ACTIVE PIXEL SENSORS VS. CHARGE-COUPLED DEVICES

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ACTIVE PIXEL SENSORS VS. CHARGE-COUPLED DEVICES Dr. Eric R. Fossum Imaging Systems Section Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology (818) 354-3128 1993 IEEE Workshop on CCDs and Advanced Image Sensors

OUTLINE 1. A Brief History of CCDs 2. Active Pixel Sensors 3. State of the Art 4. Comparison of APS vs. CCD Technology 5. Speculation 6. Summary E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 2

EVOLUTION OF PHOTOLITHOGRAPHIC FEATURE SIZE VS. PIXEL SIZE 100 DIMENSION (microns) 10 1 CCD Invented Design Rule Pixel Size Typ. Diffraction Limit 0.1 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 YEAR E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 3

TYPICAL CCD PERFORMANCE COMMERCIAL SCIENTIFIC Array Size 1920x1036 2048x2048 CTE >0.99997 >0.999995 Architecture FIT 1" Full Frame Smear -110 db n/a Full Well 120,000 40,000 Noise 20-30 e- 3-5 e- Dynamic Range 75 db 80 db Power Dissipation 1.5 W <10 mw Pixel Size 7.3 μm x 7.6 μm 7.5 μm x 7.5 μm Aperture >60% with microlens >90 % E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 4

ADVANTAGES OF CCDS Incumbent technology Large formats demonstrated Very small pixels possible Noiseless charge domain processing (e.g. binning, TDI) E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 5

SOME RELEVANT PROBLEMS WITH CCDS 1. Need for nearly perfect charge transfer efficiency Signal fidelity ~ ηm, η=cte, m=# of stages e.g. η=0.99995, m=8000, yields fidelity of 0.67 2. Radiation softness Particularly susceptible to bulk silicon damage (reduced CTE) 3. Susceptible to smear Requires good light shield, FIT structure 4. High power dissipation on-chip for large, fast arrays Large capacitances to drive Large voltage swings (power ~ CV2f, electroluminescence) E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 6

SOME RELEVANT PROBLEMS WITH CCDS (CONT.) 5. Difficult to integrate on-chip electronics Requires high power drive electronics Many voltages required Process incompatible for practical CMOS signal chain integration 6. Difficult to extend spectral range Want UV response λ < 0.4 microns Want SWIR response to 2.5 microns High CTE in non-silicon materials unlikely Backside illumination fraught with problems 7. Limited readout rate HDTV rates (70 MHz) require dual channel architecture E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 7

OTHER SOLID-STATE IMAGER TECHNOLOGIES PHOTODIODE ARRAYS CIDS High noise (>250 e- r.m.s.) Lag Good blue/uv response High noise (~ 200 e- r.m.s.) Non-destructive readout HYBRID IR FPAs High fill factor Medium noise (30-50 e- r.m.s.) Hybrids expensive, small array sizes (<512x512) ACTIVE PIXEL SENSOR CONCEPT E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 8

One or more active transistors in the pixel. Eliminates the need for charge transfer Buffer the output signal Provides high sensitivity (low C) Provides current drive capability Provides random access capability Allows low power readout Simplifies system design E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 9

(insert George VG here) E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 10

JPL CMOS ACTIVE PIXEL SENSOR First Silicon Demonstrated: 100% TTL compatible input (0,5 V) on all input signals. X-Y addressability. Differential analog output signal. Lateral antiblooming control. Low read noise (22 e- rms expected) High sensitivity (4 μv/e-) Low dark current (1-10 na/cm2) High dynamic range (600 mv saturation) Low fixed pattern noise (<1.5% saturation) Vanilla CMOS design. E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 11

MICROLENS ARRAY TO INCREASE EFFECTIVE FILL FACTOR hν microlens array substrate "Dead" region Photosensitive region E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 12

SUMMARY OF STATE OF THE ART DGFSPT CMD BCMD BASIS SIT AMI CMOS Developer Toshiba Olympus Texas Instr. Canon Olympus NHK JPL/ Caltech APS Type Lateral Vertical Vertical Vertical Lateral Lateral Lateral Output Lateral Lateral Lateral Vertical Vertical Lateral Lateral Pixel Size 13 x 13 5.0 x 5.2 10 x 10* 13.5 x 13.5 17 x 13.5 17.3x13.5 40 x 40* (μm) Sensitivity 200 μv/e- 965 pa/e+ 15.4 μv/e- 3.5 μv/e+ 3.0 μv/e+ 1.6 μv/e- 4.0 μv/e- Input- Noise 0.8 e- rms 11.2 e+ rms 15 e- rms 60 e+ rms 69 e+ rms 130 e- rms* 22 e- rms Dynamic 75 db 68 db 72 db 76 db 86.5 db 77 db 82 db Range FPN (p-p) 10 % 6 % 2 % 0.03 % 1.1 % 0.2 % 1.5 % Antiblooming vertical vertical* vertical none* none* lateral lateral Lag 0 0 0 <0.1 % 70 % 0 0 Note discont. *uses horiz. blnk. *hex. layout *uses clipping op discont. *100x gain e-beam=1.3 *2 μm design rule E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 13

STATE OF THE ART: TOSHIBA DOUBLE-GATE FLOATING SURFACE TRANSISTOR IG IG S p+ PG DG DG n p n D p+ PG DG n n p-well n-sub sensitivity of 200 μv/e- read noise 0.8 e- rms needs large voltage on DG E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 14

STATE OF THE ART: OLYMPUS CHARGE-MODULATION DEVICE (CMD) PG D S D n+ n+ n+ n-channel p- substrate small pixel (5.0 μm x 5.2 μm) gain is 965 pa/hole, 11.2 e+ rms noise readout is current mode dark current and FPN problem E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 15

STATE OF THE ART: TI BULK CHARGE-MODULATED DEVICE (BCMD) PG D S D p p+ n p+ p+ p n n+ sensitivity 15 μv/e- read noise 15 e- r.m.s. complex vertical layer structure E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 16

STATE OF THE ART CANON BASE-STORED IMAGE SENSOR (BASIS) R Emitter R p+ p+ n+ p+ n- n+ substrate Collector sensitivity 3.5 μv/e+, but ktc noise very low FPN (0.03%) good fill factor, blue response E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 17

STATE OF THE ART: OLYMPUS STATIC INDUCTION TRANSISTOR Gate Emitter p+ n+ p+ n- n+ Collector sensitivity 3.0 μv/e+ large dynamic range large lag problem E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 18

STATE OF THE ART NHK AMPLIFIED MOS IMAGER (AMI) RESET Ty Tx SELECT 100 x gain due to avalanche effect in a-si 130 e- ktc noise = 1.3 e- photocathode-referred noise photocathode QE = 10 % E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 19

COMPARISON OF APS TECHNOLOGIES DGFSPT CMD BCMD BASIS SIT AMI CMOS FPN Random Noise Small Pixel Fill Factor Voltages Microlense Snapshot (Transfer) CMOS Integration E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 20

APS VS. CCD APS CCD Major Strengths Low Power On-Chip Integration Low Smear Radiation Hardness Random Access Incumbent Technology Small Pixels 5k x 5k Demo'd Charge-domain processing Major Weaknesses Lower Fill-Factor FPN Susceptibility Newer Technology Power Requirements Incompatible w/ Integratn Need for perfect CTE E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 21

SPECULATION Smart Sensors Machine Vision Linear Arrays Consumer Video Consumer Still Broadcast Video Scientific Mini cameras Scientific Imaging = CCD = APS 1993 1998 2003 2008 E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 22

SUMMARY Active pixel sensors are a new, emerging technology APS is already becoming competitive to CCDs The major strength of CCDs is incumbency and current state of the art in IC design rules. APS needs to improve FPN using improved fab. and on-chip signal processing. APS is a stepping stone to highly integrated opto-electronic sensor systems (e.g. a camera on a chip) CCDs are future "dinosaurs". E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 23

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS S. Mendis, Columbia University R. Gee, S. Kemeny, B. Pain, C. Stevens, V. Sarohia, JPL G. Johnston, W. Hudson, NASA HQ Discussions with Kodak, Polaroid, Orbit, Olympus, NEC, NHK, Sony, Toshiba, Canon, Matsushita, Philips, Texas Instruments The research described in this paper was carried out by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Reference herein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not constitute or imply endorsement by the United States Government or the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology. E.R.Fossum 1/1/2008 CANADA pg. 24