https://semiconductor.samsung.com/image-sensor/mobile-image-sensor/isocell-hp5/
Specifications:
Effective Resolution
16,384 x 12,288 (200MP)
Pixel Size
0.5 μm
Optical Format
1/1.56"
Color Filter
Tetra²pixel RGB Bayer Pattern
Normal Frame Rate
7.5 fps @full, 30 fps @50MP, 90 fps @12.5MP
Video Frame Rate
30 fps @8K, 120 fps @4K, 480 fps @FHD (w/o AF)
Shutter Type
Electronic rolling shutter
ADC Accuracy
10-bit
Supply Voltage
2.2 V for analog, 1.8 V for I/O, 1.0 V for digital core supply
Operating Temperature
-20℃ to +85℃
Interface
4 lanes (4.5 Gbps per lane) D-PHY / 3 trios (4 Gsps per trio) C-PHY
Chroma
Tetra²pixel
Autofocus
Super QPD (PDAF)
HDR
Smart-ISO Pro (iDCG), Staggered HDR
Output Formats
RAW8, RAW10, RAW12, RAW14
Analog Gain
16x @full, 256x @12.5MP
Excerpt from Baidu news (translated with Google translate):
Samsung releases ISOCELL HP5, the world's first 0.5µm ultra-fine pixel 200 million image sensor
... Samsung officially released the new 200-megapixel image sensor ISOCELL HP5, which is expected to be the first telephoto camera of the OPPO Find X9 Pro mobile phone.
... ISOCELL HP5 sensor is 1/1.56 inches in size, has an ultra-high resolution of 16384 x 12288, and compresses the unit pixel size to 0.5 microns. It is Samsung's first 200 million image sensor in the world equipped with 0.5µm ultra-micro pixels.
To overcome the challenges posed by small pixels, ISOCELL HP5 integrates multiple cutting-edge technologies. Among them, dual vertical transfer gate (D-VTG) and front deep trench isolation (FDTI) technologies work together to effectively increase the full well capacity of each pixel, or its ability to accommodate light signals.
So, it's this I guess: https://imagesensors.org/Past%20Workshops/2025%20Workshop/2025%20Papers/R01.2_Kim.pdf
ReplyDeleteThe performance table seems the same as Samsung's ISSCC 2024 chip, which was called "50MP, 0.5um pitch quad photo diode." Are they the same chips?
DeleteThe ADC resolution is only 10bit. What do RAW12 and RAW14 mean?
ReplyDeleteBigger file size?!
DeleteThe sensor has HDR (iDCG). So a single exposure is digitized with two different "gains". These are combined on-chip resulting in higher than 10b format.
DeleteHDR, related, not ADC
DeleteSinility grows stronger...
ReplyDeleteSmaller pixel = less camera system gain. Worse for low light.
ReplyDelete