A 4.6-Μm, 127-Db Dynamic Range, Ultra-Low Power Stacked Digital Pixel Sensor with Overlapped Triple Quantization
IEEE transactions on electron devices/IEEE transactions on electron devices(2022)
Abstract
This article presents a global shutter (GS), stacked digital pixel sensor (DPS) to meet the ultra-low power, ultra high dynamic range (HDR) requirements for battery-powered, always-on mobile computer vision (CV) applications. The $4.6~\mu \text{m}$ DPS pixel is partitioned into two layers; a dual conversion gain (CG) pixel with a backside-illuminated photodiode (PD) on the top layer and an in-pixel ADC circuit with 10 bit SRAM on the bottom layer. A Cu-to-Cu hybrid-bonding (HB) technology is used to connect the two layers via pixel-level interconnect. The sensor features an overlapped triple quantization (3Q) scheme that performs a time-to-saturation (TTS) quantization and the dual-CG linear ADC mode sequentially in the same frame and extends the dynamic range (DR) with a small number of ADC bits. The DPS with a $512\times512$ pixel array has achieved an ultra-HDR of 127 dB and low power consumption of 5.75 mW at 30 frames per second. The nonlinear conversion characteristics of the TTS mode provide an equivalent full well capacity (FWC) of 9000 ke − , while the high CG linear ADC mode realizes a low noise floor of 4.2 e − .
MoreTranslated text
Key words
Robot sensing systems,Quantization (signal),Random access memory,Partial discharges,Codes,Latches,Dynamic range,CIS,CMOS image sensor,computer vision (CV) sensor,digital pixel sensor (DPS),global shutter (GS),high dynamic range (HDR),low power,noise analysis,stacked process
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined