6 research outputs found

    The Quanta Image Sensor: Every Photon Counts

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    The Quanta Image Sensor (QIS) was conceived when contemplating shrinking pixel sizes and storage capacities, and the steady increase in digital processing power. In the single-bit QIS, the output of each field is a binary bit plane, where each bit represents the presence or absence of at least one photoelectron in a photodetector. A series of bit planes is generated through high-speed readout, and a kernel or ā€œcubicleā€ of bits (x, y, t) is used to create a single output image pixel. The size of the cubicle can be adjusted post-acquisition to optimize image quality. The specialized sub-diffraction-limit photodetectors in the QIS are referred to as ā€œjotsā€ and a QIS may have a gigajot or more, read out at 1000 fps, for a data rate exceeding 1 Tb/s. Basically, we are trying to count photons as they arrive at the sensor. This paper reviews the QIS concept and its imaging characteristics. Recent progress towards realizing the QIS for commercial and scientific purposes is discussed. This includes implementation of a pump-gate jot device in a 65 nm CIS BSI process yielding read noise as low as 0.22 eāˆ’ r.m.s. and conversion gain as high as 420 ĀµV/eāˆ’, power efficient readout electronics, currently as low as 0.4 pJ/b in the same process, creating high dynamic range images from jot data, and understanding the imaging characteristics of single-bit and multi-bit QIS devices. The QIS represents a possible major paradigm shift in image capture

    Threshold Uniformity Improvement in 1b Quanta Image Sensor Readout Circuit

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    A new readout architecture for single-bit quanta image sensor (QIS) consisting of a capacitive transimpedance amplifier (CTIA) before a 1-bit quantizer to improve the threshold uniformity of the readout cluster is proposed in this paper. The 1-bit quantizer in the previous single-bit QIS had significant threshold non-uniformity likely caused by the fluctuation of the common-mode voltage of the jot output. To guarantee the stability of the common-mode voltage of input signals fed to the 1-bit quantizer, the CTIA is added before the 1-bit quantizer. A pipeline operation mode is also proposed so the CTIA and 1-bit ADC can work at the same time, thereby reducing the CTIA power consumption. A 2048 Ɨ 1024 high-speed test chip was implemented with 45 nm/65 nm stacked backside illuminated (BSI) CMOS image sensor (CIS) process and tested. According to the measured D-log-H results, a good threshold uniformity in the range of 0.3 to 0.8 eāˆ’ for all readout clusters is demonstrated at 500 frame per second (fps) equivalent timing with 68 mW power consumption

    The Quanta Image Sensor: Every Photon Counts

    No full text
    The Quanta Image Sensor (QIS) was conceived when contemplating shrinking pixel sizes and storage capacities, and the steady increase in digital processing power. In the single-bit QIS, the output of each field is a binary bit plane, where each bit represents the presence or absence of at least one photoelectron in a photodetector. A series of bit planes is generated through high-speed readout, and a kernel or ā€œcubicleā€ of bits (x, y, t) is used to create a single output image pixel. The size of the cubicle can be adjusted post-acquisition to optimize image quality. The specialized sub-diffraction-limit photodetectors in the QIS are referred to as ā€œjotsā€ and a QIS may have a gigajot or more, read out at 1000 fps, for a data rate exceeding 1 Tb/s. Basically, we are trying to count photons as they arrive at the sensor. This paper reviews the QIS concept and its imaging characteristics. Recent progress towards realizing the QIS for commercial and scientific purposes is discussed. This includes implementation of a pump-gate jot device in a 65 nm CIS BSI process yielding read noise as low as 0.22 eāˆ’ r.m.s. and conversion gain as high as 420 ĀµV/eāˆ’, power efficient readout electronics, currently as low as 0.4 pJ/b in the same process, creating high dynamic range images from jot data, and understanding the imaging characteristics of single-bit and multi-bit QIS devices. The QIS represents a possible major paradigm shift in image capture
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