| Literature DB >> 31156324 |
Arin C Ulku1, Claudio Bruschini1, Ivan Michel Antolovic1, Edoardo Charbon1, Yung Kuo2, Rinat Ankri2, Shimon Weiss2, Xavier Michalet2.
Abstract
We report on SwissSPAD2, an image sensor with 512×512 photon-counting pixels, each comprising a single-photon avalanche diode (SPAD), a 1-bit memory, and a gating mechanism capable of turning the SPAD on and off, with a skew of 250ps and 344ps, respectively, for a minimum duration of 5.75ns. The sensor is designed to achieve a frame rate of up to 97,700 binary frames per second and sub-40ps gate shifts. By synchronizing it with a pulsed laser and using multiple successive overlapping gates, one can reconstruct a molecule's fluorescent response with picosecond temporal resolution. Thanks to the sensor's number of pixels (the largest to date) and the fully integrated gated operation, SwissSPAD2 enables widefield FLIM with an all-solid-state solution and at relatively high frame rates. This was demonstrated with preliminary results on organic dyes and semiconductor quantum dots using both decay fitting and phasor analysis. Furthermore, pixels with an exceptionally low dark count rate and high photon detection probability enable uniform and high quality imaging of biologically relevant fluorescent samples stained with multiple dyes. While future versions will feature the addition of microlenses and optimize firmware speed, our results open the way to low-cost alternatives to commercially available scientific time-resolved imagers.Entities:
Keywords: CMOS; FLIM; SPAD; fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy; image sensor; phasor analysis; single-photon avalanche diodes; time gating; time-resolved; widefield
Year: 2018 PMID: 31156324 PMCID: PMC6541425 DOI: 10.1109/JSTQE.2018.2867439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE J Sel Top Quantum Electron ISSN: 1077-260X Impact factor: 4.544