Cargando…

A Dual-Mode 303-Megaframes-per-Second Charge-Domain Time-Compressive Computational CMOS Image Sensor

An ultra-high-speed computational CMOS image sensor with a burst frame rate of 303 megaframes per second, which is the fastest among the solid-state image sensors, to our knowledge, is demonstrated. This image sensor is compatible with ordinary single-aperture lenses and can operate in dual modes, s...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kagawa, Keiichiro, Horio, Masaya, Pham, Anh Ngoc, Ibrahim, Thoriq, Okihara, Shin-ichiro, Furuhashi, Tatsuki, Takasawa, Taishi, Yasutomi, Keita, Kawahito, Shoji, Nagahara, Hajime
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8914848/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35271100
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22051953
_version_ 1784667852993724416
author Kagawa, Keiichiro
Horio, Masaya
Pham, Anh Ngoc
Ibrahim, Thoriq
Okihara, Shin-ichiro
Furuhashi, Tatsuki
Takasawa, Taishi
Yasutomi, Keita
Kawahito, Shoji
Nagahara, Hajime
author_facet Kagawa, Keiichiro
Horio, Masaya
Pham, Anh Ngoc
Ibrahim, Thoriq
Okihara, Shin-ichiro
Furuhashi, Tatsuki
Takasawa, Taishi
Yasutomi, Keita
Kawahito, Shoji
Nagahara, Hajime
author_sort Kagawa, Keiichiro
collection PubMed
description An ultra-high-speed computational CMOS image sensor with a burst frame rate of 303 megaframes per second, which is the fastest among the solid-state image sensors, to our knowledge, is demonstrated. This image sensor is compatible with ordinary single-aperture lenses and can operate in dual modes, such as single-event filming mode or multi-exposure imaging mode, by reconfiguring the number of exposure cycles. To realize this frame rate, the charge modulator drivers were adequately designed to suppress the peak driving current taking advantage of the operational constraint of the multi-tap charge modulator. The pixel array is composed of macropixels with 2 × 2 4-tap subpixels. Because temporal compressive sensing is performed in the charge domain without any analog circuit, ultrafast frame rates, small pixel size, low noise, and low power consumption are achieved. In the experiments, single-event imaging of plasma emission in laser processing and multi-exposure transient imaging of light reflections to extend the depth range and to decompose multiple reflections for time-of-flight (TOF) depth imaging with a compression ratio of 8× were demonstrated. Time-resolved images similar to those obtained by the direct-type TOF were reproduced in a single shot, while the charge modulator for the indirect TOF was utilized.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8914848
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-89148482022-03-12 A Dual-Mode 303-Megaframes-per-Second Charge-Domain Time-Compressive Computational CMOS Image Sensor Kagawa, Keiichiro Horio, Masaya Pham, Anh Ngoc Ibrahim, Thoriq Okihara, Shin-ichiro Furuhashi, Tatsuki Takasawa, Taishi Yasutomi, Keita Kawahito, Shoji Nagahara, Hajime Sensors (Basel) Article An ultra-high-speed computational CMOS image sensor with a burst frame rate of 303 megaframes per second, which is the fastest among the solid-state image sensors, to our knowledge, is demonstrated. This image sensor is compatible with ordinary single-aperture lenses and can operate in dual modes, such as single-event filming mode or multi-exposure imaging mode, by reconfiguring the number of exposure cycles. To realize this frame rate, the charge modulator drivers were adequately designed to suppress the peak driving current taking advantage of the operational constraint of the multi-tap charge modulator. The pixel array is composed of macropixels with 2 × 2 4-tap subpixels. Because temporal compressive sensing is performed in the charge domain without any analog circuit, ultrafast frame rates, small pixel size, low noise, and low power consumption are achieved. In the experiments, single-event imaging of plasma emission in laser processing and multi-exposure transient imaging of light reflections to extend the depth range and to decompose multiple reflections for time-of-flight (TOF) depth imaging with a compression ratio of 8× were demonstrated. Time-resolved images similar to those obtained by the direct-type TOF were reproduced in a single shot, while the charge modulator for the indirect TOF was utilized. MDPI 2022-03-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8914848/ /pubmed/35271100 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22051953 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kagawa, Keiichiro
Horio, Masaya
Pham, Anh Ngoc
Ibrahim, Thoriq
Okihara, Shin-ichiro
Furuhashi, Tatsuki
Takasawa, Taishi
Yasutomi, Keita
Kawahito, Shoji
Nagahara, Hajime
A Dual-Mode 303-Megaframes-per-Second Charge-Domain Time-Compressive Computational CMOS Image Sensor
title A Dual-Mode 303-Megaframes-per-Second Charge-Domain Time-Compressive Computational CMOS Image Sensor
title_full A Dual-Mode 303-Megaframes-per-Second Charge-Domain Time-Compressive Computational CMOS Image Sensor
title_fullStr A Dual-Mode 303-Megaframes-per-Second Charge-Domain Time-Compressive Computational CMOS Image Sensor
title_full_unstemmed A Dual-Mode 303-Megaframes-per-Second Charge-Domain Time-Compressive Computational CMOS Image Sensor
title_short A Dual-Mode 303-Megaframes-per-Second Charge-Domain Time-Compressive Computational CMOS Image Sensor
title_sort dual-mode 303-megaframes-per-second charge-domain time-compressive computational cmos image sensor
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8914848/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35271100
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22051953
work_keys_str_mv AT kagawakeiichiro adualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT horiomasaya adualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT phamanhngoc adualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT ibrahimthoriq adualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT okiharashinichiro adualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT furuhashitatsuki adualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT takasawataishi adualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT yasutomikeita adualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT kawahitoshoji adualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT nagaharahajime adualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT kagawakeiichiro dualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT horiomasaya dualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT phamanhngoc dualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT ibrahimthoriq dualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT okiharashinichiro dualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT furuhashitatsuki dualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT takasawataishi dualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT yasutomikeita dualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT kawahitoshoji dualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor
AT nagaharahajime dualmode303megaframespersecondchargedomaintimecompressivecomputationalcmosimagesensor