Blu-ray Disc recordable

Blu-ray Disc Recordable (BD-R) refers to two direct to disc optical disc recording technologies that can be recorded on to a Blu-ray-based optical disc with an optical disc recorder. BD-R discs can be written to once, whereas Blu-ray Disc Recordable Erasable (BD-RE) can be erased and re-recorded multiple times. Disc capacities are 25 GB for single-layer discs, 50 GB for double-layer discs,[1] 100 GB ("XL") for triple-layer, and 128 GB for quadruple-layer (in BD-R only).[2][3]

A blank rewritable Blu-ray Disc (BD-RE)

The minimum speed at which a Blu-ray Disc can be written is 36 megabits (4.5 megabytes) per second.[4]

Version

As of April 2018, there are five versions of Blu-ray Disc Recordable Erasable (BD-RE) and four versions of Blu-ray Disc Recordable (BD-R). Each version includes three Parts (a.k.a. Books): Basic Format Specifications, File System Specifications, Audio Visual Basic Specifications. Each part has sub-versions (e.g. R2 Format Specification includes Part 3: Audio Visual Basic Specifications Ver.3.02, Part 2: File System Specifications Ver. 1.11, Part 1: Basic Format Specifications Ver. 1.3).[5][6][7]

DateRE VersionR VersionBy Parts[7][lower-alpha 1]Changes
Part 1Part 2Part 3
20021.0[8]RE V1.0RE V1.0RE V1.0
  • BD File System (BDFS), computer-incompatible
  • BD Audio/Visual (BDAV) format
  • BD content protection (BDCP) [9][10]
20052.0[11]1.0RE V2.1
R V1.3
RE V2.1
R V1.1
RE V2.1
  • New UDF 2.5 file system for computer use; UDF 2.6 also available for BD-R
  • Uses AACS[12]
  • Hybrid formats (inapplicable to recordable discs)[13]
  • New BD-R Low To High physical format.[14]
September 20063.0[15]2.0[5]RE V2.1
R V1.3
RE V2.1
R V1.1
RE V3.0 +
ROM V2.4 (BDMV)
  • New camcorder sized (8 cm) discs
  • "Camcorder" added to product categories
  • BDMV (Blu-ray Disc Movie) application format
June 20104.0[16]3.0[17]RE V3.0
R V2.0
RE V3.0
R V2.0
RE V4.0 +
RE V2.1
New BDXL definition:
  • Multi-layered BDAV rewritable/recordable disc with 2× and 4× speeds
  • 100 GB capacity
  • "Professional Device" added to BD product categories[18]
December 20175.0[19]4.0[20]RE V3.1
R V2.2
RE V4.0
R V3.0
RE V5.0 BDXL expansions:
  • New 128 GB BD-R capacity
  • Ultra HD broadcast recording support

Speed

As of December 2017, the following speeds are seen in Blu-Ray specifications for R/RE discs:[7]

Drive speed Data rate 25GB BD-R(E) write time 50GB BD-R(E) DL (25GB/layer) write time 100GB BR-R(E) XL TL (~33GB/layer) write time
[1]36 Mbit/s4.5 MB/s4.29 MiB/s~95 min.~190 min.~380 min.
72 Mbit/s9 MB/s8.58 MiB/s~47 min.~94 min.~188 min.
144 Mbit/s18 MB/s17.17 MiB/s~24 min.~48 min.~96 min.
216 Mbit/s27 MB/s25.75 MiB/s~16 min.~32 min.~64 min.
8x 288 Mbit/s 36 MB/s ~11.25 min. ~22.5 min.
10x 360 Mbit/s 45 MB/s ~9 min. ~18 min.
12x 432 Mbit/s 54 MB/s ~7.5 min. ~15 min.
14x 504 Mbit/s 63 MB/s ~6.5 min. ~13 min.
16x 576 Mbit/s 72 MB/s ~5.7 min. ~11.5 min.

2× speeds are mandatory for all formats, with 4× and 6× being optional for non-XL BD-R media. Since BD-RE 5.0/BD-R 4.0, a read speed of 4× is mandatory for UHD support.[7]

Note: Add extra time for disc verification phase and time for erasing the disc in the case of BD-RE.

Pricing

As of April 2018 (approximate pricing):

  • BD-R/RE drive US$50 and above[21]
  • 6× single-layer BD-R disc (25 GB) US$0.42 each in quantity;[22]
  • 10× single-layer BD-R disc (25 GB) CN¥2.04 each in quantity;[23]
  • 6× double-layer BD-R disc (50 GB) US$1.64 in quantity;[24]
  • 2× single-layer BD-RE disc (25 GB) US$0.82 in quantity;[25]
  • 2× double-layer BD-RE disc (50 GB) US$3.15 in quantity;[26]
  • 4× BD-R XL disc (100 GB) US$5 in quantity;[27]
  • 4× BD-RE XL disc (100 GB) US$11 in quantity;[28]

Recording mechanisms

Instead of the pits and lands found on prepressed/prerecorded/replicated discs, BD-R and RE discs contain grooves which contain a wobble frequency that is used to locate the position of the reading or writing laser on the disc.[29] BD-R has an Optimum Power Calibrations (OPC) / Test Zone, which is used to calibrate (finely adjust) the power of the writing laser before and during writing, and it also has a Drive Calibration Zone (DCZ) at the outer edge of the disc, for optional high speed calibration. The calibration is necessary to allow for slight manufacturing defects, greatly reducing or completely eliminating rejected discs and drives, reducing costs and eliminating potential waste. The information below describes the different types of recording layers that may be used on BD-R and BD-RE discs.

HTL (high to low)

"Normal" BD-R discs use a composite (or, in the case of BD-RE, a phase-changing alloy) that decreases its reflectivity on recording, i.e. "High To Low".[30] Sony, for example, uses an inorganic[31] composite that splits into two laminar components with low reflectivity.[32] Composites used may include BiN, Ge3N4, and Pd-doped tellurium suboxide.[33] A pair of layers with copper alloy and silicon that combines on recording may alternatively be used.[34] Similar to CD-RW and DVD-RW, a phase transition alloy (often GeSbTe or InAgTeSb, Copper silicate (CuSi) or other alloys can also be used, like Verbatim's proprietary MABL)[35][34][36] is used for BD-RE discs. Melting the material with a very high power beam turns it into an amorphous state with low reflectivity, while heating at a lower power erases it back to a crystalline state with high reflectivity.[37]

In BD-RE discs, the data layers are surrounded by a pair of dielectric Zinc Sulfur-Silicon Dioxide layers.[3][38] An adhesive spacer layer and a semi-reflective layer are used for multi-layer discs.[34][39] The recording and dielectric layers are all deposited using Sputtering. [38] On multi-layer BD-RE discs, each GeSbTe recording layer is progressively thinner. So the first layer (L0) is 10nm thick, L1 is 7.5nm thick, L2 is 6nm thick, and so on. The silver alloy reflective layers that are behind each recording layer also become progressively thinner, so the L0 silver layer is 10nm thick, the L1 layer is 9nm thick, the L2 layer is 7nm thick, and so on. The separation layers that separate the recording layers from one another also progressively become thinner. [40][41][42]

BD-R LTH (low to high)

BD-R LTH is a write-once Blu-ray Disc format that features an organic dye recording layer. "Low To High" refers to the reflectivity changing from low to high during the burning process, which is the opposite of normal Blu-rays, whose reflectivity changes from high to low during writing. The advantage of BD-R LTH is it can protect a manufacturer's investment in DVD-R/CD-R manufacturing equipment because it does not require investing in new production lines and manufacturing equipment. Instead, the manufacturer only needs to modify current equipment. This is expected to lower the cost of disc manufacturing.[43]

Old Blu-ray players and recorders cannot utilize BD-R LTH; however, a firmware upgrade can enable devices to access BD-R LTH. Panasonic released such a firmware update in November 2007 for its DMR-BW200, DMR-BR100 and MR-BW900/BW800/BW700 models.[44] Pioneer was expected to ship the first LTH BD drives in Spring 2008.[45] Sony upgraded the PlayStation 3 firmware enabling BD-R LTH reading in March, 2008.[46]

In 2011, France's Ministry of Culture and Communication conducted a study on the suitability of data archival of LTH (low to high) discs compared to HTL (high to low) discs. The data they collected indicated that the overall quality of LTH discs is worse than HTL discs.[47][48]

gollark: You should really just flash LineageOS or something, and/or use a better carrier.
gollark: Since it says Verizon.
gollark: It might be a Verizon thing, actually.
gollark: This is not a stock thing. OEMs are just bees.
gollark: (will not actually do most maths)

See also

Notes

  1. RE and R definitions from the same date have different Part 1 and Part 2 specifications, but share the same Part 3 specifications.

References

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  3. http://academic.hep.com.cn/foe/article/2014/2095-2759/11051
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  5. "Format Specification - R2". www.blu-raydisc.info. Archived from the original on 2010-08-26. Retrieved 2017-02-24.
  6. White paper – Blu-ray Disc Format, 3. File System Specifications for BD-RE, R, ROM, August 2004 (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on 2011-01-24, retrieved 2010-06-10
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  13. Blu-ray Disc Association. "Hybrid Format Specification". Archived from the original on 2010-07-02. Retrieved 2010-06-10.
  14. LTH was included in the "Blu-ray Disc Recordable Format Ver.1.2" specifications. Archived 2008-02-25 at the Wayback Machine cdrinfo.com
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