s) described hereinafter.
Application of the present invention is especially useful in all kind of devices where there is a need for high data rates as in PC data drives or archiving functionality.
a and 2b schematically shows a first embodiment of the invention, wherein detector elements are arranged in three rows and with elements for each track of a multiple track storage of an optical disc. The laser bean arrangement is shown in
a and 3b shows a second embodiment with one row of power reading detector elements and with two detector elements for reading an error signal used in the track guidance servo control loop and wherein
a and 4b shows a third embodiment of the invention with a detector element layout for an astigmatic focusing having one row of detector elements only and wherein
a and 5b shows a fourth embodiment with a detector layout for an astigmatic focusing having three rows of power reading detector elements, wherein
A number of embodiments for performing the method according to the invention will be described in the following supported by the enclosed drawings.
In
Light reflected back from the laser spots 25 from the data layer 21 is directed to a detection branch of the detector by means of a semitransparent mirror 26 in an angle to one side or a PBS in combination with a quarter wave plate. The servo lens has as a purpose to focus the light reflected from the respective spot to detector elements 28a, 28b, 28c of a detector 28. Each detector element is aimed to receive light reflected from an allotted spot.
According to the embodiment the detector has a layout as shown in
In the embodiments as disclosed in the drawings the detector elements are represented by squares, while light spots are represented as circles.
In the detector layout the first spectrum is arranged to be focused on a first row of detector elements 28a. This first row of detector elements 28a is in this embodiment composed by small area detector elements as the purpose is to measure the total power of the light reflected back from the specific spot (the CA signal). Most of the power of the light reflected from the respective spot is concentrated in a circular area with a diameter lambda/NA. By this, a central aperture (CA) detector element 28a does not need to be greater than 1,22 lambda/NA and still allow an alignment tolerance of positioning the beam on the detector to be large enough (note that the NA mentioned here is the NA of the servo lens 27).
A second row of detector elements 28b is arranged on the detector 28 to receive light from the second spectrum of the light reflected back from the spots 25. A third row of detector elements 28c is also arranged on the detector 28 to receive light from the third spectrum of the light reflected back from the spots 25. For convenience only 5 detector elements per row is illustrated, but the number of elements can in correspondence to the layout be extended to any proper number of detector elements per row. According to this embodiment only the two centre detector elements 28bc and 28cc of the two rows of detector elements 28b and 28c arranged in the detector 28 need to be larger then the CA measuring detector elements 28a, 28b, 28c as they are segmented detector elements measuring an error signal for the focusing of the laser beam 23.
According to a second embodiment, disclosed in
In
According to yet another, a third, embodiment, astigmatic focussing of the laser beam 23 on the track of the optical disc is used. This is shown in
Also, in this third embodiment of
In
Further, in
The method and device according to the invention can be applied in all optical recording devices, but it is especially useful for data drives as the data rates are the highest for this application due to speed race.
Although the present invention has been described in connection with specific embodiments, it is not intended to be limited to the specific form set forth herein. Rather, the scope of the present invention is limited only by the accompanying claims. In the claims the terms comprising and including do not exclude the presence of other elements or steps. Furthermore, although individually listed a plurality of means, elements or method steps may be implemented by e.g. a single unit or processor. Additionally, although individual features may be included in different claims, these may possibly be advantageously combined and the inclusion in different claims does not imply that a combination of features are not feasible and/or advantageous. In addition, singular references do not exclude a plurality. Thus references to “a”, “an”, “firs”, “second” etc. do not preclude a plurality. Reference signs in the claims are provided merely as clarifying examples and shall not be construed as limiting the scope of the claims in any way.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04106314.0 | Dec 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2005/053909 | 11/25/2005 | WO | 00 | 6/1/2007 |