Albert Theuwissen delivers Plenary presentation "There’s More to the Picture Than Meets the Eye (and in the future it will become only much more)"
"Over the last five decades, solid-state imaging has gone through a difficult “childhood”, changing technology during its “adolescence”, and finally growing up to become a mature, “adult” that can compete with the human visual system when it comes to image quality.
State-of-the-art mobile devices enjoyed by consumers, rely on a multi-disciplinary mixture of analog electronics, digital circuits, mixed signal design, optical know-how, device physics, semiconductor technology, and algorithm development. As a result, CMOS image sensors utilized in today’s mobile phones come close to perfection as far as imaging characteristics are concerned. However, this does not mean that further developments in the field are no longer necessary. On the contrary, new technologies and new materials are opening up new dimensions and new applications which complement the classical imaging functionality of sensors.
This trend will ultimately convert the image sensor landscape from image capturing to smart vision. Consequently, the future of solid-state imaging will not only revolve around the shooting of beautiful images, as the market driver will no longer be limited only to mobile phones."
Always worth to listen to!!!
ReplyDeleteWhat is the RON supposed in the Figure 1.4.3 please ? Thanks !!
ReplyDeleteWhere do those FWC scalings derive from. Thus far, sub-pixel scaling has managed to maintain per unit area capacity. Clearly that cannot continue indefinitely. Is the illustration based on a constant deep trench isolation geometry?
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to attending this tomorrow!
ReplyDeleteDid the simulations in Figure 1.4.3 include the strong effect of optical diffractions when the aperture(pixel size) is close/below the incident wavelength?
ReplyDeleteI suppose this will only be visible for confernce attendees, right? Or will there be a recorded version? Most likely, Vladimir will answer this question - if the answer is yes, there will be a post.
ReplyDeleteit seems the video is online: https://youtu.be/VUzeKn0DBpA?list=PLmpDf0HfYL01Edkbq8GnS4tMUxNzbTDzc
DeleteThanks for the link. But I cannot access it.
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