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A low-noise 15-μm pixel-pitch 640×512 hybrid InGaAs image sensor for night vision

Authors :
Philippe Bois
Pierre Castelein
Sébastien Dubois
Eric De Borniol
Romain Guiguet
A. Rouvie
Sébastien Martin
Fabrice Guellec
Michael Tchagaspanian
Source :
SPIE Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
SPIE, 2012.

Abstract

Hybrid InGaAs focal plane arrays are very interesting for night vision because they can benefit from the nightglow emission in the Short Wave Infrared band. Through a collaboration between III-V Lab and CEA-Leti, a 640x512 InGaAs image sensor with 15μm pixel pitch has been developed. The good crystalline quality of the InGaAs detectors opens the door to low dark current (around 20nA/cm2 at room temperature and -0.1V bias) as required for low light level imaging. In addition, the InP substrate can be removed to extend the detection range towards the visible spectrum. A custom readout IC (ROIC) has been designed in a standard CMOS 0.18μm technology. The pixel circuit is based on a capacitive transimpedance amplifier (CTIA) with two selectable charge-to-voltage conversion gains. Relying on a thorough noise analysis, this input stage has been optimized to deliver low-noise performance in high-gain mode with a reasonable concession on dynamic range. The exposure time can be maximized up to the frame period thanks to a rolling shutter approach. The frame rate can be up to 120fps or 60fps if the Correlated Double Sampling (CDS) capability of the circuit is enabled. The first results show that the CDS is effective at removing the very low frequency noise present on the reference voltage in our test setup. In this way, the measured total dark noise is around 90 electrons in high-gain mode for 8.3ms exposure time. It is mainly dominated by the dark shot noise for a detector temperature settling around 30°C when not cooled. The readout noise measured with shorter exposure time is around 30 electrons for a dynamic range of 71dB in high-gain mode and 108 electrons for 79dB in low-gain mode.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........362fd447f82edc1dd090e4400ba18790
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.912105