Single objective lens for use with CD or DVD optical disks
An optical disk reader or read/write system for CD or DVD formats. First and second laser diodes operating at different wavelengths have their output beams collimated and directed at a single element objective lens, and are then reflected off the disk back through the lens to a photodetector. The single element objective lens has a central aperture zone and an outer aperture zone, the central zone being profiled to operate at a first numerical aperture at approximately 0.45 and the output beam of the first laser diode is confined to the central aperture zone. The outer aperture zone together with the central aperture zone are profiled to operate at a second numerical aperture, for example 0.60 wherein the output beam of the second laser diode has ray fans extending across the full aperture of the single element objective lens. A diffractive is formed on one surface of the single element objective lens and provides sufficient aspheric surface power for spherical aberration correction as well as correction for spherochromatism. The diffractive also provides sufficient correction for spherical aberration and spherochromatism that the single element objective lens achieves diffraction-limited image quality for both CD and DVD formats.
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The present invention relates to a single objective lens that can be used with either CD optical disks or DVD optical disks. Several different formats of optical disk are known in the prior art. The two most commonly used formats are the CD and the DVD. These two optical disk formats store different data densities; the DVD uses a much smaller track and much smaller “pits” to record a higher data density. The CD (Compact Disk) appears in wide use as both a CD-DA (Company Disk-Digital Audio) and a CD-ROM (Compact Disk-Read Only Memory); the format is identical for these two species. The DVD (Digital Versatile Disk) appears in use as a digital video (movie) storage or an extended computer memory product.
Data records on both CD and DVD formats are in “pits” formed in a reflective surface of the disk. These “pits” are actually in the form of short “trenches” that lie along a track that spirals around the disk surface. The CD “pit” is typically 0.50 micrometer (uM) wide and between 0.83 to 3.05 uM long. The track pitch is 1.6 uM and the depth of the “pit” is 0.20 uM. To achieve higher data density, the DVD “pit” is typically 0.3 uM wide and between 0.40 to 1.5 uM long. The track pitch is 0.74 uM and the “pit” depth is 0.16 uM. The CD can reliably record about 650 MB of digital data whereas the DVD can reliably record about 4.7 GB of digital data on one side of the disk (both sides can be used on a DVD).
The width and depth of the CD “pit” was determined by A early optical fabrication technology which limited the objective lens to 0.45 NA (Numerical Aperture), and by early laser diode technology (a 780 nm emission line). Because cost-effective objective lenses could be made no faster than 0.45 NA (i.e. a relative aperture of f/1.11) and lower wavelength laser diode emission lines were not available, the size of a diffraction-limited laser spot image was limited to 1.0 uM at the Full-Width-Half-Maximum intensity points (FWHM). The CD “pit” depth is chosen to by one-fourth of the laser wavelength (0.20 uM) and the “pit” width is chosen to be about half the laser spot diameter (0.50 uM). This arrangement permits about half of the waterfront in the laser spot to reflect from the bottom of the “pit” and about half of the waterfront to reflect from the surface surrounding the “pit.” The two reflected components are half a wavelength out of phase so they interfere destructively. No signal is, returned to the objective lens when a “pit” is present. When no “pit” is present, the full waterfront reflects from the surrounding surface and light is returned to the objective lens.
This is the digital encoding process for most optical disks.
There are other subtle effects that this encoding process introduces such as diffraction at the edges of the pit, but the interference process is thought to be the principal phenomenon.
The newer DVD format has been enabled by two technology developments; a 650 nm laser diode has become commercially viable and 0.60 NA objective lenses have become cost-effective. The A combination of these two factors produces a diffraction-limited laser spot with 0.64 uM FWHM, so the DVD “pit” width becomes 0.32 uM and the “pit” depth becomes 0.16 uM.
Several optical disk products have been produced in the prior art that combine CD and DVD formats in the same optical reader. In order to achieve this goad, the prior art uses two laser diodes plus two lenses and moves either one set (laser diode plus objective for CD format) or the other set (laser diode plus objective for DVD format) over the disk that is to be read. No prior art single objective design is known that can operate with either the CD or DVD formats.
The invention of this application is a single lens that can operate with either the CD format (with 780 nm laser diode) or with the DVD format (with 650 nm laser diode). No moving parts are required with this invention because the appropriate laser diode can be tuned on electrically and introduced to the objective lens via a dichroic beamsplitter or a grating structure.
The first embodiment of the present invention is shown in greater detail in FIG. 5. This is a molded COC (Cyclic Olefin
Copolymer) plastic lens 20 with aspheric first surface 21 and aspheric second surface 22. This invention uses the fact that the polycaronate disk cover plate 30 varies from 0.6 mm in the DVD format 31 to 1.2 mm in the CD format 32 and that the spherical aberration introduced by the plate is twice as large for the CD format. Concurrently, the objective DVD format NA is 0.60 and introduces nearly 2.4 times the spherical aberration that the CD format 0.45 NA introduces to the system. The spherical aberration of the cover plate and the spherical aberration of the objective, therefore, work in concert for the CD and for the DVD systems to produce similar amounts of system spherical aberration. Although the amount of spherical aberration for the two systems is similar, the distribution of spherical aberration across the aperture of the lens is different for the two systems and this limits the aberration correction to a less than diffraction-limited condition. In addition, the CD and DVD systems operate at different wavelengths and the refractive index of the plastic changes with wavelength in such a way that the distribution of spherical aberration across the lens aperture also changes with wavelength. Optical designers recognize this condition as spherochromatism.
The first embodiment of this invention utilizes the discovery that a single element objective lens can be used for both CD and DVD operation because the amount of spherical aberration for the two systems is similar and can be controlled to nearly diffraction-limited levels by the correct choice of aspheric surface profiles in the central zone 25 and in the outer zone 26 of the objective.
The first surface 21 and second surface 22 shown in
-
- a first aspheric surface defined as:
- and a second surface having an aspheric profile defined as:
- a first aspheric surface defined as:
Where sag represents sagittal height, and
the vertex curvatures ρ1 and ρ2 satisfy
The preferred embodiment uses a diffractive surface on one side of the objective. Diffractive surfaces introduce an additional aberration-correction feature that refractive aspheric surfaces cannot provide. Diffractive surfaces change the wavefront differently for different wavelengths. A positive powered diffractive surface bends longer wavelength light more than shorter wavelength light. This is the opposite behavior of a refractive aspheric surface. This new aberration-correction feature permits a single element objective lens to correct most of the spherochromatism that limits the performance of a simple refractive aspheric lens.
Diffractive surfaces are known in the prior art where they are widely used to correct the chromatic aberration of a singlet operating over a board spectral band or to correct the spherical aberration of a singlet over a very narrow spectral band. The use of a diffractive surface to correct sperochromatism spherochromatism of a singlet operating at two different wavelengths is not known in the prior art.
A diffractive surface consists of microscopic grooves in the surface of an optical element. The grooves are widest at the center of the optical element and progressively decrease groove width toward the periphery of the element. The groove width is similar in magnitude to the wavelength of light being used, so the grooves act as a diffraction grating to bend the light. The bending of light is due to diffraction rather than refraction (as produced by Fresnel lenses). Because the groove widths become smaller near the element periphery, the incident wavefront bends more near the edge of the optical element than at the center and the wavefront is therefore focused by diffraction.
Because diffraction is wavelength dependent, the wavefront focusing changes with wavelength to correct chromatic aberration. Because the rate at which the groove widths change can be adjusted to make the surface behave like an aspheric refractive surface, spherical aberration can be corrected.
The first surface 121 shown in
-
- a first aspheric surface defined as:
the second surface 122 has a spherical profile on which is imposed a diffractive surface 122d. The diffractive surface 122d has a polynomial phase function with at least the second and fourth power terms non-zero where
Phase=C2r2+C4r4
- a first aspheric surface defined as:
The wavefront error is essentially zero and the more sensitive scale is needed to see any wavefront error in this plot.
Modifications of design may be made without departing from the invention. For example, the diffractive surface may be carried by the lens surface 21 closest to the disk. Various types of collimators and beam-splitters may be used as well as laser diodes of various wavelengths. Various materials may be used for the objective lens, including glass and PMMA.
Claims
1. An optical disk reader or optical read/write system capable of operating in either a comapct disk (CD) or digital versatile disk (DVD) format, comprising:
- disk support and drive means capable of supporting and driving either a compact disk having a disk substrate of thickness Y or a digital versatile disk having a disk substrate of thickness X,
- a first laser diode operating with an output beam having a first wavelength,
- a second laser diode operating with an output beam having a second wavelength different from said first wavelength,
- optical means for either directing the output beam of said first laser diode at a said compact disk when carried by said disk support and drive means or directing the output beam of said second laser diode at a said digital versatile disk when carried by said disk support and drive means,
- a single element objective lens optically positioned between said disk support and drive means on one end and said first and second laser diodes on another end,
- said single element objective lens having a central aperture zone and an outer aperture zone, said central aperture zone being profiled to operate at a first numerical aperture (NA) and said output beam of said first laser diode being optically confined to said central aperture zone,
- said outer aperture zone together with said central aperture zone being profiled to operate at a second numerical aperture (NA) and wherein said output beam of said second laser diode has ray fans extending across the full aperture of said lens, and
- diffractive means carried by said single element objective lens, said diffractive means providing sufficient aspheric surface power for spherical aberration correction and providing correction for spherochromatism.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said lens has first and second surfaces, and said first surface is located closer to said disk support and drive means than said second surface and said diffractive means is carried by said second surface.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said lens has first and second surfaces, and said first surface is located closer to said disk support and drive means than said second surface and said diffractive means is carried by said first surface.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said diffractive means provides sufficient correction for spherical aberration and for spherochromatism that said single element objective lens achieves diffraction-limited image quality for both CD and DVD formats.
5. An optical disk reader or optical read/write system capable of operating in either a compact disk (CD) or digital versatile disk (DVD) format, comprising:
- disk support and drive means capable of supporting and driving either a compact disk having a disk substrate of thickness 2X or a digital versatile disk having a disk substrate of thickness X,
- a first laser diode operating with an output beam wavelength of approximately 780 nm,
- a second laser diode operating with an output beam wavelength of approximately 650 nm,
- optical means for either directing the output beam of said fist laser diode at a said compact disk when carried by said disk support and drive means or directing the output beam of said second laser diode at a said digital versatile disk when carried by said disk support and drive means,
- a single element objective lens optically positioned between said disk support and drive means on one end and said first and second laser diodes on another end, said single element objective lens having first and second surfaces, said first surface having an aspheric profile,
- said single element objective lens having a central aperture zone and an outer aperture zone, said central aperture zone being profiled to operate at approximately a 0.45 numerical aperture (NA) and said output beam of said first laser diode being optically confined to said central aperture zone,
- said outer aperture zone together with said central aperture zone being profiled to operate at approximately a 0.60 numerical aperture (NA) and wherein said output beam of said second laser diode has ray fans extending across the full aperture of said lens, and
- diffractive means carried by said single element objective lens, said diffractive means providing sufficient aspheric surface power for spherical aberration correction and providing correction for spherochromatism.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said diffractive means has a predetermined depth to optimize diffractive efficiency for both laser diode wavelengths.
7. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein said first surface is located closer to said disk support and drive means than said second surface and said diffractive means is carried by said second surface.
8. The apparatus of claim 7 wherein said diffractive means provides sufficient correction for spherical aberration and for spherochromatism that said single element objective lens achieves diffraction-limited image quality for both CD and DVD formats.
9. An optical disk reader or optical read/write system capable of operating in different disk formats, each disk format having a different substrate thickness, comprising:
- disk support and drive means capable of supporting and driving the different disk formats;
- a first laser diode operating with an output beam having a first wavelength;
- a second laser diode operating with an output beam having a second wavelength different from the first wavelength; and
- optical means including a single element objective lens for either directing the output beam of the first laser diode at one disk of the different disk formats when carried by the disk support and drive means or directing the output beam of the second laser diode at the other disk of the different disk formats when carried by the disk support and drive means,
- the single element objective lens optically positioned between the disk support and drive means on one end and the first and second laser diodes on another end,
- the single element objective lens having a central aperture zone, an outer aperture zone, and diffractive means,
- the central aperture zone being profiled to contribute to a first numerical aperture (NA) operation and a first laser diode operation, and to contribute to a second numerical aperture (NA) operation and a second laser diode operation,
- the outer aperture zone being profiled to contribute to the second numerical aperture (NA) operation and the second laser diode operation, and
- the diffractive means providing sufficient aspheric surface power for spherical aberration correction and providing correction for spherochromatism.
10. The optical disk reader or optical read/write system of claim 9,
- wherein each diffractive ray, for reading or writing for the different disk formats, has the same diffraction order.
11. The optical disk reader or optical read/write system of claim 10,
- wherein the same diffraction order is a first diffraction order.
12. The optical disk reader or optical read/write system of claim 9,
- wherein the diffractive means has a predetermined depth having an optimum wavelength dependent on a predetermined wavelength chosen midway between the first wavelength and the second wavelength.
13. The optical disk reader or optical read/wire system of claim 9, wherein the diffractive means is based on a polynomial phase function comprising a non-zero fourth power term which controls spherical aberration correction.
14. An optical disk reader or optical read/write system capable of operating in different disk formats, each disk format having a different substrate thickness, comprising:
- disk support and drive means capable of supporting and driving the different disk formats;
- a first laser diode operating with an output beam having a first wavelength;
- a second laser diode operating with an output beam having a second wavelength different from the first wavelength; and
- a single element objective lens optically positioned between the disk support and drive means on one end and the first and second laser diodes on another end,
- the single element objective lens having diffractive means, a central aperture zone, and an outer aperture zone,
- the central aperture zone for a first numerical aperture (NA) either directing the output beam of the first laser diode at one disk of the different disk formats when carried by the disk support and drive means or directing together with the outer aperture zone for a second numerical aperture (NA) the output beam of the second laser diode at the other disk of the different disk formats when carried by the disk support and drive means, and
- the diffractive means providing sufficient aspheric surface power for spherical aberration correction and providing correction for spherochromatism.
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Type: Grant
Filed: Jul 5, 2002
Date of Patent: May 20, 2008
Assignee: Konica Corporation (Tokyo)
Inventors: Barry G. Broome (Carlsbad, CA), Jenkin A. Richard (Mountain View, CA)
Primary Examiner: Hoa T. Nguyen
Assistant Examiner: Kim-Kwok Chu
Attorney: Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, L.L.P.
Application Number: 10/189,259
International Classification: G11B 7/00 (20060101);