|
Claims  |
|
|
I claim:
1. A laser system for reading data on an optical data storage medium having
different optical characteristics comprising,
a data medium having a high reflectivity surface layer and a light
absorptive underlayer, the medium having prerecorded data of a first
absorptivity and user recorded data of a second absorptivity, and
imperfections having a third absorptivity, each of the data and the
imperfections having different combinations of specularly reflected and
optically transmitted beam components with respect to an incident laser
beam,
first and second detector means for simultaneously detecting said
specularly reflected and optically transmitted beam components and
generating first and second electrical signals corresponding to a quantity
of light received,
correlation means connected to said detector means for comparing the levels
of said electrical signals with stored reference levels of specular
reflectivity and optical transmissivity, the combination of said levels
being indicative of different data and imperfection conditions of the
medium, said levels from said detector means being first converted to
ratiometric values in accordance with the strength of said incident laser
beam.
2. The system of claim 1 wherein said quantity of the light received is
light amplitude.
3. The system of claim 1 further defined by an infrared laser generating
said incident laser beam.
4. A laser system for discriminating between data and foreign matter of
imperfections on an optical data medium comprising,
a data medium having a high reflectivity surface layer and a light
absorptive underlayer, the medium having prerecorded data of a first
absorptivity and user recorded data of a second absorptivity, and
imperfections having a third absorptivity, each of the data and the
imperfections having different combinations of specularly reflected and
optically transmitted beam components with respect to an incident laser
beam,
a laser having a beam directed onto said medium via a first optical path, a
first portion of the beam being transmitted through the medium and
impinging on a first detector, a second portion of the beam being
specularly reflected from the medium via a second optical path having part
of the path in common with the first optical path but diverging at a beam
splitter disposed to transmit the specularly reflected beam to a second
detector,
a correlation means connected to the first and second detectors for
comparing signal levels, as represented by ratiometric values in
accordance with the strength of said incident laser beam, from the first
and second detectors with stored reference levels of specular reflectivity
and optical transmissivity, the combination of said levels being
indicative of different data and imperfection conditions of the medium.
5. The laser system of claim 4 wherein the medium comprises a substrate, a
partially transmissive, partially reflective layer over the substrate and
a silver-halide emulsion, processed black, on the back side of the
substrate.
6. The laser system of claim 5 wherein the processed black emulsion on the
back side of the substrate incorporates a line pattern.
7. The laser system of claim 5 wherein the reflective layer is derived from
a silver-halide emulsion having prerecorded data areas developed black and
data areas for laser recording processed to a partially reflective state.
8. The laser system of claim 4 wherein said data medium has prerecorded
data areas having lower reflectivity and higher transmissivity
characteristics than non-data areas.
9. A method for discriminating between data and foreign matter or
imperfections on a partially specular reflective, partially transmissive
optical data medium comprising,
providing a partially specular reflective, partially transmissive optical
data medium having different combinations of specular reflectivity and
optical transmissivity characteristics for prerecorded data, user recorded
data and imperfections with respect to an incident laser beam,
simultaneously detecting reflected and transmitted beam components
resulting from said incident laser beam,
correlating with specularly reflected and transmitted beam components after
conversion to ratio-metric values with stored reference levels of specular
reflectivity and optical transmissivity, the combination of said levels
indicating different data and imperfection conditions of the medium.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein said optical data medium is provided with
prerecorded data areas having lower reflectivity and higher transmissivity
characteristics than non-data areas. |
|
|
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
Description  |
|
|
TECHNICAL FIELD
The invention relates to data recovery from a storage medium, and in
particular to recovery of data from an optical storage medium having
different optical characteristics for prerecorded and user recorded data.
BACKGROUND ART
Laser recording and data storage material having different optical
characteristics are known. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,284,716 to J.
Drexler and E. Bouldin, assigned to the assignee of the present invention,
for "Broadband Reflective Laser Recording and Data Storage Medium with
Absorptive Underlayer," describes a broadband reflective laser recording
and data storage medium for direct reading after writing. It is formed
from the conversion of a photosensitive silver halide emulsion into a
reflective, stable silver-gelatin coated substrate in which the
silver-gelatin coating is easily pitted by impingement of a laser beam.
The chemical conversion of the raw silver-halide emulsion material into the
laser recording material described in the patent requires four steps.
First, a non-saturating actinic radiation exposure is used to define areas
for user data recording. A normal photographic development is used to
produce a medium of gray neutral density. The surface of the remaining
silver halide is chemically fogged in a water or alcohol base solution to
create a very thin layer of silver precipitating nuclei on the surface.
Finally, a single step, negative silver diffusion transfer process is used
to dissolve the unexposed and undeveloped silver halide, forming silver
ion complexes. These complexes are transported by diffusion transfer to
the sites of the silver precipitating nuclei and the filamentary silver.
The resulting reflective coating has a high concentration of
non-filamentary silver particles at the surface of a low melting
temperature colloid matrix. This matrix forms an underlayer which is
partially absorptive to light. The reflective surface layer and absorptive
underlayer have a composite reflectivity ranging between 50% and 30%, a
transmissivity in the range of 10% to 0.1% of the light actually entering
the surface of the medium and an absorptivity within the range of 90% to
99.9% of the light actually entering the surface of the medium.
Writing of data on the medium is accomplished by creation of low
reflectivity spots in a reflective field. This is done either through
laser writing, through hole melting in the reflective medium or
photographic prerecording by light exposure and black development.
Laser writing on this recording material is accomplished by melting holes
or pits in the reflective surface with a low power laser. A laser beam or
focussed light beam is used for reading recorded data. The beam impinges
on the recorded pits with greatly reduced specular reflection due to
scattering and absorption by the pitted underlayer. The reductions in
reflectivity are measured by a detector and converted to electrical
impulses corresponding to data.
One of the advantages of this medium is that it also can be
photographically prerecorded. In the first non-saturating exposure step a
pattern can be formed by exposure through a mask or scanning light source,
which are processing, yields two different surface reflectivities. This
pattern resides both in the reflective layer and in the underlayer, below
the reflective surface layer, or in laterally adjacent areas.
One of the problems which occurs in reading reflected light from pits in
the medium is that it is not possible to distinguish between a pit or hole
having low surface reflectivity due to scattering and absorption of light,
and black prerecorded silver which also has low surface reflectivity or
high light absorption. It is also difficult to distinguish between these
two kinds of data and certain types of material defects, including foreign
particulate matter and material inhomogeneities which create spots of low
reflectivity by either light scattering or absorption.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,145,758 to J. Drexler and C. Betz, assigned to the assignee
of the present invention for "Error Checking Method and Apparatus for
Digital Data in Optical Recording Systems" describes a data reading system
wherein digital data is written onto a transmissive medium, such as a
photoplate, by a modulated laser whose beam is detected by a first
photodetector means which measures laser output directed toward the
recording medium. A second photodetector means measures light scattering
from the medium, while a third photodetector detects and measures light
transmitted through the recording layer of the medium surface to confirm
recording of the data. Amounts of transmitted light or scattered light
from the medium during the recording process are correlated to the laser
output into expected values of light for detecting errors in recording
immediately after the time of recording. This error detection system is
intended for light transmissive media and would not be used in reading
reflective media. The defects are detectable by the apparatus before laser
recordings themselves are detectable.
An object of the present invention is to distinguish in reading the data
between laser recorded pits or holes and photographically prerecorded data
in the form of black silver areas in a field of reflective silver. Another
objective of the invention is to distinguish between laser recorded data
on the reflective optical data storage media of the metallic film type or
metal organic composites and light absorptive foreign particles in the
recording media. Another object is to distinguish between light absorptive
photographically prerecorded data and light absorptive foreign particles
in the recording media.
DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION
The above objects have been achieved with a laser system capable of
distinguishing optical data on optical storage disks, optical cards or
optical tape of the type having a plurality of distinguishing optical
characteristics which are interpreted by simultaneous measurements of
specular reflectivity and optical transmissivity. The different optical
characteristics are associated with different types of previously recorded
data in different lateral portions of the medium. Different optical
characteristics are also associated with foreign particles in the medium
as distinct from those representing recorded data.
In reflective silver-based recording media of the type described in U.S.
Pat. Nos. 4,278,756 and 4,284,716 data is photographically prerecorded in
certain areas prior to formation of the reflective silver laser recorded
data in other areas. Photographically prerecorded data may be black or
have a duller silver appearance having higher transmissive optical density
to infrared than the unrecorded reflective surface and lower specular
reflectivity to infrared and visible light. Laser recorded data,
consisting of pits penetrating a highly reflective field or surface layer,
have a lowered transmissive optical density than the unrecorded reflective
surface since the pits penetrate part way through the medium and lower
specular reflectivity owing partly to the pits scattering light. Foreign
particulate matter in the surface will reduce both the composite surface
reflectivity and the light transmissivity of the medium. By the
photographically prerecorded data greatly reducing the light
transmissivity of the medium to infrared and the laser recorded holes
increasing the light transmissivity to infrared, the presence of foreign
particulate matter can be identified by its intermediate transmissivity.
Simultaneously, foreign particulate matter produces higherreflectivity
than either photographically prerecorded or laser recorded user data, but
not as much as the reflective field in which laser recorded user data is
located. By simultaneously measuring light reflection at a point and light
transmission through the medium at that point, photographic prerecorded
data, laser recorded user data and foreign particulate matter may be
distinguished from one another and thereby identified.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a top plan view of a laser recording medium in accord with the
present invention.
FIG. 2 is a side sectional view of an optical information record medium for
use with the system of the present invention.
FIG. 3 is a side sectional view of an alternate optical information record
medium for use with the system of the present invention.
FIG. 4 is a detail top view of the record medium of FIG. 1.
FIG. 5 is an optical data disk reading system in accord with the present
invention.
FIG. 6 is a diagram of a scheme for correlating reflected and transmitted
beam components.
FIG. 7 is an optical data card reading system in accord with the present
invention.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
In FIG. 1 an optical recording medium is shown to be a disk 10 having a
central aperture 12 and an outer edge 14. The medium need not be a disk,
but could also be a card. The description of a disk is merely exemplary.
Data is recorded in circular tracks 16 partially shown in enlarged detail.
Both user data and prerecorded data are stored on the disk, in different
lateral areas, as discussed with reference to FIG. 4.
With reference to FIG. 2, an optical recording medium is preferably a laser
recordable medium of the kind described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,284,716.
Briefly, the two-layer medium described in the patent is made as follows.
The surface of a fine grained silver-halide emulsion photo-sensitive
medium, for example a Lippman emulsion, is exposed briefly to a
low-to-moderate level of actinic radiation. A mask is used for creating a
prerecorded pattern, for example a servo track pattern in different
lateral areas from user data areas. This exposed silver halide is then
developed to an optical density of 0.05 to 2.0, as measured with red light
of a photographic densitometer. This gelatin layer containing filamentary
silver particles exhibits an optical density of typically 0.05 to 0.8 for
a 3 micron emulsion and 0.1 to 1.5 for a 6 micron emulsion. After this
initial processing step, the emulsion layer is gray in appearance, but a
large amount of the silver halide in the emulsion remains unaltered. A
very thin layer of unexposed silver halide at the surface of this
partially developed emulsion layer is then chemically fogged to form a
very dense layer of silver precipitating nuclei at that surface. The
fogged medium is finally subjected to a negative silver diffusion transfer
step wherein the silver halide in the emulsion is solvated to form soluble
silver complexes. These silver complexes are precipitated on the silver
precipitating nuclei to form a reflective layer comprising non-filamentary
silver particles which aggregate with the filamentary silver. The degree
of reflectivity of the surface may be adjusted over a range of values
depending upon the ratios of the two types of silver, but should be about
40%. This same mechanism also causes some of the silver ion complex to
precipitate on the filamentary silver in the absorptive underlayer,
increasing the optical density to red light of this already developed
underlayer typically by at least a factor of two increase in light
absorption.
The final result of these two exposure/development sequences is a superior
reflective laser recording medium which is comprised of a very thin layer
of reflective but non-electrically conducting reduced non-filamentary
silver and a much smaller amount of filamentary silver, under which lies a
highly absorptive layer consisting primarily of filamentary silver in a
gelatin matrix. This absorptive underlayer typically has a final optical
density to red light of between 0.2 to 3.0. The original silver-halide
emulsion photosensitive medium which eventually results in the above
described reflective laser recording medium is usually coated on either a
plastic or glass substrate. The reflective surface has a reflectivity to
red light of 40% for a typical sample.
Laser recording on this reflective surface can be made very efficient. The
absorptive filamentary silver particles in the reflective layer can be
increased until the minimum acceptable reflectivity is reached. These
filamentary particles are absorptive over a very wide spectrum range from
ultraviolet to near infrared, permitting a wide variety of lasers to be
used for recording. Also, the light energy that is not absorbed by the
reflective layer is substantially absorbed by the underlayer which causes
a rise of temperature at the interface of the reflective layer and
underlayer, thereby facilitating the melting of the reflective layer.
Recording is accomplished by use of a laser beam to melt the gelatin at a
spot in the reflective layer, thereby reducing the specular reflectivity
at the spot. Before recording, the reflectivity of the reflective layer is
specular; in other words incident light perpendicular to the surface will
be reflected back towards its origin in a parallel line. After recording,
perpendicular incident light will be diffusely reflected because the light
returning towards the source will be scattered as opposed to parallel.
This latter effect and the increased absorptivity at the spot lead to a
lowered specular reflectivity. The absorptive underlayer would be only
slightly penetrated by the recording process. None of the silver in either
layer is melted during the recording process.
Such a medium may be seen in FIG. 2. A glass or plastic substrate 11 has a
very thin Lippman emulsion 13 processed as briefly described above and as
described more fully in the aforementioned U.S. Pat. No. 4,284,716. This
emulsion has an upper layer 15 which is highly reflective and an
underlayer 17 which is highly absorptive. In FIG. 2 the two layers are
separated by a boundary 19, but this is only for purposes of illustration.
In practice, there is a smooth transition between the highly reflective
upper layer 15 and the highly absorptive underlayer 17, with no
discontinuous boundary therebetween. Upper layer 15 consists primarily of
non-filamentary silver particles which are roughly spherical in shape,
while the underlayer 17 consists of filamentary silver particles which are
elongated in shape. In both layers, the particles are suspended in
gelatin. Usually, the volume concentration of silver particles in the
reflective layer 15 is a minimum of 20% and a maximum of 50%.
In the event that it is desired to enhance the optical density of the
material, the configuration of FIG. 3 may be used. Substrate 21, a glass
or plastic sheet, has an emulsion 23 identical to emulsion 13, beneath
reflective layer 25. An additional feature of the recording medium of FIG.
3 is a black developed emulsion, preferably a Lippman emulsion 29, on the
opposite side of substrate 21 from emulsion 23. The backside layer 29 is
chemically developed so that the silver therein is primarily black
filamentary silver with an optical density between perhaps 0.2 and 3.0
after development. A pattern may be incorporated into this layer for
security purposes, such as a repetitive line pattern. Such a pattern could
be taken into account by the detection system and serve to deter forgery
since a medium coated on both sides would usually not be a stock material,
but would be specially manufactured.
With reference to FIG. 4 a pair of data tracks 31 and 33 are shown to be
laterally spaced between prerecorded guide tracks 32, 34 and 36. These
guide tracks may be photographically prerecorded black silver with edges
38 having an undulating character which may serve to modulate a light beam
at a distinctive frequency. The servo tracks define the data tracks as
lanes or tracks laterally between servo tracks. Within track 31 dark spots
41 may be seen. These dark marks represent prerecorded data which may be
control information, database data, or the like. The oval marks 43
represent pits in the reflective surface layer of the disk made by pitting
the surface layer with bursts of laser energy.
The dashed line 45 represents the size of a laser beam for reading either
prerecorded or user data. The beam is less than the width of a track and
on the same order of magnitude as the size of a data bit. Preferably, a
semiconductor laser with an infrared beam is used. Infrared is superior
because of its ability to pentrate dirt particles.
With reference to FIG. 5 a data recovery system in accord with the present
invention is shown. An optical source, such as a laser 61 has a beam 63
directed to recording medium 65 constructed in accord with the medium
construction described with reference to FIG. 2. Such a medium may be
adapted for rotation on a spindle 67 or may be a stationary data card read
by a scanning optical system. Light beam 63 is directed toward the medium
65 and two optical signals are derived after the beam impinges on the
medium. Specularly reflected light is deflected by the partially
transmissive mirror 69 toward detector 71, which detects the amplitude of
reflected beam component 73. Transmitted beam component 75 is delivered to
another detector 77 so that the amplitude of the transmitted component can
be converted to a proportional electrical signal in a similar manner as
detector 71 converts the reflected beam component 73 to a proportional
electrical signal. The Table below indicates the manner in which the
surface reflectivity and optical density can be used to separate
prerecorded and user data and to isolate the presence of particulates, so
that only unambiguous user or prerecorded data will be read by the system.
TABLE
__________________________________________________________________________
Typical Light Transmission
Typical Surface Reflectivity
Opitical Density
(Red or Infrared light normal
(Red or Infrared light normal
Surface Condition
to surface) to surface)
__________________________________________________________________________
Surface processed as
40% 1.5
described-recording field
A.
Recorded data pit
8% 0.7
in field
B.
Foreign particulate
5-15% 2.0
matter in field
C.
Prerecorded black silver
8% 3.0
through emulsion (Fig. 2)
D.
Black silver on back
40% 4.5
of norma1 surface
or field (Fig. 3)
E.
Inhomogeneity in
20-30% 1.0
metal/organic
reflective composite
(surface)
__________________________________________________________________________
The prerecorded data may be distinguished from pits indicative of user data
in the reflective surface because in transmission the typical optical
density difference is 3.0 compared to 0.7, even though surface
reflectivities are similar. Particulate matter or dirt may be
distinguished because although the reflectivity caused by particulates may
resemble prerecorded data, a dirt particle has an optical density of 2.0
compared to 0.7 for data and 3.0 for a prerecorded dark spot. For a medium
processed in accord with FIG. 3, optical densities could be made even
greater for further separation of user and prerecorded data on the one
hand and particulates on the other hand.
In FIG. 5, a third detector 72 samples the output of laser source 61 by
receiving an incident beam component 74 from mirror 69. Detector 72
converts the optical signal to a proportional electrical signal. It is
important to sample the strength of the incident beam in order to convert
the electrical signals from detectors 71 and 77 to ratios for percentages
of the incident light. Since the incident beam must equal the amount of
light transmitted plus the amount of light reflected plus the amount of
light absorbed by the medium, percentages may be readily calculated by a
computer, or manually if necessary. Since the amount of light absorbed by
the medium can be determined experimentally, during calibration
procedures, the task of converting the signals received in detectors 71
and 77 to percentages is straightforward, so long as the source remains
constant. By detecting source component 74, the incident beam strength can
be monitored for any departure from calibration values. Consider the
intensity of the laser beam to be I.sub.B. What is reflected is I.sub.B r
where r is the total reflectivity (specular reflection plus scattering).
What enters the surface is I.sub.B (1 -r) and what is transmitted through
the medium is I.sub.B (1-r)t where t is the transmissivity. The laser beam
power absorbed in the media is I.sub.B (1-r)(1-t).
With reference to FIG. 6, the two detectors 71 and 77 have electrical
outputs 81 and 83 respectively. These outputs are electrically connected
through analog-to-digital converters, not shown, to computer 85 indicated
by a dashed line. Within the computer is a program which converts the
signals detected from detectors 71 and 77 from signal intensities to
ratiometric or percentage values.
Computer 85 contains internal programs for comparing the digital signals
derived from detectors 71 and 77. Comparisons are made to determine in
block 91 whether surface reflectivity exceeds 18%. A second determination,
illustrated diagramatically in block 93 is whether optical density exceeds
1.7. A third determination, illustrated diagramatically by block 95, is
whether optical density exceeds 2.5. These determinations are necessary
for ascertaining which of the conditions existing in the Table applies to
the detected signals. Condition A in the Table, detection of a recorded
pit, exists when the three tests indicated by blocks 91, 93 and 95 are all
negative. Condition B in the Table, detection of a foreign particle,
exists when blocks 91 and 95 are negative and block 93 is affirmative.
Condition C in the Table, detection of prerecorded black silver, exists
when block 91 is negative and blocks 93 and 95 are affirmative. Condition
D in the Table, detection of black silver on back of normal surface,
exists when blocks 91, 93 and 95 are all affirmative. These determinations
are made instantaneously by logic circuits which respond to incoming data
at the data rate. Condition E in the Table, detection of an inhomogeneity
in the metal/organic reflective surface composite, exists when blocks 93
and 95 are negative and 91 is affirmative.
With reference to FIG. 7, a data card 101 is of the type having a
reflective layer 103 on the underside of the card, not visible in the
figure. The layer and the underlayer supporting it has a composite
reflectivity ranging between 50% and 30% and a transmissivity in the range
of 10% to 0.1% of the light actually entering the surface of the medium.
The absorptivity of this material is within the range of 90% to 99.9% of
light actually entering the surface of the medium. The cross section of
the material may resemble the recording medium of FIG. 2 or FIG. 3. A
laser, such as the semiconductor laser 105 directs a beam 107 along an
optical path including focussing lens 109, beam splitter 111, mirror 113,
quarter wave plate 115 and focussing optics 117 onto an impingement point
119 on the medium. A first portion of the beam, 121 travels through the
card and to the first detector 123 where the optical signal is converted
to a proportional electrical signal. A second portion 125 of the beam is
reflected from spot 119. The dashed line is indicative of the reflected
beam portion. This second beam portion is parallel to the incident beam
107 between reflective layer 103 and beam splitter 111 since specular
reflection occurs at the impingement point 119. Beam portion 125 travels
through beam splitter 111 to prism 127 and then to the second detector 129
where the reflected light beam portion is converted to a proportional
electrical signal.
Prior to reading data, correlation measurements are made using the system
of FIG. 7 to record first and second detector signals for pits in the card
created by laser writing, thin spots in the reflective surface layer and
low reflectivity spots caused by particulate matter at the point of beam
impingement. These conditions give rise to surface conditions similar to
those described in the Table. The electrical signals from the detectors
are transmitted to correlation registers of the type illustrated and
described with reference to FIG. 6. From this correlation means, a
decision may be made regarding which of the conditions illustrated in the
Table is applicable, in real time, for signals being received from the
detectors 123 and 129.
It will be realized that to read the medium 101, the card may be moved in
the direction indicated by arrow A or the incident beam may be deflected
by a beam scanner mechanism, not illustrated.
By comparing the reflected and transmitted beam components, errors in
reading data may be substantially reduced. The effect of dirt particles
and the like, as well as media defects, may be substantially reduced and
the signal-to-noise ratio of optical data recording media increased or
equivalently the error rate is reduced.
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
Description  |
|