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Integrated receiver channel circuits and structures for a pulsed time-of-flight laser radarRuotsalainen, T. (Tarmo) 14 April 1999 (has links)
Abstract
This thesis describes the development of integrated structures and circuit implementations for the receiver channel of portable pulsed time-of-flight laser rangefinders for industrial measurement applications where the measurement range is from ∼1 m to ∼100 m to noncooperative targets and the required measurement accuracy is from a few millimetres to a few centimetres. The receiver channel is used to convert the current pulse from a photodetector to a voltage pulse, amplify it, discriminate the timing point and produce an accurately timed logic-level pulse for a time-to-digital converter.
Since the length of the laser pulse, typically 5 ns, is large compared to the required accuracy, a specific point in the pulses has to be discriminated. The amplitude of the input pulses varies widely as a function of measurement range and the reflectivity of the target, typically from 1 to 100 ... 1000, so that the gain of the amplifier channel needs to be controlled and the discrimination scheme should be insensitive to the amplitude variation of the input signal. Furthermore, the amplifier channel should have low noise in order to minimize timing jitter.
Alternative circuit structures are discussed, the treatment concentrating on the preamplifier, gain control circuitry and timing discriminator, which are the key circuit blocks from the performance point of view. New circuit techniques and structures, such as a fully differential transimpedance preamplifier and a current mode gain control scheme, have been developed. Several circuit implementations for different applications are presented together with experimental results, one of them being a differential BiCMOS receiver channel with a bandwidth of 170 MHz, input referred noise of 6 pA/√Hz
and maximum transimpedance of 260 kW. It has an accuracy of about +/- 7 mm (average of 10000 measurements), taking into account walk error with an input signal range of 1:624 and jitter (3s).
The achievable performance level using integrated circuit technology is comparable or superior to that of the previously developed commercially available discrete component implementations, and the significantly reduced size and power consumption open up new application areas.
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