SOLVENT-COATED ORGANIC MATERIALS FOR HIGH-DENSITY OPTICAL RECORDING.

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Abstract

Bilayer structures consisting of organic dye/polymer binder systems solvent-coated on reflective substrates are useful for real-time high-density optical recording. Information is recorded by employing focused actinic light that is highly absorbed in the vicinity of the surface of the dye/binder layer. Recorded marks consist of steep-walled flat-bottomed depressions or ″pits″ that have depth designed to impart a phase shift of approximately pi /2 to a focused readout light beam having a wavelength at which the dye/binder layer is essentially transparent. The optical and physical characteristics of these structures that lead to good recording sensitivity and high levels of playback performance are discussed.

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Howe, D. G., & Wrobel, J. J. (1980). SOLVENT-COATED ORGANIC MATERIALS FOR HIGH-DENSITY OPTICAL RECORDING. In Journal of vacuum science & technology (Vol. 18, pp. 92–99). https://doi.org/10.1116/1.570709

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