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| United States Patent | 4308545 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4308545.html |
| Inventor(s) | Lehureau; Jean-Claude (Paris, FR);
Magna; Henriette (Paris, FR);
Thirouard; Michel (Paris, FR) |
| Abstract | This disc has a layer of an inscribable and optically legible recording
material deposited on a transparent plate traversed by the recording or
reading beam and protected from the outside by a cover formed for example
by a metal sheet, whose two surfaces are fixed to the layer so as to form
a space in front of the latter. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4308545 |
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Protected optical disc |
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| Publication Date |
December 29, 1981 |
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| Filing Date |
September 25, 1979 |
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| Priority Data |
Sep 29, 1978[FR]78 27920 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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References  |
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| Market Size |
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Estimate the gross annual revenues of the relevant market
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| Market Share |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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What percentage of gross sales should the inventor or assignee be paid?
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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| Market Size | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Market Share | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Reasonable Royalty | N/A | [No votes] |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What we claim is:
1. A protected optical disc for the recording of information comprising a
transparent supporting plate and a further support said further support
having central and edge ring shaped contact surfaces and therebetween a
recess for forming with said supporting plate a chamber insulated from the
outside, and supported by said supporting plate within said chamber facing
said further support a metal layer inscribable and optically legible by
reflection using a radiation beam traversing said supporting plate; the
inner face of said further support being provided with an antioxidant
deposit extending in said chamber for preventing oxidation of said metal
layer.
2. A disc according to claim 1, wherein said deposit is a metal; said metal
being more electropositive than said metal layer.
3. A disc according to claim 1, wherein said deposit is a layer of organic
material containing an antioxidant material.
4. A disc according to claim 3, wherein said antioxidant material is in the
form of metal particles.
5. A disc according to claim 3, wherein said antioxidant material is an
unsaturated metal oxide.
6. A disc according to claim 1, wherein said metal layer has a ring shaped
inscription region bounded by coaxial outer and inner rings; said recess
being an annular chamber overhanging said inscription region; said further
support resting on said supporting plate along said coaxial outer and
inner rings.
7. A disc according to claim 1, wherein said further support is a body of
organic material having an annular depression, a central hole and two ring
shaped coaxial bearing areas bounding said annular depression.
8. A protected optical disc for the recording of information comprising:
a transparent supporting plate;
a stamped sheet of metal forming a further support and having an annular
depression, a central hole and two ring shaped coaxial bearing areas
bounding said annular depression, said depression facing said supporting
plate and forming a chamber insulated from the outside;
a structure on said plate and extending in said chamber, inscribable and
optically legible by reflection using a radiation beam traversing said
supporting plate; and
an anti-oxidant deposit on said further support and within said chamber. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a protected optical disc used for the
recording of information in the form of video or digital signals.
It is known that in order to obtain a high information density on a
relatively compact carrier it is advantageous to use an optical disc
having at least one layer, whose physical characteristics vary as soon as
it is exposed to radiation in which the information is recorded by means
of a focused light beam in the form of diffracting microelements, which
can then be detected by means of another focused light beam for the
purpose of reading the information. In order to permit easy, frequent
manipulations by a user the commercially sold pre-inscribed or blank disc
must have a protection to obviate any influence of dust, finger marks,
etc., on the disc and also to prevent any deterioration of the
radiation-sensitive layer.
The manufacture of pre-inscribed discs is based on the pressing of a
transparent support from a matrix carrying the information to be
reproduced on a large number of discs. The manufacturing operations are
performed in a dust-free atmosphere, great care being taken to ensure that
the optical support is not deformed. The discs obtained carry an optically
legible information, but they cannot be recorded by the user.
It is much more complicated to produce discs which can be inscribed by the
user, because it is necessary that the protection added to the layer used
for recording the information does not disturb the passage of an
information-modulated focused light beam. Furthermore the recording
procedure must not require development. Inscribable discs are known which
comprise a layer which undergoes a permanent modification under the action
of an inscription radiation placed between two plates, one of which is
transparent, the layer being deposited on one of the plates. The two
plates are separated by shims in order to provide a free space in front of
the layer to permit the giving off of decomposition products, for example
metal vapours when the layer is a volatilisable metal layer. The need to
make shims with a strictly constant thickness so as not to destroy the
flatness of the plates, which must themselves be sufficiently thick and
rigid to ensure a good protection and the assembly of the whole unit leads
to high production costs.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention makes it possible to obtain an uncomplicated and
relatively inexpensive disc. The disc according to the invention does not
use shims for making a space in front of the recording layer. As this
layer is deposited on a standard transparent plate with a thickness of
approximately 1 mm onto the plate-layer assembly is fixed a protective
cover whose very shape ensures contact at the edges of the disc and around
the central hole of the disc whilst a closed space is made between these
two circular contacts. To this end the cover is made from a metal sheet,
involving a low raw material cost, by punching and shaping by means of a
simple tool. Shaping can be carried out without any special precautions,
because no optical qualities are required of the cover. The transparent
plate covered with the recording layer undergoes no shaping. As a result
there is no risk of the assembly being damaged by these manipulations.
According to the invention a recording layer is used which is constituted
by a highly plasticized thermodegradable layer and an extremely thin metal
layer. This leads to a very good sensitivity with a medium power laser
source. The use of a stamped metal cover leads to further improvements
compared with known discs. It is for example possible to obtain an
electrochemical protection of the metal ablation layer forming part of the
recording layer.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will be explained in greater detail hereinafter relative to
non-limitative embodiments and with reference to the attached drawings,
wherein show:
FIG. 1 a disc according to the invention.
FIG. 2 the construction of the cover from a metal sheet.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG. 1 shows in radial section a protected optical disc according to the
invention. All the elements of the disc are coaxial and there is a central
hole 7 for the passage of a rotation spindle forming part of a recorder or
an optical reader. It comprises a transparent plate 1, preferably made
from a plastic material such as polyvinyl chloride, polymethyl
methacrylate and polycarbonate. The surface quality of this plate must be
compatible with the satisfactory operation of the follow-up controls of
the recorders and readers. Such requirements are not very severe and can
be obtained with standard plates. Plate 1 has a thickness of about 1 mm
and it serves to receive a light beam 6 (for recording or reading), whose
focusing plane is outside the plate and whose diameter during its passage
through the plate is also approximately 1 mm. Thus, dust, scratches and
dirty marks will not cause any significant variations in the energy
distribution of the recording spot.
The face of plate 1 opposite to the incidence face I of beam 6 is covered
by a heat sensitive layer. As this disc is particularly intended to be
inscribed by the user and read directly, i.e. without prior developing,
preference is given to the use of heat sensitive layer of the type
described in French Patent Application No. 76 31 867 filed by the present
applicant Company, i.e. constituted by a first layer 2 which is
thermodegradable at low temperature (approximately 100.degree. to
150.degree. C.) deposited by immersion or centrifuging on the transparent
plate and a second metal layer 3 deposited on layer 2 by vacuum
evaporation or chemical deposition. Layer 2 has a relatively small
thickness of approximately a few .mu.m. Its face F, opposite to the
contact face with plate 1 must be perfectly ground because it forms the
focusing plane of beam 6. The metal layer 3 deposited on face F has a very
limited thickness (approximately 1/100 .mu.m). Such a layer is highly
absorbent at the wave length of the inscription radiation, said radiation
coming from a laser source which is able to supply a spot of a
sufficiently small size for the inscription of microelements in the focal
plane of a lens regulated in such a way that it coincides with the plane
of layer 3. With a thickness of about 1/100 .mu.m such a layer is able to
absorb more than 60% of the radiation and the thermal energy due to the
light spot continues to be concentrated in the vicinity of the spot. As
the thickness of the thermodegradable layer 2 is well below the
penetration depth of the inscription radiation into the material forming
the same most of the radiation is transmitted to metal layer 3, which is
locally rapidly heated to a temperature of about 100.degree. to
200.degree. C. This heating is diffused towards the thermodegradable layer
2, which is thus heated to its degradation temperature and the areas
thereof in contact with the heated metal zones are destroyed. This
degradation brings into force complex mechanical and chemical phenomena
which attack the metal layer in the zone which has diffused the heat, but
not in adjacent zones. Thus, diffracting microelements which are optically
legible by reflection are obtained when the beam 6 comes from a low power
laser. During recording decomposition products must be able to escape from
the heat sensitive layer. It is therefore necessary to provide a space
behind the metal layer 3, whilst ensuring the protection of said layer and
the rigidity of the whole disc. To this end the disc also has a protective
cover 5, which forms the base of the disc opposite to transparent plate 1.
According to the invention this cover is made from a sheet, whose
mechanical properties ensure the desired rigidity. The material used is an
organic or metallic material, e.g. aluminium, in such a way as to ensure
low raw material costs and maximum ease of machining. The initial sheet is
stamped so as to give it the shape shown in FIG. 1 and provides the
desired closed space 4 and contact surfaces in the form of rings coaxial
with the metal layer 3 at the edge of the disc (surface 8) and in the
vicinity of the central hole 7 of the disc (surface 9). Such a cover is
easily made, is easy to fit on the remainder of the disc and gives both a
good rigidity and flatness of the assembly.
To produce such a cover 5 from a metal sheet it is possible to use a
punching and shaping tool such as that shown in cross-section in FIG. 2.
Starting with a flat metal sheet 11, whose thickness is approximately 500
.mu.m by using the press-matrix assembly 10 a central hole and the
impression of the sheet between surfaces 8 and 9 so as to form a cavity
are performed simultaneously. This pressing process can be carried out
without any special precautions and no mechanical operation has to be
carried out on the remainder of the disc which, whilst unprotected by the
cover, must be kept in a clean atmosphere protected from dust and
deformations. Thus, the only operation to be carried out carefully is the
adhesion of the cover to the metal layer 3, but the latter operation can
be easily performed.
The way in which the stamped metal cover is made offers the additional
advantage of the chemical protection of the metal layer 3. Thus, as the
gas in cavity 4 is air over a period of time oxidation may occur and this
would obviously reduce the thermal and chemical properties of the layer.
The invention offers various different possibilities for providing
protection and namely the deposition on the inner face of the cover of a
metal which is more electropositive than the metal from which layer 3 is
formed, e.g. zinc or manganese. Deposition can be carried out by
evaporation, or by electrochemical process. Another possibility of giving
a chemical protection comprises depositing on the inner face of cover 5 an
organic layer containing in suspension metal particles or unsaturated
metal oxides, for example a minimum paint.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments described and presented
hereinbefore and various modifications can be made thereto without passing
beyond the scope of the invention.
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Description  |
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