Applicants and their fellow workers have developed the Photoconductor on Active Pixel (POAP) image sensor technology for the last decade. Examples of these sensors are provided in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,730,914, 7276,749 and 7,436,038 all of which are incorporated herein by reference. They have developed an amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) p-i-n photodiode coating (0.4 micron-0.7 micron spectrum). This photodiode coating is deposited on a pixelated CMOS readout array for visible imaging applications. Applicants are presently developing a microcrystalline germanium (μc-Ge) p-i-n photodiode coating (0.4 micron-1.6 micron spectrum). This photodiode coating is deposited on a pixelated CMOS readout array for visible (VIS), near infrared (NIR) and short wave infrared (SWIR) imaging applications. U.S. Pat. No. 6,730,914 teaches the use of direct injection pixel circuits for POAP image sensor applications.
Applicants' experiments have shown that microcrystalline germanium photodiode coatings and microcrystalline silicon photodiode coatings produce relatively very high leakage currents. And that prior art pixel circuits are not compatible with these microcrystalline photodiode coatings. The present invention provides pixel circuits, capable of operating in either “snapshot” or “rolling integration” mode, and compatible with a conformal photodiode coating. Preferred embodiments of the present invention are compatible with these coating materials, as well as others, including amorphous Silicon. The preferred pixel circuits includes additional transistors not provided in prior art pixel circuits to divert leakage current away from integration nodes when not integrating, to reset the integration node, and to buffer and select the integrated voltage.
In a first preferred embodiment, a six transistor (6T) circuit with five control lines, can provide conventional (i.e. kTC-noise limited) snapshot integration-then-read (ITR) capability, and also off-chip correlated double sampling (CDS) capability. In a second preferred embodiment, an eight transistor (8T) circuit with seven control lines, can provide conventional (i.e. kTC-noise limited) snapshot integration-then-read (ITR) capability and integrate-while-read (IWR) capability; and also off-chip correlated double sampling (CDS) capability.
The advantages of the first preferred embodiment are: less control lines (5 versus 7) routed to each pixel, less circuitry in a relatively small pixel (6 MOSFETS and one capacitor versus 8 MOSFETS and two capacitors), and lower readout noise. The additional circuitry and control lines required for the second preferred embodiment may require a pixel size larger than 6 microns×6 microns to accommodate but may also further reduce noise.
Pixel Circuit #1, displayed in
The pixel circuit can be divided into three sub-circuits; detector, integration switch, and readout sub-circuits. The basic operation of this pixel circuit is described here.
The detector sub-circuit (“Detector”) includes the POAP photodiode and the direct injection transistor TDI. This circuit attempts to hold the voltage across the photodiode, VPD, at a constant value, independent of the integrated charge on the capacitor CINT. This enables photodiode operation at a bias voltage that attempts to minimize dark current from the photodiode.
The injection efficiency η of the photodiode current through transistor TDI, dependent on the relative values (current divider) of the shunt resistance of the photodiode and the input impedance of transistor TDI, is
We can approximate the shunt resistance of our photodiode as
The injection efficiency η versus IPD/Idark@−1 V bias is displayed in
The integration switch sub-circuit includes the two transistors TINTCTL and TCASCODE. The differential gate voltage, ΔVINT=VINTCTL−VCASCODE controls the current Io=I1+I2 flowing through the two paths of the switch.
The currents I1/Io and I2/Io versus ΔVINT are displayed in
The readout sub-circuit includes the integration capacitor CINT, the source follower transistor TSF, the select transistor TSEL, and the reset transistor TRST. The integration capacitor CINT collects electric charge from the photodiode. When the select switch TSEL is closed, the source follower transistor TSF (trans-impedance amplifier) provides a current that is proportional to the collected charge on CINT. This current is directed to the periphery of the pixel array for amplification, digitization, and digital readout. The reset switch TRST, when closed, dumps the integrated charge on CINT and resets the voltage across CINT to zero.
The snapshot integration readout sequence for Pixel Circuit #1 is displayed in
The rolling reset integration mode for Pixel Circuit #1 is implemented by keeping the integration switch always opened (ΔVINT=VINTCTL−VCASCODE=1 V) to enable the photodiode current Io to flow continuously to the integration capacitor CINT. The rolling reset integration is then implemented in the same manner as a conventional 3T (source follower transistor TSF, select transistor TSEL and reset transistor TRST) pixel circuit.
Pixel Circuit #1 can also provide off-chip CDS readout, displayed in
Pixel Circuit #2, displayed in
Pixel Circuit #2 is essentially the same as Pixel Circuit #1, with the addition of a transfer gate TX and a second integration/charge storage capacitor C2.
The snapshot integration readout sequence for Pixel Circuit #2, displayed in
The reset switch TRST1 is opened, then the integration switch is opened (ΔVINT=VINTCTL−VCASCODE=1 V) to enable the photodiode current Io to flow to the integration capacitor C1. After an integration time TINT, the integration switch is closed (ΔVINT=VINTCTL−VCASCODE=−1 V) to stop collection of charge on the integration capacitor C1 and to direct the photodiode current Io directly to the power supply. The transfer gate TX is then opened to allow one half of the charge on capacitor C1 to flow to capacitor C2 (i.e. the two capacitor voltages will equalize). The transfer gate TX is then closed. The charges on capacitors C2 on all of the pixels are then progressively readout row-by-row (approximately 90 ms readout time for a 14 kpixel×14 kpixel sensor). The charge values are digitized and stored off-chip. During this readout period, the pixel can integrate simultaneously on capacitor C1.
The rolling reset integration mode for Pixel Circuit #2 is essentially the same as for Pixel #1. The transfer gate TX is kept always open for this integration mode. The rolling reset integration mode is implemented by keeping the integration switch always opened (ΔVINT=VINTCTL−VCASCODE=1 V) to enable the photodiode current Io to flow continuously to the integration capacitors C1 and C2. The rolling reset integration is then implemented in the same manner as a conventional 3T (source follower transistor TSF, select transistor TSEL, and reset transistor TRST) pixel circuit.
The CDS integration mode for Pixel Circuit #2, displayed in
Noise simulations for the pixel circuits and integration modes are displayed in
While there have been shown what are presently considered to be preferred embodiments of the present invention, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made herein without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
For example, the polarity of the photodiode layer could be reversed so that electrons are collected on the pixel electrodes during pixel integration. Thus, the scope of the invention is to be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents.
This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/207,186 filed Feb. 9, 2009.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6369853 | Merrill et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100201431 A1 | Aug 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61207186 | Feb 2009 | US |