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Title: Introduction to Optoelectronics Optical storage (2)


1
Introduction to OptoelectronicsOptical storage
(2)
  • Prof. Katsuaki Sato

2
What we learn today.
  • Optical storage is a storage using light for
    read-out of recorded information
  • Record density is determined by the spot size of
    the light beam, which is limited by the
    wavelength of the light and the NA (numerical
    aperture) of lens.
  • There are three categories of optical storage,
    i.e., read-only type, write-once type and
    rewritable type.
  • Different physical phenomena are used for
    recording of the signal on optical disks.

3
Spot size at the focal point
  • Numerical aperture of lens
  • NAnsina
  • d0.6?/NA
  • CD-ROM NA0.6
    ?780nm?d780nmDVD ?650nm?d650nmBD NA0.85
    ?405nm?d285nmHD-DVD NA0.6
    ?405nm?d405nm

4
Classification of optical storages
  • Optical disk
  • Read only type
  • CD, CD-ROM, DVD-ROM
  • Recordable type
  • Direct read after write (Write once type)
  • CD-R, DVD-R
  • Rewritable (recording and erasing)
  • Phase change CD-RW, DVD-RAM, DVD-RW, DVDRW, BD,
    HD-DVD
  • Magneto-optical MO, GIGAMO, MD, Hi-MD, AS-MO,
    iD-Photo
  • Holographic memory, Hole-burning memory

5
Physical phenomena used in optical disk technology
  • CD-ROM, DVD-ROM
  • pit formation
  • CD-R, DVD-R
  • Chemical decomposition of organic dye
  • CD-RW, DVD-RAM, DVD-RW, DVDRW
  • Phase change between ordered and disordered
    states
  • MO, MD, GIGAMO, iD-Photo, HD-MD
  • Magnetic phase change between ferromagnetic and
    paramagnetic states
  • Holographic memory Photorefractive effect
  • Hole-burning memory Local structure change

6
Characteristics of optical disk
  • Removable
  • Large capacity, high density
  • 10Gb/in2 (far less than HD(100 Gb/in2))
  • Aiming at 100 Gb/in2 using near-field technique
  • Random accessibility
  • Cassette ? MD, VTR ? DVD
  • Shorter access than magnetic tape
  • Longer seek time than HD
  • High reliability
  • Higher head clearance than HD

7
Increase of Areal Density in Optical Disks
8
Different Disks
9
CD-ROM
  • Polycarbonate substratesn1.55
  • ?780nm ??503nm (wavelength in the substrate)
  • Pit depth110nm ¼wavelength
  • Phase difference in reflectionpDestructive
    addition of reflected beams

http//www.infonet.co.jp/ueyama/ip/multimedia/cd.h
tml
10
CD-ROM Drive
  • Focusing servo
  • Tracking servo
  • Optical pickup

Objective lens
Tracking Servo
Focusing Servo
Quarter wave-plate
Collimating lens
Grating
Polarization Beam Splitter
Cylindrical lens
Optical detector
http//www.infonet.co.jp/ueyama/ip/multimedia/cd.h
tml
11
CD-RW
  • Phase change
  • Crystalline and
  • amorphous

http//www.cds21solutions.org/main/osj/j/cdrw/rw_p
hase.html
12
Phase change recording
  • Phase change between different phases
  • Rewritable As grown amorphous state is
    initialized to crystalline state by annealing.
    Recording is performed by heating above the
    melting point Tm (600?C) followed by quenching to
    amorphous state. Erasing is done by heating to
    Tcr(400 ?C) to crystallize.
  • High level Heating above Tm?rapid cool?amorphous
  • Low levelHeating above Tcr?slow cool?crystalline
  • DVD-RAM GeSbTe based alloy
  • DVDRW Ag-InSbTe based alloy

13
Recording and erasing
  • Rapid coolingamorphous?low reflectivity
  • Slow cooling below Tmcrystalline?high
    reflectivity

http//www.cds21solutions.org/main/osj/j/cdrw/rw_p
hase.html
14
Crystalline and amorphous
recorded amorphous
Initialcrystalline
R high
R low
Record
Erase
laser spot
recorded mark
15
What is amorphous?
  • Amorphous
  • non crystalline (disordered) state
  • without LRO (long range order) but with SRO
    (short range order)
  • Atomic arrangement of liquid is frozen
  • Metastable state introduced by rapid cooling of
    liquid
  • Random metallic alloy, chalcogenide glass,
    tetrahedral system, oxide glass
  • DRPHS (dense random packing of hard spheres) can
    explain RDF (radial distribution function)

16
Radial distribution function (RDF)
  • G(r) Probability to find a neighboring atom at a
    distance of r.

Calculated
experiment
http//cmt.dur.ac.uk/sjc/thesis/thesis/node79.html
17
CD-R
  • Organic dye is used
  • Thermal decomposition
  • Deformation of substrate by heat
  • Work as a pit

18
DVD Family
19
MO(magneto-optical)Recording
  • Recording Thermomagnetic (Curie point)recording
  • Heat-assisted magnetic recording
  • Playback Magneto-optical effect
  • Rotation of linear polarization is converted to
    the electrical signal
  • Employed in MO, MD disks
  • Compatibility
  • High repeatability10,000,000 times
  • Complicated optical head (Polarization detection)
  • Novel inventions such as MSR, MAMMOS, DWDD are
    realized as commercial products

20
Magneto-optical (MO) Recording
  • RecordingThermomagnetic recording
  • Magnetic recording using laser irradiation
  • Reading out Magneto-optical effect
  • Magnetically induced polarization state
  • MO disk, MD(Minidisk)
  • High rewritabilitymore than 107 times
  • Complex polarization optics
  • New magnetic concepts MSR, MAMMOS and DWDD

21
History of MO recording
  • 1962 Conger,Tomlinson Proposal for MO memory
  • 1967 Mee Fan Proposal of beam-addressable MO
    recording
  • 1971 Argard (Honeywel) MO disk using MnBi films
  • 1972 Suits(IBM) MO disk using EuO films
  • 1973 Chaudhari(IBM) Compensation point recording
    to a-GdCo film
  • 1976 Sakurai(Osaka U) Curie point recording on
    a-TbFe films1980 Imamura(KDD) Code-file MO memory
    using a-TbFe films
  • 1981 Togami(NHK) TV picture recording using
    a-GdCo MO disk
  • 1988 Commercial appearance of 5MO disk (650MB)
  • 1889 Commercial appearance of 3.5 MO
    disk(128MB)
  • 1991 Aratani(Sony) MSR
  • 1992 Sony MD
  • 1997 Sanyo ASMO(5 6GBL/G, MFM/MSR) standard
  • 1998 Fujitsu GIGAMO(3.5 1.3GB)
  • 2000 Sanyo, Maxell iD-Photo(5cmf730MB)
  • 2004 Sony Hi-MD

22
Structure of MO disk media
  • MO disk structure

Polycarbonate substrate
SiNx layer for protection and MO-enhancement
Al reflection layer
MO-recording layer (amorphous TbFeCo)
Land
Groove
Resin
23
MO recording How to record(1)
  • Temperature increase by focused laser beam
  • Magnetization is reduced when T exceeds Tc
  • Record bits by external field when cooling

M Tc
Temp
Tc
Laser spot
MO media
External field
Coil
24
MO recording How to record(2)
  • Use of compensation point
  • writing
  • Amorphous TbFeCo
  • Ferrimagnet with Tcomp
  • HC takes maximum at Tcomp
  • Stability of small recorded marks

Hc
M
Tb
FeCo
Mtotal
Fe,Co
T
Tcomp
Tc
Tb
RT
25
Amorphous TbFeCo Film
26
Two recording modes
  • Light intensity modulation (LIM) present MO
  • Laser light is modulated by electrical signal
  • Constant magnetic field
  • Elliptical marks
  • Magnetic field modulation (MFM)MD, ASMO
  • Field modulation by electrical signal
  • Constant laser intensity
  • Crescent-shaped marks

27
Shape of Recorded Marks
28
MO recording How to read
  • Magneto-optical conversion of magnetic signal to
    electric signal

D1
-
LD
D2
Differential detection
Polarized Beam Splitter
29
Structure of MO Head
Bias field coil
Recorded marks
Track pitch
Focusing lens
Rotation of polarization
MO film
Beam splitter
Half wave-plate
mirror
lens
PBS (polarizing beam splitter)
LD
Laser diode
Photo-detector
PDphotodiode
30
Advances in MO recording
  1. Super resolution
  2. MSR
  3. MAMMOS/DWDD
  4. Use of Blue Lasers
  5. Near field
  6. SIL
  7. Super-RENS (AgOx)

31
MSR(Magnetically induced super-resolution)
  • Resolution is determined by diffraction limit
  • d0.6?/NA, where NAn sin a
  • Marks smaller than wavelength cannot
  • be resolved
  • Separation of recording and reading layers
  • Light intensity distribution is utilized
  • Magnetization is transferred only at the heated
    region

d
32
Illustration of 3 kinds of MSR
33
AS-MO standard
34
iD-Photo specification
35
MAMMOS(magnetic amplification MO system)
36
Super-RENSsuper-resolution near-field system
  • AgOx filmdecomposition and precipitation of Ag
  • Scattering center?near field
  • Ag plasmon?enhancement
  • reversible
  • Applicable to both phase-change and MO recording

??????
?????
37
To shorter wavelengths
  • DVD-ROM Using 405nm laser, successful play back
    of marks was attained with track pitch
    0.26?m?mark length 213?m (capacity 25GB) using
    NA0.85 lens i?
  • i M. Katsumura, et al. Digest ISOM2000, Sept.
    5-9, 2000, Chitose, p. 18.
  • DVD-RW Using 405nm laser, read / write of
    recorded marks of track pitch0.34?m and mark
    length0.29?m in 35?m two-layered
    disk(capacity27GB) was succeeded using NA0.65
    lens, achieving 33Mbps transfer rate ii ?ii
    T. Akiyama, M. Uno, H. Kitaura, K. Narumi, K.
    Nishiuchi and N. Yamada Digest ISOM2000, Sept.
    5-9, 2000, Chitose, p. 116.

38
Read/Write using Blue-violet LD and SIL (solid
immersion lens)
NA1.5 405nm 80nm mark 40GB
SILhead
405nm LD
I. Ichimura et. al. (Sony), ISOM2000 FrM01
39
SIL (solid immersion lens)
40
Optical recording using SIL
41
Hybrid Recording
405nm LD
Recording head (SIL)
Readout MR head
Achieved 60Gbit/in2
H. Saga et al. Digest MORIS/APDSC2000, TuE-05,
p.92.
TbFeCo disk
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