A Seminar Report On "Blu-Ray Disc"
A Seminar Report On "Blu-Ray Disc"
A Seminar Report On "Blu-Ray Disc"
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirement of third year (6th sem.) for the award of the degree of
SUBMITTED BY:
Ankur Mishra B.Tech (E.C.) Roll No. 1041931003
SUBMITTED TO:
Mr. Sandeep Rathour Deptt. Of Elec. & Comm. Engg. P.E.C. Kanpur
DEPARTMENT OF ELEC. & COMM. ENGINEERING PRABHAT ENGINEERING COLLEGE, KANPUR G.B. TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY, LUCKNOW 2012-13
PRABHAT ENGG. COLLEGE
AKNOLEDGEMENT
I, hereby acknowledge the priceless and over helming support and assistance extended to me by my teachers, classmates and other staffs of department of Electronics & Communication Engineering. First and foremost I express my sincere thanks to Mr. Sandeep Rathour, Head Of Department, Electronics & Communication, for evaluation of the seminar. Along with that I extend my sincere gratitude to the lecturers of Electronics & Communication department and other staff of the department. I also sincerely thank all my classmates and friends whose suggestions were a constant source of inspiration for me in completing this seminar.
CONTENTS
1.Abstract 2.Introduction To Blu-Ray Disc 3.Blu-Ray Technology 4.Specification Of Blu-Ray 5.Current Technology 6.Comperison Of BD & DVD 7.Next Generation Technology 8.Conclusion 9.References
4 5 7 13 17 18 19 24 25
ABSTRACT
Blu-ray, also known as Blu-ray Disc (BD) is the name of a next-generation optical disc format jointly developed by the Blu-ray Disc Association (BDA), a group of leading consumer electronics and PC companies (including Apple, Dell, Hitachi, HP, JVC, LG, Mitsubishi, Panasonic, Pioneer, Philips, Samsung, Sharp, Sony, TDK and Thomson). The format was developed to enable recording, rewriting and playback of high-definition video HD), as well as storing large amounts of data. The Blu-ray Disc using blue-violet laser achieves over 2-hour digital high definition video recording on a 12cm diameter CD/DVD size phase change optical disc. The Blu-ray Disc enables the recording, rewriting and play back of up to 25 gigabytes (GB) of data on a single sided single layer 12cm CD/DVD size disc using a 405nm blue-violet laser. By employing a short wavelength blue violet laser, the Blu-ray Disc successfully minimizes its beam spot size by making the numerical aperture (NA) on a field lens that converges the laser 0.85. This also allows for disc better readout and an increased recording density. The Blu-ray Disc's tracking pitch is reduced to 0.32um, almost half of that of a regular DVD, achieving up to 25 GB high-density recording on a single sided disc. Because the Blu-ray Disc utilizes global standard "MPEG-2 Transport Stream" compression technology highly compatible with digital broadcasting for video recording, a wide range of content can be recorded. It is possible for the Blu-ray Disc to record digital high definition broadcasting while maintaining high quality and other data simultaneously with video data if they are received together. In addition, the adoption of a unique ID written on a Blu-ray Disc realizes high quality copyright protection functions. The Blu-ray Disc is a technology platform that can store sound and video while maintaining high quality and also access the stored content in an easy-to-use way. This will be important in the coming broadband era as content distribution becomes increasingly diversified.
Hitachi Ltd. LG Electronics Inc. Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. Mitsubishi Electric Corporation Pioneer Corporation Royal-Philips Electronics Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd Sharp Corporation Sony Corporation TDK Corporation Thomson Multimedia Walt Disney Pictures
BLU-RAY TECHNOLOGY
planning of a read-only system and write-once system has already started. In addition to high picture quality, the introduction of core and new functions is indispensable for the spread of the next generation package media. For example, during the switch from VHS to DVD, digital recording and interactive functions were newly introduced. Consequently, it is anticipated that the specifications of BD-ROM will provide high performance instructiveness and a connection to broadband services, reflecting the demands of the movie industry .
3.3.1 DIODE
A laser diode is a laser where the active medium is a semiconductor p-n junction similar to that found in a light-emitting diode. Laser diodes are sometimes referred to (somewhat redundantly) as injection laser diodes or by the acronyms LD or ILD.
time (on the order of microseconds) before they recombine. If a photon f exactly the right frequency happens along within this time period, recombination may be stimulated by the photon. This causes another photon of the same frequency to be emitted, with exactly the same direction, polarization and phase as the first photon. In a laser diode, the semiconductor crystal is fashioned into a shape somewhat like a piece of papervery thin in one direction and rectangular in the other two. The of the crystal is n-doped, and the bottom is p-doped, resulting in a large, flat p-n junction .The two ends of the crystal are cleaved so as to form a perfectly smooth, parallel edges; two reflective parallel edges are called a Fabry-Perot cavity. Photons emitted in precisely the right direction will be reflected several times from each end face before they are emitted. Each time they pass through the cavity, the light is amplified by stimulated emission. Hence, if there is more amplification than loss, the diode begins to "lase"
(b)TYPES OF LASERIODES
(i)Double hetero structure lasers:
In these devices, a layer of low band gap material is sandwiched between two high band gap layers. One commonly used pair of materials is GaAs with AlGaAs. Each of the junctions between different band gap materials is called a hetero structure, hence the name "double hetero structure laser" or DH laser. The kind of laser diode described in the first part of the article is referred to as a "homo junction" laser, for contrast with these more popular devices. The advantage of a DH laser is that the region where free electrons and holes exist simultaneouslythe "active" region is confined to the thin middle layer. This means that many more of the electronhole pairs can contribute to amplificationnot so many are left out in the poorly amplifying periphery. In addition, light is reflected from the hetero junction; hence, the light is confined to the region where the amplification takes place.
For DVD, the recording layer is sandwiched between two 0.6-mm thick layers of plastic typically polycarbonate. The purpose of this is to shift surface scratches, fingerprints and dust particles to a position in the optical pathway where they have negligible effect - i.e. well away from the point of focus of the laser. However, burying the recording layer 0.6 mm below the surface of the disc also has disadvantages. Due to the injection molding process used to produce them, disc substrates suffer from stressinduced birefringence, which means that they split the single incident laser light into two separate beams. If this splitting is excessive, the drive cannot read data reliably from the disc. Consequently, the injection molding process has always been a very critical part of CD and DVD production. Another critical manufacturing tolerance, particularly for DVDs, is the flatness of the disc, because the laser beam becomes distorted if the disc surface is not perpendicular to the beam axis - a condition referred to as disc tilt. This distortion increases as the thickness of the cover layer increases and also increases for higher numerical To overcome these disadvantages; the recording layer in a Blu-ray Disc sits on the surface of a 1.1-mm thick plastic substrate, protected by a 0.1-mm thick cover layer. With the substrate material no longer in the optical pathway, birefringence problems are eliminated. In addition, the closer proximity of the recording layer to the drive's objective lens reduces disc tilt sensitivity. This only leaves the problem of surface scratching and fingerprints, which can be prevented by applying a specifically Single Layer Disc Dual Layer Disc The outline of a Dual Layer BD Read-Only disc. To improve scratch resistance, the cover layer can optionally be protected with an additional hard coat layer. A spacing layer is used to separate the two information discs.
SPECIFICATION OF BLU-RAY
23.3GB/25GB/27GB Laser wavelength: 405nm (blue-violet laser) Lens numerical aperture (NA):0.85 Data transfer rate: 36Mbps Disc diameter: 120mm Disc thickness: 1 .2mm (optical transmittance protection layer:0.1mm) Recording format: Phase change recording Tracking format: Groove recording Tracking pitch: 0.32um Shortest pit length:0.160/0.149/0.138um Recording phase density:16.8/18.0/19.5Gbit/inch Video recording format: MPEG2 video Audio recording format: AC3, MPEG 1, Layer 2, etc. Video and audio Multiplexing format: MPEG2 transport stream Cartridge dimension: Approximately 129 x 131 x 7mm
4.2 FORMATS
Unlike DVDs and CDs, which started with read-only formats and only later added recordable and re-writable formats, Blu-ray is initially designed in several different formats: BDROM(read-only)-for pre-recorded content 1. 2. 3. BD-R(recordable)-for PC data storage BD-RW(rewritable)-for PC data storage BD-RE(rewritable)-for HDTV recording
4.3DATA RATE
For high-definition movies a much higher data rate is needed than for standard definition. With the BD format choices for both NA and wavelength we have been able to realize a format with 5X higher data rate while only doubling the rotation rate of DVD-ROM discs. The following numbers offer a comparison: Data bit length: 111.75 nm (25GB) (267 nm for DVD) Linear velocity: 7.367 m/s (Movie application) (3.49 m/s for DVD). User data transfer rate: 53.948 Mbit/s (Movie application) (10.08 Mbps for DVD) The BD system has the potential for future higher speed drives. The BD-RE (rewritable) standard is now available; to be followed by the BD-R (recordable) and BD-ROM formats in mid-2004, as part of version 2.0 of the Blu-ray specifications. BD-ROM pre-recorded media are to be available by late 2005. Looking further ahead in time, Blu-ray Discs with capacities of 100GB and 200GB are currently being researched, with these capacities achieved by using four and eight layers respectively.
4.4 CODECS
The BD-ROM format will likely include 3 codecs: MPEG-2 (the standard used for DVDs), MPEG-4's H.264/AVC codec, and VC-1 based on Microsoft's Windows Media 9 codec. The first codec only allows for about two hours of storage on a single layer Blu-ray Disc, but with the addition of the latter two more advanced codecs, a single-layer disc can hold almost four hours. High- definition MPEG-2 has a data rate of about 25Mbps, while the latter two have data rates of about I5Mbps for video and 3 Mbps for audio. BD-RE (and by extension BD-R) does not currently support any advanced codecs beyond MPEG-2. Because MPEG-2 is currently used to broadcast HDTV, recorders write this HD stream directly to a disc. Since there are no consumer level recorders capable of real-time transcoding from the MPEG-2 used for broadcasting and any other codec that might be used for BD- RE,MPEG-2istheonlyformatsupportedbyBD-RE. Encoding methods for the audio stream include Linear PCM, Dolby Digital, DTS and dts++ (loss less compression). The Blu-ray Disc Association is known to be looking into other codecs superior to those supported by the DVD specification.
4.5 VARIATIONS
An 8 cm BD specification has been finalized and approved. A one-sided, single- layer 8 cm BD can hold 15 GB, giving it the capacity of one and a half regular sized (12 cm) single sided double layer DVDs. This would be an ideal format for small, portable devices, such as portable movie players and digital video cameras. A new hybrid Blu-ray / DVD combo disc has been developed by JVC and is awaiting acceptance by the Blu-ray Disc Association. This would allow both normal DVD players and Blu-ray players to utilize the disc .Users would be able to purchase a
PRABHAT ENGG. COLLEGE
single disc that can play at either high definition or standard DVD quality, depending on the hardware utilized. Users that do not have a Blu-ray disc player can view the video content at standard definition using their current DVD player, and enjoy the same content at high definition resolution when upgrading to a Blu-ray disc-player in the future.
4.6 COMPATIBILITY
The BDA announced that, while it was not compulsory for manufacturers, Blu-ray lasers and drives are capable of reading the various DVD formats, ensuring backward compatibility. This makes the upgrade more attractive to consumers as it does not require replacing their collections of DVDs.
4.7 RECORDERS
The first Blu-ray recorder was unveiled by Sony on March 3, 2003, and was introduced to the Japanese market in April that year. On September 1, 2003, JVC and Samsung Electronics announced Blu-ray based products at DFA in Berlin, Germany. Both indicated that their products would be on the market in 2005. In March 2004, both Sony and Matsushita announced plans to ship 50 GB Blu-ray recorders the same year. The Matsushita product is to ship in July 2004 in the Japanese market under the Panasonic brand. Sony is to follow by the end of 2004 and has announced that the Play station 3 will be shipped with a special Blue-ray drive. Meanwhile, LG Electronics is expected to ship a recorder equipped with a 200 GB hard disk into the U.S. market by Q3 2004. These products are to support single-sided, dual-layer rewriteable discs of 54GB capacity, Sony machine will also support BD-ROM pre-recorded media, which are expected to be available by Christmas 2005.
CURRENT TECHNOLOGY
5.1 CURRENT STORAGE DEVICES
Some of the popular storage devices that are available in the market include: Analog Storage Technology VHS
plastic.
A disc in the DVD format can currently hold 4.7 gigabytes of data. Unlike DVD technology, which uses red lasers to etch data onto the disc, the Blu-ray disc technology uses a blue-violet laser to record information. The blue-violet laser has a shorter wavelength than the red lasers do, and with its Parameters BD-ROM DVD-ROM
PRABHAT ENGG. COLLEGE
Storage capacity (single-layer) 25GB 4.7GB Storage capacity (dual-layer) 50GB 9.4GB Laser wavelength: 405nm 650nm Numerical aperture (NA):0.85 0.60 Protection layer: 0.1mm 0.6mm Data transfer rate (1x):36.0Mbps 11.08Mbps Smaller area of focus, it can etch more data into the . The digital information is etched on the discs in the form of microscopic pits. These pits are arranged in a continuous spiral track from the inside to the outside. Using a red laser, with 650 nm wavelength, we can only store 4.7 GB on a single sided DVD. TV recording time is only one hour in best quality mode, and two, three or four hours with compromised pictures. Data capacity is inadequate for non-stop backup of a PC hard drive.
The technology is proven, but that's no guarantee of a smooth migration. Already, a standards war much like those that have broken out over every major medium since the videocassette is threatening this latest optical innovation. The nine electronics companies, led by Sony, Pioneer, and Matsushita Electric Industrial, unveiled a standard format dubbed the Blu-ray Disc, which incorporates blue-violet laser technology and sets the recording capacity of the disks between 23 and 25 gigabytes per side. Within the coalition, Sony, Matsushita, and Hitachi have demonstrated prototypes of lasers that meet the requirements. 7.3 HD DVD AS A CONTESTEE The group (BDF), however, faces competition on several fronts. On one side stands Toshiba Corp, which has refused to endorse the Blue-ray Disc. That's troubling because in the early 1990s, Toshiba led the alliance of electronics and film companies that produced the standard for today's DVD systems, trouncing a competing effort by Sony and Royal Philips Electronics of the Netherlands. Earlier this year, Toshiba, which continues to head the DVD Forum, demonstrated its own rewritable optical disk, boasting a capacity of 30 GB per side. And Toshiba is not the only holdout: Mitsubishi Electric and AOL Time Warner, both important members of the DVD Forum, have yet to join the Blue-ray Disc group. The Toshiba is developing another kind of disc using the BLUE LASER Technology under name AOD (Advanced Optical Disc) more popularly known as HD DVD (High Definition DVD).And this technology is also backed up by the DVD Forum similar to the BDF Toshiba has developed an alternative version and NEC and a provisional specification approved by the DVD Forum. The original name was AOD (Advanced Optical Disc). There are three versions in development. 1. HD DVD-ROM discs are pre-recorded and offer a capacity of 15 GB per layer per side. These can be used for distributing HD movies. 2. HD DVD-RW discs are re-writable and can be used to record 20 GB per side for re- writable versions. 3. HD DVD-R discs are write-once recordable format discs with a capacity of 15 GB per side. Like Blu-ray discs they need a blue laser of 405 nm wavelength, but are physically similar to DVD discs, as they use a cover layer of 0.6 mm. Therefore HD DVD discs can be manufactured using existing DVD lines, and existing UV mastering equipment.
Looking forward Sony currently has plans for at least three generations of Professional Disc products, with PARAMETERS Storage capacity Number Laser Numerical Protection Data of wavelength aperture layer transfe layers (NA) r rate Video compression
BD
25 GB
Singlelayer
405 nm
0.85
0.1 mm
54.0 Mbps
BD
50 GB
Duallayer
405 nm
0.85
0.1 mm
54.0 Mbps
HD-DVD
15 GB Singlelayer
405 nm
0.65
0.6 mm
36.5 Mbps
HD-DVD
30 GB
Duallayer
405 nm
0.65
0.6 mm
36.5 Mbps
the goal of doubling capacity and performance with each release. The second-generation discs
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are expected sometime in 2005, featuring 50GB of storage capacity on a single- sided, doublelayer disc with a transfer rate of 18MB per second. The company plans to release thirdgeneration discs in 2007, with a projected storage capacity of 100GB using double-sided media and offering a transfer rate of 36MB per second The 25 GB capacity will increase later to 50GB, thanks to dual layer discs, proposed by Panasonic. The Blu-Ray group is still discussing whether the disc can be naked or must be housed in a protective cartridge. Existing CD and DVD players and recorders will not be able to use Blu-Ray discs. New Blu-Ray players will need infra-red, red and blue lasers if they are also to play all kinds of CD and DVD recordings. According to industry analysts (In-Stat/MDR) "The EL6900C and the Blu-Ray disc recording standard will meet the surging demand for increased disc-based video and data recording capacity. We project this new technology will propel the DVD rewritable market to 62 million units worldwide in 2006 and Intersil is paving the way with its new drivers". Sony will target commercializing the newly developed 3-wavelength optical head within 2 years, and will positively promote to further technology development. By doing so, in addition to further reducing the number of parts used for achieving smaller size of optical heads, enhancement of productivity and reliability will be achieved. This will contribute to the BD market expansion by realizing BD related key devices to be utilized in various AV and IT products
CONCLUSION
Anyone old enough to recall fond memories of Rubik's Cubes, Family Ties, and Duran Duran likely remembers another '80s phenomenon: the VHS vs. Betamax war. The two competing video-recording technologies emerged together in the 1970s, when Sony's (NYSE: SNE) Betamax VCR, a pioneer in the industry, fought for market share against a rival VHS version developed by Matsushita (NYSE: MC). VHS technology quickly gained widespread acceptance, while Betamax followed a divergent path into obscurity. In 1988, with less than 5% of the market, Sony finally threw in the towel by announcing plans to market a VHS-based recorder. While the end came slowly, the decision would prove to be a death knell for the Betamax name. Fast-forward to today. The growing popularity of high-definition television (HDTV) has fostered a new wave of recording technology, soon to supplant the VCR, and possibly even DVD. Again, two competing technologies are vying for acceptance, but this time Sony appears to be on the winning side. The Blu-ray Disc Founders (not to be confused with the effusively painted Blue Man Group) is a consortium of 13 leading electronics firms. It has developed a superior optical disc known as the Blu-ray Disc (BD). As opposed to the red lasers currently used to produce DVDs, blue beams have a shorter wavelength, allowing for enhanced precision and more tightly
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compressed data. While a typical DVD holds 4.7 GB of information, a BD contains 25 GB enough storage for two hours of HDTV or 13 hours of standard television. Dual-layer discs under development will hold an astounding 54 GB. Aside from greater storage capacity, Blu-ray discs will also contain more interactive features. The world's two foremost computer manufacturers, Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) and Motley Fool Stock Advisor holding Dell Computer (NASDAQ: DELL), were formally added to the Blu-ray alliance, virtually ensuring the future adoption of BD technology for PC data storage. The competing format, known as HDDVD, is simultaneously under joint development by Toshiba and NEC. Though HD-DVD technology appears to be an underdog at this point, it has recently gained notoriety by winning the support of the DVD forum, a confederation of DVD-related companies. Blu-ray, has already earned an early endorsement from Columbia TriStar Pictures (Hollywood), which has committed to using the Blu-ray technology. Though BDs are not yet mainstream, and pro forma revenue projections are still being formulated, the technology is moving quickly. The Sony BDZ-S77, a BD recorder, is already on the shelves in HDTV-dominated Japan, and LG Electronics intends to introduce its brand to U.S. consumers as early as the third quarter of this year. Further, with consumers clamoring for faster transfer speeds and storage capacity (two of the more notable advantages of BD technology), it's possible that the industry is headed to a point where BD sales will one day out strip DVDs. Its too early to call the game just yet, but this will be an interesting technological development to follow.
REFERENCES
Documents
White paper Blu-ray disc (Sony-march 2005) Websites 1. http://www.bluray.com 2. http://www.blu-raytalk.com 3. http://www.opticaldisc-systems.com 4. http://www.gizmodo.com
DEPARTMENT OF ELEC. & COMM. ENGINEERING PRABHAT ENGINEERING COLLEGE, KANPUR G.B. TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY, LUCKNOW
CERTIFICATE
Certified that Ankur Mishra, Roll No. 1041931003 has carried out the research work presented in this seminar report entitled, Blu-Ray Disc for the award Bachelor of Technology (Electronics & Communication Engineering) from PEC, Kanpur under my supervision. The report embodies result of original work and studies carried out by
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Student himself and the contents of the report do not form the basis for the award of any other degree to the candidate or to anybody else.