Optical pickup device having chromatic aberration correction lens
An optical pickup device includes a light source to emit light, an objective lens to focus the light on a recording medium to form a light spot, an optical path changer on an optical path between the light source and the objective lens to change the path of incident light, a chromatic aberration correction lens disposed on an optical path between the light source and the objective lens, and a photodetector to receive light which is reflected from the recording medium and is then incident thereon through the optical path changer. The chromatic aberration correction lens corrects a chromatic aberration occurring due to a change in the wavelength and/or due to an increase in a wavelength bandwidth of the light. The chromatic aberration correction lens includes at least two lenses such that a lens having a positive power and a lens having a negative power are adjacent to each other.
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This application is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/097,287, filed Apr. 4, 2005, now pending, which is the divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/883,492, filed Jun. 19, 2001, now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,987,724, which claims the benefit of Korean Patent Application No. 2000-55477, filed Sep. 21, 2000, in the Korean Industrial Property Office, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an optical pickup device, and more particularly, to an optical pickup device having a chromatic aberration correction lens to correct a chromatic aberration caused by a change in a wavelength and/or an increase in a wavelength bandwidth of light emitted from a light source, occurring when changing a recording/reproducing power output.
2. Description of the Related Art
The recording capacity of an optical recording and reproducing apparatus is determined by the size S of a light spot formed on an optical disc by the objective lens of an optical pickup device. Generally, the size S of the light spot is proportional to a wavelength λ and is inversely proportional to a numerical aperture (NA). Accordingly, to obtain a higher information recording density than that obtained on conventional optical discs such as CDs or DVDs, an optical pickup device (hereinafter, referred to as a high density optical pickup device) used for next generation DVDs (hereinafter, referred to as HD-DVDs) under development is anticipated to use a light source emitting blue light and an objective lens having a NA of at least 0.6, to reduce the size of the light spot formed on the optical disc.
However, an optical material such as glass or plastic used as the material of the objective lens in the conventional optical pickup device has a very steep change in refractivity in a wavelength band shorter than 650 nm. Table 1 shows changes in refractivity of M-BaCD5N, which is manufactured by Hoya and is used as a glass material for molding the objective lens, according to a wavelength.
As seen from Table 1, an optical material has a change in refractivity with respect to a small wavelength change of about 1 nm in a short blue wavelength band, for example, a 405 nm wavelength band, four times larger than in a 650 nm wavelength used in a conventional DVD optical pickup device. Such a steep change in refractivity of the optical material with respect to blue light causes a high density optical recording and reproducing apparatus using a blue light source to be defocused, thereby degrading performance.
In other words, an optical recording and reproducing apparatus uses different recording light power and reproducing light power. This change in the light output power between recording and reproduction causes the wavelength change. For example, in the case of the blue light source, the change in the wavelength is about 0.5-1 nm. Usually, when the output of the light source increases, the wavelength of light emitted from the light source is longer. Accordingly, the high density optical pickup device using blue light has a large chromatic aberration in the objective lens designed for a reference wavelength due to the change in the wavelength during switching between recording light output power and reproducing light output power, causing defocus.
For example, as shown in
Although defocus caused by the change in the wavelength can be corrected by adjusting the objective lens, it takes a relatively long time to actuate the objective lens using an actuator and to follow the change in the wavelength, and during this time, the quality of a recorded or reproduced signal is degraded. Defocus occurring when output power increases for recording results in a lack of recording light power, and defocus occurring when output power decreases for reproduction increases jitter.
In other words, when the output power of the light source increases when recording information on the optical disc, the wavelength of light emitted from the light source is relatively long, for example, 406 nm, so that the light spot formed on the optical disc is defocused. Until the actuator is adjusted in response to the defocus, recording cannot be performed. Then, when the output power of the light source decreases for reproduction, the wavelength of light emitted from the light source is relatively short, for example, 405 nm. Since the actuator has been adjusted with respect to the lengthened wavelength, the light spot is defocused again. As shown in
Moreover, when the light source is actuated at a high frequency (HF) to reduce feedback noise of the light source due to light reflected from the optical disc to the light source, a wavelength bandwidth of the light source increases, resulting in chromatic aberration, and this chromatic aberration degrades the reproduced signal.
Accordingly, a high density recordable optical pickup device capable of recording and reproducing repeatedly is required to have an optical system capable of suppressing or correcting chromatic aberration resulting from a change in the wavelength of light emitted from the light source due to the change in output power between recording and reproduction. Japanese Patent Publication No. hei 9-311271 discloses a structure employing a refraction/diffraction-monolithic-type objective lens to correct chromatic aberration resulting from a change in wavelength. A conventional refraction/diffraction-monolithic-type objective lens is an aspheric lens whose surface receiving or emitting light is aspheric. Diffraction patterns are integrally formed on this aspheric surface so that a refractive lens and a diffraction lens are integrated into a single lens.
The refraction/diffraction-monolithic-type objective lens is designed to satisfy (1+VHOE/V)(n2−1)>0.572 when it is assumed that refractivities of the lens at a central wavelength λ1, a minimum wavelength λ2 and a maximum wavelength λ3 of light emitted from a semiconductor laser are n1, n2 and n3, and that the Abbe numbers of the refractive lens and the diffraction lens are V=(n2−1)/(n1−n3) and VHOE=λ2(λ1−λ3), respectively. Accordingly, the conventional refraction/diffraction-monolithic-type objective lens has a numerical aperture of at least 0.7 and can remove chromatic aberration due to the change in the wavelength of light emitted from the semiconductor laser. However, an optical pickup device employing the conventional refraction/diffraction-monolithic-type objective lens cannot obtain sufficient output power necessary for recording since optical efficiency is lowered to about 70-85% due to the properties of the diffraction lens.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONAccordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an optical pickup device to correct a chromatic aberration of an objective lens with an additional chromatic aberration correction lens having a relatively infinite focal length as compared to a focal length of the objective lens.
It is a further object of the invention to provide an optical pickup device to overcome the above-mentioned problems.
Additional aspects and/or advantages of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows and, in part, will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention.
The foregoing objects of the present invention are achieved by providing an optical pickup device including a light source to emit light; an objective lens to focus light incident from the light source on a recording medium to form a light spot; an optical path changer disposed on an optical path between the light source and the objective lens, the optical path changer to change the path of light incident from the recording medium; a chromatic aberration correction lens disposed on the optical path between the light source and the objective lens, the chromatic aberration correction lens to correct a chromatic aberration occurring due to a change in a wavelength and/or due to an increase in a wavelength bandwidth of the light emitted from the light source, the chromatic aberration correction lens including a lens having a positive power and a lens having a negative power adjacent to each other, a total focal length of the chromatic aberration correction lens being relatively infinite relative to the objective lens; and a photodetector to receive light incident from the optical path changer.
The chromatic aberration correction lens has a focal length of at least 10 m. Furthermore, the Abbe number of an optical material of which the lens having the positive power is formed, at a d-line, is larger than that of an optical material of which the lens having the negative power is formed, at the d-line.
In one embodiment, the chromatic aberration correction lens includes a first lens having a negative power and a second lens having a positive power, which are sequentially disposed from the light source, and the first and second lenses have similar power. Here, the first and second lenses are formed of glass materials, which have different Abbe numbers at a d-line and similar refractivities. The surfaces of the first and second lenses facing the light source and the objective lens, respectively, have relatively large negative radii of curvature, and the surface between the first and second lenses has a relatively small positive radius of curvature.
In another embodiment, the chromatic aberration correction lens includes a first lens having a positive power and a second lens having a negative power, which are sequentially disposed from the light source, the surfaces of the first and second lenses facing the light source and the objective lens, respectively, have positive radii of curvature, the surface between the first and second lenses has a negative radius of curvature, and all the surfaces have similar magnitudes of radii of curvature.
In still another embodiment, the chromatic aberration correction lens includes a first lens having a negative power, a second lens having a positive power and a third lens having a negative power, which are sequentially disposed from the light source. The first and third lenses are formed of glass materials, respectively, which have similar Abbe numbers at a d-line, and the second lens is formed of a glass material having an Abbe number relatively different from those of the glass materials of the first and third lenses. The surfaces of the first and third lenses facing the light source and the objective lens, respectively, have positive radii of curvature, the surface between the first and second lenses has a positive radius of curvature, and the surface between the second and third lenses has a negative radius of curvature.
Here, preferably, the chromatic aberration correction lens is designed to satisfy 0.95#ho/hi#1.05, wherein a height of the light incident on the chromatic aberration correction lens is hi, and the height of light coming out through the chromatic aberration correction lens is ho. The chromatic aberration correction lens is designed to satisfy 0<1/(f1·v1)+1/(f2·v2)+ . . . +1/(fn·vn)<0.008, wherein the focal lengths of lenses constituting the chromatic aberration correction lens and the objective lens with respect to the light source are f1, f2, . . . and fn, and the Abbe numbers of optical materials forming the lenses at a d-line are v1, v2, . . . and vn.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSThese and/or other aspects and advantages of the invention will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings of which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the present embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to the like elements throughout. The embodiments are described below in order to explain the present invention by referring to the figures.
Referring to
A blue semiconductor laser emitting light of a wavelength of at most 420 nm, for example, a wavelength of 405 nm is used as the light source 10. The semiconductor laser may be either an edge emitting laser or a vertical cavity surface emitting laser. Here, when the light source 10 emits light having a wavelength of 405 nm at reproduction power, the light source 10 emits light having a wavelength which is longer than the wavelength at the reproduction power, for example, a wavelength of 406 nm, at recording power. Due to such a change in the wavelength resulting from a change in light output power and/or an increase in the wavelength caused by driving the light source 10 with high frequency (HF), a chromatic aberration occurs in the objective lens 60. This chromatic aberration is corrected by the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 according to the present invention as will be described later.
The optical path changing unit 100 is disposed between the light source 10 and the objective lens 60 to change the path of incident light. As shown in
The objective lens 60 has a numerical aperture of at least 0.65, for example, 0.75 or 0.85, so that it can form the light spot on the high density recording medium 1, which may be an HD-DVD to record and reproduce information. Here, the objective lens 60 may have a numerical aperture of at least 0.85 when it is composed of a plurality of lenses or is of a solid immersion type. The photodetector 90 receives light reflected from the recording medium 1 and detects an information signal and an error signal.
A collimating lens 20 is disposed on the optical path between the light source 10 and the chromatic aberration correction lens 40. The collimating lens 20 condenses diverging light emitted from the light source 10 to be parallel. As shown in
When an edge emitting laser is used as the light source 10, a beam shaping prism 30 is disposed on the optical path between the collimating lens 20 and the optical path changing unit 100 so that recording of information is possible even with low power. Although not shown in
Here, reference numeral 80 denotes a sensing lens 80. For example, when a focus error signal is detected by an astigmatism method, the sensing lens 80 is an astigmatism lens to include an astigmatism into the incident light.
The chromatic aberration correction lens 40 according to the present invention comprises at least two lenses such that a lens having a positive power and a lens having a negative power are disposed to be adjacent to each other. Here, the Abbe number of an optical material, of which the lens having the positive power is formed, at a d-line, exceeds that of an optical material, of which the lens having the negative power is formed, at the d-line.
When the focal lengths of the lenses with respect to the light source 10 are f1, f2, . . . , and the Abbe numbers of the optical materials forming the lenses at the d-line are v1, v2, . . . , a condition to correct the chromatic aberration is usually expressed by
Considering this condition, the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 according to the present invention is designed, as will be described later in detailed embodiments, such that it satisfies the condition that
is approximately 0, that is, it satisfies the range given by Equation (1) thereby effectively correcting the chromatic aberration of the objective lens 60.
When the optical pickup device 105 according to the present invention includes the collimating lens 20, as shown in
indicating the correction degree of the chromatic aberration are the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 and the objective lens 60.
The chromatic aberration correction lens 40 according to the present invention as described above has a relatively infinite focal length, for example, a focal length of at least 10 m, as compared with the objective lens 60, so that it has optical power close to 0.
Hereinafter, detailed embodiments of the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 according to the present invention and the optical design data for the objective lens 60 and the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 will be described in detail. In the following embodiments, an optical pickup device according to the present invention includes the collimating lens 20 so that parallel light is incident on the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 or on the objective lens 60, and optical data suitable for a reference wavelength of 405 nm is used as an example.
First, in the case where the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 according to the present invention is not used, the degree of aberration occurring in the objective lens 60 is observed when the wavelength of light emitted from the light source 10 changes from the reference wavelength of 405 nm into a wavelength of 406 nm. When the objective lens 60 has a numerical aperture of 0.75 with respect to the reference wavelength of 405 nm, referring to
Table 3 shows the conic constants and aspheric coefficients of the aspheric surfaces 1 and 2 of the objective lens 60.
Here, when a depth from the apex of an aspheric surface is represented by “z”, the depth z can be expressed by Equation (2).
Here, h is a height from an optical axis, c is a curvature, K is a conic coefficient, and A through J are aspheric coefficients.
The diameter of an incident pupil of parallel light on the objective lens 60 configured as described above is 3.9 mm, and the focal length of the objective lens 60 is about 3.0000 mm.
Referring to
In the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 having the above structure according to the first embodiment of the present invention, the focal length of the first lens 41 is −3.790843 mm, the focal length of the second lens 45 is 3.892900 mm, and the total focal length of the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 is about 171.985311426 m. The incident pupil diameter of the objective lens 60 is 3.9 mm. According to the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 and the objective lens 60 having the optical design data shown in Table 4,
approximates to 0, that is,
Therefore, the chromatic aberration occurring in the objective lens 60 due to a change in the wavelength of light emitted from the light source 10 when the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 is not used, as shown in
Referring to
In the chromatic aberration correction lens 140 having the above structure according to the second embodiment of the present invention, the focal length of the first lens 141 is 5.112121 mm, the focal length of the second lens 145 is −4.157561 mm, and the total focal length of the chromatic aberration correction lens 140 is about 109.823479554 m. The incident pupil diameter of the objective lens 60 is 4.8 mm. According to the chromatic aberration correction lens 140 and the objective lens 60 having the optical design data shown in Table 5,
approximates to 0, that is,
Consequently, in the case where the optical system structure of
Referring to
In the chromatic aberration correction lens 240 having the above structure according to the third embodiment of the present invention, the focal length of the first lens 241 is 26.405720 mm, the focal length of the second lens 243 is 6.440303 mm, the focal length of the third lens 245 is −6.937722, and the total focal length of the chromatic aberration correction lens 240 is about 116.040546093 m. The incident pupil diameter of the objective lens 60 is 5.0 mm. According to the chromatic aberration correction lens 240 and the objective lens 60 having the optical design data shown in Table 6,
approximates to 0, that is,
In other words, chromatic aberration occurring in the objective lens 60 can be almost removed when the chromatic aberration correction lens 240 according to this embodiment is used, similar to the case of using the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 according to the first embodiment of the present invention. Consequently, in the case where the optical system structure of
The chromatic aberration correction lenses 40, 140 and 240 according to the first through third embodiments of the present invention described above are designed to be suitable for a high density optical pickup device, which includes the objective lens 60 having a numerical aperture of 0.75 and is suitable for the recording medium 1 having a thickness of 0.6 mm. Even if the numerical aperture of the objective lens 60 and the thickness of the recording medium 1 change, the chromatic aberration can be effectively corrected as in the above three embodiments just by appropriately changing the optical design data of each of the chromatic aberration correction lenses 40, 140 and 240. In other words, when a high density optical pickup device according to the present invention is designed to form a light spot on a recording medium 1 having a thickness of smaller than 0.6 mm with an objective lens 60 having a numerical aperture of larger than 0.75, each of the chromatic aberration correction lenses 40, 140 and 240 having structures according to the first through third embodiments of the present invention is newly designed to be suitable for the conditions of the objective lens 60 and the recording medium 1.
For example, when an optical pickup device 105 according to the present invention is designed such that an objective lens 60′ having a numerical aperture of 0.85 with respect to the reference wavelength of 405 nm focuses incident parallel light on a recording medium 1′ having a thickness of 0.1 mm to form a light spot, the optical structure and the optical design data of the objective lens 60′ and the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 according to the first embodiment are changed as shown in
The objective lens 60′ is a bi-convex lens whose both surfaces are aspheric. Table 8 shows the conic constants and aspheric coefficients of the aspheric surfaces S4 and S5 of the objective lens 60′.
The incident pupil diameter of light incident on the objective lens 60′ in parallel is 3.03 mm, and the focal length of the objective lens 60′ is about 1.782400 mm.
Like the chromatic aberration correction lens 40 according to the first embodiment of the present invention described above with reference to
When the chromatic aberration correction lens 340 having the above structure is configured to be suitable for the objective lens 60′ having a numerical aperture of 0.85 and the recording medium 1′ having a thickness of 0.1 mm based on the optical data shown in Table 7, the focal length of the first lens 341 is −3.45806 mm, the focal length of the second lens 345 is 3.460852 mm, and the total focal length of the chromatic aberration correction lens 340 is about −53.801051977 m. According to the chromatic aberration correction lens 340 and the objective lens 60′ having the optical design data shown in Tables 7 and 8, approximate to 0, that is,
As is known from the above detailed embodiments, in a high density optical pickup device employing a chromatic aberration correction lens according to the present invention,
has a value which is close to 0 and satisfies the range defined by Equation (1). In addition, a chromatic aberration correction lens according to the present invention has an optical power of nearly 0 and an infinite focal length of at least 10 m. Accordingly, when the height of light incident on the chromatic aberration correction lens is hi, and the height of light coming out through the chromatic aberration correction lens is ho, the chromatic aberration correction lens satisfies 0.95#ho/hi#1.05. Consequently, a chromatic aberration correction lens according to the present invention can correct chromatic aberration occurring in an objective lens due to a change in a wavelength resulting from a change in the light output power of the light source 10 and/or due to an increase in a wavelength bandwidth caused by driving the light source 10 with HF, and is advantageous in that it can be simply added to an optical pickup device without changing the optical system structure of the optical pickup device.
As described above, a high density optical pickup device according to the present invention is provided with a chromatic aberration correction lens having an infinite focal length as compared to an objective lens and corrects chromatic aberration using the refraction of optical materials, thereby having a high light efficiency. In addition, an optical pickup device according to the present invention is provided with a collimating lens to change diverging light emitted from a light source into parallel light and a separate chromatic aberration correction lens, thereby recording information with light of relatively low power. Moreover, since a chromatic aberration correction lens has an optical power of nearly 0, it can be simply installed without changing the optical system structure.
Although a few embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it would be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made in this embodiment without departing from the principles and spirit of the invention, the scope of which is defined in the claims and their equivalents.
Claims
1. A single objective lens for an optical pickup device, the single objective lens having a numerical aperture (NA) of 0.85 or more, wherein both lens surfaces of the single objective lens are aspherical.
2. The single objective lens of claim 1, wherein the numerical aperture (NA) is equal to or greater than 0.85 with respect to light having a wavelength of 420 nm or less.
3. The single objective lens of claim 1, wherein the numerical aperture (NA) is 0.85.
4. The single objective lens of claim 3, wherein depths z from aspherical vertices of the both lens surfaces are respectively expressed by Equation 1: z = c h 2 1 + 1 - ( 1 + K ) c 2 h 2 + A h 4 + B h 6 + C h 8 + D h 10 + E h 12 + F h 14 + G h 16 + H h 18 + J h 20, ( 2 ) where h is a height from an optical axis, c is a curvature, K is a conic coefficient, and A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, and J are aspherical coefficients.
5. The single objective lens of claim 1, wherein depths z from aspherical vertices of the both lens surfaces are respectively expressed by Equation 1: z = c h 2 1 + 1 - ( 1 + K ) c 2 h 2 + A h 4 + B h 6 + C h 8 + D h 10 + E h 12 + F h 14 + G h 16 + H h 18 + J h 20, ( 2 ) where h is a height from an optical axis, c is a curvature, K is a conic coefficient, and A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, and J are aspherical coefficients.
6. The single objective lens of claim 3, wherein the single objective lens is formed of glass or plastics.
7. The single objective lens of claim 1, wherein the single objective lens is formed of glass or plastics.
8. An optical pickup device comprising the single objective lens of claim 1.
9. The optical pickup device of claim 8, wherein the numerical aperture (NA) of the single objective lens is equal to or greater than 0.85 with respect to light having a wavelength of 420 nm or less.
10. The optical pickup device of claim 8, wherein the numerical aperture (NA) of the single objective lens is 0.85.
11. The optical pickup device of claim 10, further comprising a light source for emitting light having a wavelength of 420 nm or less.
12. The optical pickup device of claim 8, wherein depths z from aspherical vertices of the both lens surfaces of the single objective lens are respectively expressed by Equation 1 z = c h 2 1 + 1 - ( 1 + K ) c 2 h 2 + A h 4 + B h 6 + C h 8 + D h 10 + E h 12 + F h 14 + G h 16 + H h 18 + J h 20, ( 2 ) where h is a height from an optical axis, c is a curvature, K is a conic coefficient, and A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, and J are aspherical coefficients.
13. The optical pickup device of claim 8, wherein the single objective lens is formed of glass or plastics.
14. The optical pickup device of claim 8, further comprising a light source for emitting light having a wavelength of 420 nm or less.
15. An optical recording/reproducing device comprising the optical pickup device of claim 8.
16. The optical recording/reproducing device of claim 15, wherein the numerical aperture (NA) of the single objective lens is equal to or greater than 0.85 with respect to light having a wavelength of 420 nm or less.
17. The optical recording/reproducing device of claim 15, wherein the numerical aperture (NA) of the single objective lens is 0.85.
18. The optical recording/reproducing device of claim 15, wherein depths z from aspherical vertices of the both lens surfaces of the single objective lens are respectively expressed by Equation 1: z = c h 2 1 + 1 - ( 1 + K ) c 2 h 2 + A h 4 + B h 6 + C h 8 + D h 10 + E h 12 + F h 14 + G h 16 + H h 18 + J h 20, ( 2 ) where h is a height from an optical axis, c is a curvature, K is a conic coefficient, and A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, and J are aspherical coefficients.
19. The optical recording/reproducing device of claim 15, wherein the single objective lens is formed of glass or plastics.
20. The optical recording/reproducing device of claim 15, wherein the optical pickup device further comprises a light source for emitting light having a wavelength of 420 nm or less.
Type: Application
Filed: Feb 23, 2007
Publication Date: Jul 26, 2007
Applicant: Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. (Suwon-si)
Inventors: Tae-kyung Kim (Seoul), Young-man Ahn (Suwon-si), Chong-sam Chung (Suwon-si), Hea-jung Suh (Seongnam-si)
Application Number: 11/709,737
International Classification: G11B 7/00 (20060101);