[J.
Res. Natl. Inst. Stand. Technol. 109, 517-524 (2004)]
Stability Comparison of Recordable
Optical
Discs—A Study of Error Rates in
Harsh
Conditions
Volume 109 Number
5 September-October
2004
Oliver Slattery, Richang Lu, Jian Zheng, Fred Byers,
and Xiao Tang
National
Institute of Standards and Technology,
Gaithersburg, MD 20899-8951
ollie@nist.gov
richangl@yahoo.com
jian.zheng@netzero.com
byers@nist.gov
xiao.tang@nist.gov
The
reliability and longevity of any storage medium is a key issue for archivists
and preservationists as well as for the creators of important information. This
is particularly true in the case of digital
media such as DVD and CD where a sufficient number of errors may render
the disc unreadable. This paper describes an initial stability study of
commercially available recordable DVD and CD
media using accelerated aging
tests under conditions of increased temperature and humidity. The effect of
prolonged exposure to direct light is also
investigated and shown to have an effect on the error rates of the media. Initial results show that high
quality optical media have very stable characteristics and may be
suitable for long-term storage applications. However,
results
also indicate that significant differences exist in the stability of recordable optical media from different manufacturers.
Key words: archiving;
CD-R; digital preservation; DVD-R; error rates; life expectancy.
Accepted: October 18, 2004
Available online: http://www.nist.gov/jres
1.
Introduction
Recordable optical disc media contains an organic dye
layer whose transparency can be altered either to absorb a laser beam or to
allow the beam to pass through to a reflective layer behind the dye [1,2]. The nature of this organic dye is such that when the
internal energies of its molecules reach a particular threshold, an
irreversible chemical reaction occurs, and the dye layer loses its
transparency. This property allows a high-energy beam to “write” data by
burning “pits,” in the form of dark marks, to the disc during recording. A low
powered laser reads the data by either passing through the transparent dye
layer (without causing any molecular change) to the reflective layer or by
being absorbed by the nontransparent marks in the dye.
Due to the organic nature of the dye, degradation and
breakdown of the transparent portion of dye layer will occur over a long period
of time as a natural process. This process, which has its roots in chemical
kinetics, can take several years in normal environment conditions [3]. Higher
temperatures and humidity will accelerate this process by increasing the
thermal and kinetic energies of the dye molecules.
It is well known that temperature and humidity are among the most
important factors affecting the life expectancy
of optical discs. Yet, there is another important factor that has not
been so well investigated. Light exposure can increase the rate of dye
degradation precisely because the organic dye used in recordable media is
light sensitive. This study also addresses this issue.
The effect of these processes can be modeled using
various techniques including the Eyring model [4], which is derived from the
study of chemical kinetics. The Eyring equation can model the effect of two
stress-es, such as temperature and relative humidity, on the rate of a reaction
or degradation, which can be related to the time-to-failure of the optical
disc.
The end of life of a disc can be defined as the time
when an uncorrectable error occurs. Although the disc may still be readable
after this point, some information has been lost. Consequently the life
expectancy of a disc is the period of time in which the information recorded on the disc can be retrieved without
loss. In an ideal case, the real time
taken for actual failure to occur would be measured and used as the time
to failure. However, this measurement is impractical to explore the degradation process, since a single end point
cannot describe the complex process
that led to failure. Instead we use the maximum value of some error rate
monitor, whose gradual change can serve as an indicator of the media stability.
In this study, the block error rate (BLER)
[5] is used to monitor CDs and the parity inner (PI) [6] error rate, as
summed over eight consecutive error correction blocks (PIE Sum8) [6], is used
to monitor DVDs. A high BLER rate indicates a potential onset of uncorrectable
errors (E32) [5] in CDs, and likewise a high PI error rate indicates a
potential onset of uncorrectable errors (PO) [6] in DVDs. In both cases, these
error rate monitors are used to characterize the extent of media deterioration.
Table 1. Temperature and relative
humidity stresses
2. Experimental
Equipment and Procedural Overview
All testing occurred at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) as part of the
digital data preservation program ongoing in the Information Access
Division (IAD). Two types of environmental chambers were used for artificially
aging the media. Both chambers were designed to allow aging of the media under
a controlled environmental condition.
Temperature and humidity: A Blue M (model: FRM-256B)1
environmental chamber was used to control the temperature and relative humidity
through various settings of temperature (–18
°C to –93 °C) and relative humidity (5 % to 98 %). The specified control
accuracy is ±0.5 °C for temperature and ±1 % for relative humidity (RH) respectively.
The test stresses of aging used are given in Table 1.
A complete incubation cycle for
temperature and RH accelerated testing is shown in Fig. 1. Once at
the stress condition, the temperature and RH were held constant for a
period of approximately 45 h followed by a gradual return to ambient
conditions. Discs were analyzed after each incubation cycle. This cycle was repeated under the same stress condition until the
error rate of most discs in the group increased to exceed an upper limit
of the error rates (as indicated in the DVD and
CD specifications) or until the disc became unread-able.
|
Test stress |
Incubation cycle
duration |
Minimum total time (multiple incubation cycles) |
|
60°Cto90
°C, 70%to90 %RH (various
combinations) |
Approximately
48 h including
ramping |
450 hto 850h (approximately) |
1 Certain
commercial equipment, instruments, or materials are identified in this paper
to foster understanding. Such identification does not imply recommendation or
endorsement by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, nor does it
imply that the materials or equipment identified are necessarily the best available
for the purpose.

Fig. 1. Temperature and RH incubation cycle.
Light exposure: A light chamber was
designed and built at NIST to meet the requirements for controlled light
exposure (Fig. 2). Two cylindrical light bulbs were placed vertically in the
center of the chamber, with up to twelve discs placed at equal distance from
the light source. Intensity was measured at each disc

location
to check uniformity. The discs were installed with the recordable side facing
the light source.
Two 150 W metal halide (M-H) [7] bulbs were used for
the light source, giving a 47.5 mW/cm2 light intensity at the disc surface. Light intensities were
measured using a Scientech Victor S310 thermo-power meter with shield
tube. The wavelength range of the metal halide
lamps is similar to sunlight, centered at 500 nm, and partly extending
to UV region.
Disc Analyzers: In order to monitor the change in
the error rate during aging, discs were
analyzed after each incubation cycle using disc analyzers. A CD-R analyzer
capable of reading BLER (in the case of CD) and a DVD-R analyzer capable of
reading PI error was used.
DVD-R Analyzer: The DVD 1 000P analyzer con-forms to DVD specifications and was capable of
testing electrical, digital, and
mechanical parameters in DVDs, including PI errors, PO errors and
jitter.
CD-R Analyzer: The CD CATS SA3 Advanced allowed measurement of all
relevant CD disc parameters including BLER,
E32 errors and jitter. All measurements
are performed according to optical disc industry standards.
Table 2. Light exposure stress conditions
|
Test
stress |
Incubation period duration |
Minimum total time (multiple incubation
periods) |
|
Metal Halide |
100 h (at controlled temperature) |
1400h (approximately) |
Test Specimens: Test media were selected randomly from the commercial market. Efforts
were made to include all the major dye technologies and many of the main
commercial brands. The three dye types typically used in CD-Rs (phthalocyanine,
cyanine and azo) were included. The dye types for DVD-R were unknown as no
specific information had yet been released. Table 3 shows the CD-R test samples
used in this experiment and indicates coating and dye type where possible.
Similar information for the DVD-R test specimens was not available. Each sample set had several actual pieces of media
to ensure that any particular result was representative of that entire sample.
Table 3. The
CD-R specimens for light exposure test
Coating and Dye
Unknown, Super Azo Unknown, Phthalocyanine Unknown,
Super Azo
Silver +
Gold, Phthalocyanine
Silver, Metal stabilized
cyanine Silver, Phthalocyanine Silver, Phthalocyanine
2.1 Key Measured
Parameters
Jitter:
Jitter is the temporal variation or
imprecision in a signal compared to an ideal reference clock. It is a measure of how well defined the pits and lands of
a disc are. For CD discs, jitter is defined in nanometers (nm), and the
CD specification states that jitter should not exceed 35 nm. For DVD recordable
discs, jitter is defined in percentage points, and should not exceed 9 %.
BLER (CD only): Block Error Rate is the number of blocks of data that have at least one
occurrence of erroneous data. BLER is quantified as the rate of errors (total
number of E11, E21, and E3 1 errors) [5] per second.
According to the CD specifications, BLER may be a maximum of 220 per
second. Maximum BLER is the maximum BLER measured anywhere on the disc.
E32 (CD
only): E32 errors are errors that are
uncorrectable by the C2-decoder in the CD error detection and correction
system. E32 errors represent lost data and therefore no E32 errors are allowed
for in the CD specification.
PIE
(DVD only): Data is arranged in DVD
discs in a two-dimensional array with
appended parity check bits. Each 2-dimensional array is called an error
correction code block. Parity Inner errors (PIE) is the number of parity inner
rows with errors. According to the DVD specification, any eight consecutive ECC
blocks (PI Sum8) may have a maximum of 280 PI errors.
POE (DVD only): Parity Outer errors (POE) are the number of uncorrectable parity outer
columns in an ECC block. Since PO errors are uncorrectable by the DVD error
detection and correction system, no PO errors are permitted by the DVD
specification.
3. Results
and Discussion
It should be noted that results presented
in this paper represent continuous exposure to direct light and extreme
temperature/humidity levels. The error rates are not representative of discs
stored in typical, normal or ideal storage conditions. The results from these
tests are to demonstrate, in terms of error rates, the ability of some DVD and
CD media to maintain stability given these extreme conditions.
Also, as stated earlier, each sample set had several
pieces of actual media to ensure that results were representative of the
entire sample. While there may have been
some differences in the results within each sample set, the range was
small and thus the results presented here are considered representative of the
entire set. Furthermore, particular media from any sample set was subjected to
only one particular stress condition.
Results show that the key quality parameters of optical media are altered and error rates increase
during exposure to temperature, relative humidity and/or continuous
direct light. Since these conditions are key factors in the lifetime of optical
media, an estimate for life expectancy can be achieved with a sufficient sample
size using various statistical techniques. This investigation, however, was too
small to make such an estimate.
The life expectancy of optical media will not be the same for all brands of discs. In a CD-R comparison
(see Fig. 3), sample S4, which uses phthalocyanine as the dye and a
silver and gold alloy as a reflective layer, is far more stable than any of the
other samples during both the temperature/humidity and direct light expo-sure
tests. In a DVD-R comparison (see Fig. 5), sample D2 showed the greatest
stability to the temperature/humidity and light exposure tests.

Fig. 3. Maximum BLER increase in CD-R when
exposed to (A) M-H and (B) extreme temperature/humidity.
Phthalocyanine based samples S2 and S4 provide very good stability to prolonged direct light
exposure as can be seen in the maximum BLER measurements in Fig. 3(A). Both maintain stable BLER levels
(following an initial increase in the case of sample S2) beyond 1400 h
of exposure to metal halide light whereas other samples have sharp BLER
increase within 800 h.
Sample S4 also performs the best in temperature and
humidity testing. It shows a BLER of less than 400 after 600 h of an extreme
temperature and humidity stress condition while all other samples have BLER
greater than 600 within 400 h of the same exposure. Some samples (including S1,
S2, S3 and S5) show sharp BLER increases
within 100 h. Higher stability for sample S4 is also shown for other key
measurements including jitter and E32 under all of the accelerated aging stress
conditions used (Fig. 4). According to these results, this disc is clearly more
suitable for the long-term storage of important digital data.
Sample S2, however, performs poorly in the extreme temperature and
humidity testing despite its good stability to direct light exposure. Within
150 h of extreme temperature/humidity aging, a BLER of over 1000 is observed.
Sample S2 uses a darkened polycarbonate layer
and this seems to have a limiting or filtering effect on the amount of
harmful light reaching the data layer.
Samples S1 and S3, both of which use azo dye for the
data layer, have higher error rates in both direct light exposure and extreme
temperature/humidity testing. Both samples have sharp increases in BLER within
500 h of direct light exposure and within 100 h in extreme temperature/humidity
conditions.
Other samples using
phthalocyanine, samples S6 and S7,
perform well in direct light exposure until approximately 600 h, but then a
significant increase in BLER and errors in general is seen. These samples have
low errors beyond 100 h of aging in extreme temperature/humidity
conditions, but again have sharp BLER increase soon afterwards. Both of
these discs have similar stability characteristics, which is not surprising
since samples S6 and S7 are from the same manufacturer (although branded
differently) and use the same dye and reflective layers.
Sample S5, which uses cyanine for its data layer, performs well under
some conditions of direct light exposure but
has problems in extreme temperature and humidity conditions. After 600 h
of direct light expo-sure, sample S5 has a BLER of less than 50, second only to sample S4. After 900 h of exposure
however, its BLER increases to more than 500. In extreme temperature
and humidity testing, sample S5 has an instant and severe increase in BLER.

Fig. 4. Increase in (A) jitter and (B) E32 in
CD-R exposed to M-H light.
Comparing the BLER for direct metal halide light
exposure from Fig. 3(A) with the jitter and E32 errors from Fig. 4, it can be
seen that a high level of correlation exists between the various error
indicators of CD-R. It also demonstrates that jitter is a key factor in the
quality and stability of CD-R media. As jitter increases, a clear correlation between maximum BLER and jitter
emerges. In most results, sudden BLER increases
or readability problems occur as jitter increases to approximately 50
nS. Fig. 4(B) also shows that BLER is a good
predictor of data loss caused by uncorrectable E32 errors. In the
example shown for metal halide light exposure, E32 errors occur for all discs
in correlation with a sharp increase of BLER.
Many of the trends observed in the error rates of CD-R
are also true for DVD-R. In particular, different samples of DVD-R media show
different stabilities during exposure to
direct light, temperature and relative humidity.
Unfortunately, dye information for DVD-R is less accessible than for
CD-R and it is therefore difficult to make a determination of stability based
on dye type. However, most DVD-R discs tested are based on
a
stabilized Cyanine dye. Since results from these samples of similar dye types
are quite different, there appears to be varying proprietary modifications made
to the dye formulations, and perhaps
different manufacturing processes and quality control procedures.
Fig. 5 shows that sample D2 is
the most stable of the three DVD-R media
types tested. PIE for this sample remains low beyond 800 h of exposure to
direct metal halide light compared with steady increases in PIE in samples D1 and D3 to approximately 1500 after 800
h.
The stability of sample D2 is further demonstrated when compared to the other samples during exposure
to extreme temperature and humidity.
Within 200 h, both samples D1 and D3 have reached PIE of approximately
1000 whereas sample D2 remains very low beyond 400 h of exposure.
Fig. 6 shows that there is a there is a correlation between the key
error rate monitor, PIE, and the onset of uncorrectable parity outer errors
(POE), although with the small sample size,
it is difficult to identify any clear value of PIE at which POE occurs.
And as in the case of CD, jitter appears to have a good correlation with PI
errors trends.

Fig. 5. PI (Sum 8) increase in DVD-R when
exposed to (A) M-H and (B) extreme temperature/humidity.

Fig. 6. Increase in (A) jitter and (B) POE in
DVD-R when exposed to M-H light.
4.
Conclusions
The quantity of media tested in this study
was too small to provide the statistical estimation for the life expectancy of
the discs but shows relative error trends associated with the different media.
A complete study to provide an estimate for the life expectancy is under-way at
NIST in collaboration with the Library of Congress (LoC).
While there are a number of factors that may
con-tribute to the stability of the CD-R and DVD-R media, dye type is generally
considered one of the more important ones.
Based on the test results for CD-R media, this expectation appears to
hold true, even with mixed results for the dye types. Samples containing
phthalocyanine performed better than other dye types. In particular,
phthalocyanine combined with a gold-silver alloy as a reflective layer was
consistently more stable than all other types of CD-R media. Discs using azo
dye as the data layer had less stability in light exposure and
temperature/humidity stress testing. Media using cyanine dye performed well
when exposed to light but had problems when under temperature/humidity stress
conditions.
Although information is less accessible regarding the
dye type used in DVD recordable media, it is believed that DVD-R media use a
modified form of stabilized Cyanine dye for the recording layer. It is
therefore difficult to make any determinations from these results based on dye
types for DVD-R media. Furthermore, manufacturers make modifications to the dye
to improve its stability or to make it less expensive. This process may result
in similar dye types having considerably different qualities, which is shown
to be the case in the DVD-R discs tested. And again, as in the case of the CD
recordable media, the variation of stability among different brands of DVD
recordable media is considerable.
Our results show that the effects of direct light
expo-sure cannot be ignored. The spectral wavelength of metal halide is close
to what may be expected within the higher spectrum of sunlight. Depending on
the media type and intensity of the light, a
disc may fail due to exposure to
direct sunlight in as little as a few weeks. This will be especially
true when coupled with the heating effect
of exposure to sunlight or combined with any other heat source. For archival purposes, however, light is a less challenging issue since it is relatively
simple to avoid direct light exposure or prolonged exposure to any
damaging light source.
There are a number of physical disc parameters that
will provide a good indication of the quality of the media. Based on these results, jitter is a key indicator of media
quality in both CD and DVD recordable media. A
dye's ability to maintain well-defined marks is crucial in maintaining
low error rates. This also indicates that the dye layer is probably the most
significant layer for media stability. Other layers, such as the polycarbonate layer, may also degrade but at a slower rate than
the dye layer. Furthermore, a disc with a faded or damaged polycarbonate
layer may still have all the data intact and therefore the data may be
recovered and migrated to new media. If, however, the dye layer becomes damaged
or has degraded, causing uncorrectable errors to occur, the uncorrectable data
cannot be recovered. Uncorrectable data error may cause negligible, minimal,
or up to catastrophic failure, depending on either the extent or the location
of that uncorrectable error within the DVD data structure.
It is demonstrated here that CD-R and DVD-R media can
be very stable (sample S4 for CD-R and sample D2 for DVD-R). Results suggest
that these media types will ensure data is available for several tens of years
and therefore may be suitable for archival uses. Unfortunately, it is very
difficult for customers to identify these more stable media.
It is clear that an archive quality grade for media is
necessary and should be based on a number of quality parameters rather than
brand name or manufacturer. NIST has been leading this effort in consultation
with other government agencies and has assisted in the formation of the
“Government Information Preservation Working Group” to address this issue. This
working group plans to clearly state their needs in regard to the longevity of optical media and work with the
optical disc industry to develop requirements for an archival CD or DVD recordable media. A comprehensive study is underway in a collaboration between NIST
and the Library of Congress (LoC)
with two principle objectives: 1) to
determine the life expectancy of DVD record-able media and 2) to develop
a test which media manufacturers can use to assign an archive quality grade to
their product.
Acknowledgments
The authors wish to thank the management of the NIST Information
Technology Laboratory (ITL), the leadership of the Convergent Information
Systems Division (CISD) and the Information Access Division (IAD) for their
support in this important effort.
5.
References
[1]
H. Bennett,
Understanding CD-R and CD-RW, Optical Storage Technology Association,
California, USA (2003).
[2]
H. Bennett, Understanding Recordable and Rewritable
DVD, Optical Storage Technology
Association, California, USA (2004).
[3]
D. Nikles and J. Wiest, Accelerated Aging Studies and
the Prediction of the Archival Lifetime of Optical Disk Media, Center for
Materials for Information Technology, University of Alabama, Alabama, USA
(2000).
[4]
P. T. Kahan, A Study of the Eyring Model and its
Application to Component Degradation, IBM Components Division, New York, USA
(1970).
[5]
A. Svensson,
CD-CATS SA3 Users Manual, AudioDev Inc., West Des Moines, Idaho, USA (2000).
[6]
CD Associates, Inc., The DVD1000P Analyzer Manual, CD
Associates Inc., Irvine California, USA (CD Associates is now called DaTarius
Inc.) (1998).
[7]
USHIO, General
Lighting Catalog, USHIO America Inc., Cypress, California, USA.
Further reading:
1.
B. Mann and C.
Shahani, Longevity of CD Media: Research at the
Library of Congress,, Library of Congress, Washington DC, USA (2003).
2.
F. Byers, Care and
Handling for the Preservation of CDs and DVDs—A guide for Librarians and
Archivists, NIST Special Publication 500-252, Gaithersburg, Maryland, USA
(2003).
3.
AES Standard for
audio preservation and restoration—Method for estimating life expectancy of
compact discs (CD-ROM), based on effects of temperature and relative humidity,
Reference number: AES28-1997 (1997).
4.
ISO International
Standard, Imaging materials—Recordable compact disc system—Methods for
estimating the life expectancy based on the effects of temperature and relative
humidity, Reference number: ISO/FDIS 18927:2001 (2001).
5.
E. Zwaneveld,
Standards and Technology Strategies to Preserve Content on Magnetic and Disc
Media, SMPTE Journal, New York, USA (2000).
6.
K. Lee, O.
Slattery, R. Lu, X. Tang, and V. McCrary,The State of Art and Practice in
Digital Preservation, J. Research of National Institute of Standards and
Technology Vol. 107, Gaithersburg Maryland, USA (2002).
7.
X. Tang and J.
Zheng, High-precision measurement of reflectance
for films under substrates, Optical Engineering Vol. 41, No. 12.,
Amherst, New Hampshire, USA (2002).
8.
W. Murray, Life
Expectancy of Optical Systems, JTC SnSO IT9-5/AES (1990).
9.
F. Akhavan and T.
Milster, CD-R and CD-RW optical disk characterization in response to intense
light sources, SPIE Conference on Recent Advances in Metrology, Denver,
Colorado, USA (1999).
10.
F. Podio,
Development of a Testing Methodology to Predict Optical Disk Life Expectancy Values, NIST Special Publication
500-200, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg,
Maryland, USA (1991).
About the authors: Richang Lu was a guest researcher
in the Convergent Information
System and Advanced Networking Divisions; Jian Zheng was a guest researcher in
the Convergent Information System and Information
Access Divisions; Oliver Slattery and Fred Byers were technical staf
members in the Convergent Information Systems Division and are currently
members of the Information Access Division; Xiao Tang is the former leader of
the Information Storage and Integrated System Group, within the Convergent
Information Systems Division and is currently a member of the Advanced Networking Division. All Divisions are in the
NIST Information Technology Laboratory. The National Institute of Standards and
Technology is an agency of the Technology Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce.