CCD versus CMOS - Optical Sciences
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Transcript CCD versus CMOS - Optical Sciences
Cameras for scientific experiments
A brave attempt to give an overview of the different types and their pros & cons
Grouptalk Optical Sciences, may 8 2012
Jeroen Korterik
Introduction
Lots of different types of cameras
Each working principle has it's own strong and weak points
Which type to use?
How to use it for optimal results?
Introduction: terminology
Analog film
Analog, electronic (CCD/CMOS, PAL/NTSC)
Digital (CCD/CMOS)
Color vs
monochrome
CCD versus CMOS
CCD: charge coupled device
Electrons from photodetector (diode)
charge a capacitor
Charges are shifted out towards the
output amplifier row by row, pixel by pixel
Advantage:
low noise
Backdraws:
Expensive: not CMOS compatible
High powerconsumption
Shift register
Output
amplifier
CCD versus CMOS
CMOS: Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor
1) Electrons from photodetector (diode)
charge a capacitor
2) rows of charges are selected by switching
on/off CMOS transistors
•Parallel processing: fast readout
•Cheap; standard CMOS technology
•Low power
•Traditionally noisier than CCD but CMOS
is catching up
Performance factors (part1)
Quantum efficiency (QE)
•Wiring and circuitry around/above every
pixel's photodiode decreases fill factor
and therefore the QE as well
•Workaround: etch the backside of the
sensor and illuminate from the back
('back illuminated CCD/ CMOS')
→already seen in 200€ photocameras!
Dark counts
•Spontaneous emission of electrons
from photodiode
•Constant offset in signal due to dark
counts can be corrected but
sqrt(dark counts) = shot noise!
•Strong dependance on temperature
•Liquid nitrogen models (LN): down to
-120 degC
•Peltier cooled models (TE): down to
-70 degC
•Backdraw: cooling might also reduce
the QE
Performance factors (part2)
Readout noise
•After illumination, charges are read out (charge transport, amplifier, ADC)
•This adds noise to the signal
•Solution1: longer illumination times
•Solution2: slow readout (slow ADC) → some camera's have selectable ADC speed
•Solution3: ICCD, EMCCD, sCMOS
Andor Ikon-L 936 TE cooled CCD
ADC speed [Mhz] Readout noise [e-/pix]
0.05
1
3
5
2.9
7.0
11.7
31.5
Advanced techniques for high speed & low light levels: ICCD, EMCCD, sCMOS
Intensified CCD (ICCD)
Intensifier in front of CCD amplifies optical signal
* low QE (up to 40% for gen4 intensifier)
* ns gating possible
* intensifier increases shotnoise by a factor sqrt(2)
Electron multiplier CCD (EMCCD)
Electrons out of CCD get multiplied before ADC
* high QE (up to 90% for back illuminated CCD)
* EM increases shotnoise by a factor sqrt(2)
Scientific CMOS (sCMOS)
improved CMOS sensor
* high QE ~70%
* very high speed ~500Mpix/s
* low readout noise 1.2 e-/pix
* low dark current 0.2 e-/pix/s
1D cameras
Linescan CCD
* High frame (line) rates : tens of kHz
* low noise
NMOS Linear Image Sensor
* rectangular pixels: 25um wide, 2.5mm high
→ non critical alignment, catch all the light
* high dynamic range due to large quantum well
→ measure small fluctuation on large background
Homebuilt NMOS LIS cameras:
→ with spectrograph: full spectrum per lasershot
1) Push setup 1 kHz
2) Shove setup 5 kHz
TOF camera
LED 20 MHz
Time of flight camera (TOF)
* measures intensity and time delay of reflections
* modulated light source LED @ 20 MHz
* CMOS sensor
* 'dual phase lockin amplifier' per pixel
Grayscale intensity
Colorscale TOF
Streak Camera
Horizontal direction: intensity vs position (spectrum)
Vertical direction: arrival time with resolution down to 100fs