Literature DB >> 23836643

Single-photon sampling architecture for solid-state imaging sensors.

Ewout van den Berg1, Emmanuel Candès, Garry Chinn, Craig Levin, Peter Demetri Olcott, Carlos Sing-Long.   

Abstract

Advances in solid-state technology have enabled the development of silicon photomultiplier sensor arrays capable of sensing individual photons. Combined with high-frequency time-to-digital converters (TDCs), this technology opens up the prospect of sensors capable of recording with high accuracy both the time and location of each detected photon. Such a capability could lead to significant improvements in imaging accuracy, especially for applications operating with low photon fluxes such as light detection and ranging and positron-emission tomography. The demands placed on on-chip readout circuitry impose stringent trade-offs between fill factor and spatiotemporal resolution, causing many contemporary designs to severely underuse the technology's full potential. Concentrating on the low photon flux setting, this paper leverages results from group testing and proposes an architecture for a highly efficient readout of pixels using only a small number of TDCs. We provide optimized design instances for various sensor parameters and compute explicit upper and lower bounds on the number of TDCs required to uniquely decode a given maximum number of simultaneous photon arrivals. To illustrate the strength of the proposed architecture, we note a typical digitization of a 60 × 60 photodiode sensor using only 142 TDCs. The design guarantees registration and unique recovery of up to four simultaneous photon arrivals using a fast decoding algorithm. By contrast, a cross-strip design requires 120 TDCs and cannot uniquely decode any simultaneous photon arrivals. Among other realistic simulations of scintillation events in clinical positron-emission tomography, the above design is shown to recover the spatiotemporal location of 99.98% of all detected photons.

Keywords:  multiplexing; single-photon detection; superimposed codes

Year:  2013        PMID: 23836643      PMCID: PMC3725070          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1216318110

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  1 in total

1.  New constructions of one- and two-stage pooling designs.

Authors:  Yongxi Cheng; Ding-Zhu Du
Journal:  J Comput Biol       Date:  2008-03       Impact factor: 1.479

  1 in total
  2 in total

1.  A Note on the Minimax Solution for the Two-Stage Group Testing Problem.

Authors:  Yaakov Malinovsky; Paul S Albert
Journal:  Am Stat       Date:  2014-11-17       Impact factor: 8.710

2.  Silicon single-photon avalanche diodes with nano-structured light trapping.

Authors:  Kai Zang; Xiao Jiang; Yijie Huo; Xun Ding; Matthew Morea; Xiaochi Chen; Ching-Ying Lu; Jian Ma; Ming Zhou; Zhenyang Xia; Zongfu Yu; Theodore I Kamins; Qiang Zhang; James S Harris
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2017-09-20       Impact factor: 14.919

  2 in total

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