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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Characterization, calibration, and optimization of time-resolved CMOS single-photon avalanche diode image sensor

Zarghami, Majid 02 September 2020 (has links)
Vision has always been one of the most important cognitive tools of human beings. In this regard, the development of image sensors opens up the potential to view objects that our eyes cannot see. One of the most promising capability in some image sensors is their single-photon sensitivity that provides information at the ultimate fundamental limit of light. Time-resolved single-photon avalanche diode (SPAD) image sensors bring a new dimension as they measure the arrival time of incident photons with a precision in the order of hundred picoseconds. In addition to this characteristic, they can be fabricated in complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology enabling the integration of complex signal processing blocks at the pixel level. These unique features made CMOS SPAD sensors a prime candidate for a broad spectrum of applications. This thesis is dedicated to the optimization and characterization of quantum imagers based on the SPADs as part of the E.U. funded SUPERTWIN project to surpass the fundamental diffraction limit known as the Rayleigh limit by exploiting the spatio-temporal correlation of entangled photons. The first characterized sensor is a 32×32-pixel SPAD array, named “SuperEllen”, with in-pixel time-to-digital converters (TDC) that measure the spatial cross-correlation functions of a flux of entangled photons. Each pixel features 19.48% fill-factor (FF) in 44.64-μm pitch fabricated in a 150-nm CMOS standard technology. The sensor is fully characterized in several electro-optical experiments, in order to be used in quantum imaging measurements. Moreover, the chip is calibrated in terms of coincidence detection achieving the minimal coincidence window determined by the SPAD jitter. The second developed sensor in the context of SUPERTWIN project is a 224×272-pixel SPAD-based array called “SuperAlice”, a multi-functional image sensor fabricated in a 110-nm CMOS image sensor technology. SuperAlice can operate in multiple modes (time-resolving or photon counting or binary imaging mode). Thanks to the digital intrinsic nature of SPAD imagers, they have an inherent capability to achieve a high frame rate. However, running at high frame rate means high I/O power consumption and thus inefficient handling of the generated data, as SPAD arrays are employed for low light applications in which data are very sparse over time and space. Here, we present three zero-suppression mechanisms to increase the frame rate without adversely affecting power consumption. A row-skipping mechanism that is implemented in both SuperEllen and SuperAlice detects the absence of SPAD activity in a row to increase the duty cycle. A current-based mechanism implemented in SuperEllen ignores reading out a full frame when the number of triggered pixels is less than a user-defined value. A different zero-suppression technique is developed in the SuperAlice chip that is based on jumping through the non-zero pixels within one row. The acquisition of TDC-based SPAD imagers can be speeded up further by storing and processing events inside the chip without the need to read out all data. An on-chip histogramming architecture based on analog counters is developed in a 150-nm CMOS standard technology. The test structure is a 16-bin histogram with 9 bit depth for each bin. SPAD technology demonstrates its capability in other applications such as automotive that demands high dynamic range (HDR) imaging. We proposed two methods based on processing photon arrival times to create HDR images. The proposed methods are validated experimentally with SuperEllen obtaining >130 dB dynamic range within 30 ms of integration time and can be further extended by using a timestamping mechanism with a higher resolution.
12

Conception d'un circuit d'étouffement pour photodiodes à avalanche en mode Geiger pour intégration hétérogène 3D

Boisvert, Alexandre January 2014 (has links)
Le Groupe de Recherche en Appareillage Médical de Sherbrooke (GRAMS) travaille actuellement sur un programme de recherche portant sur des photodiodes à avalanche monophotoniques (PAMP) opérées en mode Geiger en vue d'une application à la tomographie d’émission par positrons (TEP). Pour opérer dans ce mode, la PAMP, ou SPAD selon l’acronyme anglais (Single Photon Avalanche Diode), requiert un circuit d'étouffement (CE) pour, d’une part, arrêter l’avalanche pouvant causer sa destruction et, d’autre part, la réinitialiser en mode d’attente d’un nouveau photon. Le rôle de ce CE comprend également une électronique de communication vers les étages de traitement avancé de signaux. La performance temporelle optimale du CE est réalisée lorsqu’il est juxtaposé à la PAMP. Cependant, cela entraîne une réduction de la surface photosensible ; un élément crucial en imagerie. L’intégration 3D, à base d'interconnexions verticales, offr une solution élégante et performante à cette problématique par l’empilement de circuits intégrés possédant différentes fonctions (PAMP, CE et traitement avancé de signaux). Dans l’approche proposée, des circuits d’étouffement de 50 [mu]m x 50 [mu]m réalisés sur une technologie CMOS 130 nm 3D Tezzaron, contenant chacun 112 transistors, sont matricés afin de correspondre à une matrice de PAMP localisée sur une couche électronique supérieure. Chaque circuit d'étouffement possède une gigue temporelle de 7,47 ps RMS selon des simulations faites avec le logiciel Cadence. Le CE a la flexibilité d'ajuster les temps d'étouffement et de recharge pour la PAMP tout en présentant une faible consommation de puissance ( ~ 0,33 mW à 33 Mcps). La conception du PAMP nécessite de supporter des tensions supérieures aux 3,3 V de la technologie. Pour répondre à ce problème, des transistors à drain étendu (DEMOS) ont été réalisés. En raison de retards de production par les fabricants, les circuits n’ont pu être testés physiquement par des mesures. Les résultats de ce mémoire sont par conséquent basés sur des résultats de simulations avec le logiciel Cadence.
13

Development of Time-Resolved Diffuse Optical Systems Using SPAD Detectors and an Efficient Image Reconstruction Algorithm

Alayed, Mrwan January 2019 (has links)
Time-Resolved diffuse optics is a powerful and safe technique to quantify the optical properties (OP) for highly scattering media such as biological tissues. The OP values are correlated with the compositions of the measured objects, especially for the tissue chromophores such as hemoglobin. The OP are mainly the absorption and the reduced scattering coefficients that can be quantified for highly scattering media using Time-Resolved Diffuse Optical Spectroscopy (TR-DOS) systems. The OP can be retrieved using Time-Resolved Diffuse Optical Imaging (TR-DOI) systems to reconstruct the distribution of the OP in measured media. Therefore, TR-DOS and TR-DOI can be used for functional monitoring of brain and muscles, and to diagnose some diseases such as detection and localization for breast cancer and blood clot. In general, TR-DOI systems are non-invasive, reliable, and have a high temporal resolution. TR-DOI systems have been known for their complexity, bulkiness, and costly equipment such as light sources (picosecond pulsed laser) and detectors (single photon counters). Also, TR-DOI systems acquire a large amount of data and suffer from the computational cost of the image reconstruction process. These limitations hinder the usage of TR-DOI for widespread potential applications such as clinical measurements. The goals of this research project are to investigate approaches to eliminate two main limitations of TR-DOI systems. First, building TR-DOS systems using custom-designed free-running (FR) and time-gated (TG) SPAD detectors that are fabricated in low-cost standard CMOS technology instead of the costly photon counting and timing detectors. The FR-TR-DOS prototype has demonstrated comparable performance (for homogeneous objects measurements) with the reported TR-DOS prototypes that use commercial and expensive detectors. The TG-TR-DOS prototype has acquired raw data with a low level of noise and high dynamic range that enable this prototype to measure multilayered objects such as human heads. Second, building and evaluating TR-DOI prototype that uses a computationally efficient algorithm to reconstruct high quality 3D tomographic images by analyzing a small part of the acquired data. This work indicates the possibility to exploit the recent advances in the technologies of silicon detectors, and computation to build low-cost, compact, portable TR-DOI systems. These systems can expand the applications of TR-DOI and TR-DOS into several fields such as oncology, and neurology. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

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