Background While researching
metal–oxide–semiconductor (MOS) technology,
Willard Boyle and
George E. Smith discovered that an electric charge could be stored on a small
MOS capacitor, which became the fundamental building block of the
charge-coupled device (CCD) that they invented in 1969. One of the main challenges with CCD technology was its reliance on nearly perfect charge transfer during readout. This limitation resulted in several drawbacks: relatively low radiation tolerance, poor performance in low-light conditions, manufacturing difficulties in producing large arrays, limited integration with
on-chip electronics, reduced efficiency at low temperatures, constraints at
high frame rates, and challenges in fabrication using non-
silicon materials for extending wavelength response. At
RCA Laboratories, a research team including
Paul K. Weimer, W.S. Pike and G. Sadasiv in 1969 proposed a
solid-state image sensor with scanning circuits using
thin-film transistors (TFTs), with
photoconductive film used for the
photodetector. A low-resolution "mostly digital"
N-channel MOSFET (NMOS) imager with intra-pixel amplification, for an
optical mouse application, was demonstrated by
Richard F. Lyon in 1981. Another type of image sensor technology that is related to the APS is the hybrid infrared focal plane array (IRFPA), and then publicly reported by Teranishi and Ishihara with A. Kohono, E. Oda and K. Arai in 1982, with the addition of an anti-
blooming structure. The pinned photodiode is a
photodetector structure with low
lag, low
noise, high
quantum efficiency and low
dark current. The new photodetector structure invented at NEC was given the name "pinned photodiode" (PPD) by B.C. Burkey at
Kodak in 1984. In 1987, the PPD began to be incorporated into most CCD sensors, becoming a fixture in
consumer electronic video cameras and then
digital still cameras. Since then, the PPD has been used in nearly all CCD sensors and then CMOS sensors. In a photodiode array, pixels contain a
p-n junction, integrated
capacitor, and MOSFETs as selection
transistors. A photodiode array was proposed by G. Weckler in 1968, predating the CCD. which had image sensor elements with in-pixel selection transistors, proposed by Peter J.W. Noble in 1968, Passive-pixel sensors were being investigated as a
solid-state alternative to
vacuum-tube imaging devices. The MOS passive-pixel sensor used just a simple switch in the pixel to read out the photodiode integrated charge. Pixels were arrayed in a two-dimensional structure, with an access enable wire shared by pixels in the same row, and output wire shared by column. At the end of each column was a transistor. Passive-pixel sensors suffered from many limitations, such as high
noise, slow readout, and lack of
scalability. Early (1960s–1970s) photodiode arrays with selection transistors within each pixel, along with on-chip
multiplexer circuits, were impractically large. The
noise of photodiode arrays was also a limitation to performance, as the photodiode readout bus capacitance resulted in increased read-noise level.
Correlated double sampling (CDS) could also not be used with a photodiode array without external
memory. It was not possible to
fabricate active-pixel sensors with a practical pixel size in the 1970s, due to limited
microlithography technology at the time. The first MOS APS was fabricated by Tsutomu Nakamura's team at Olympus in 1985. The term
active pixel sensor (APS) was coined by Nakamura while working on the CMD active-pixel sensor at Olympus. The CMD imager had a vertical APS structure, which increases fill-factor (or reduces pixel size) by storing the signal charge under an output
NMOS transistor. Other Japanese
semiconductor companies soon followed with their own active pixel sensors during the late 1980s to early 1990s. Between 1988 and 1991,
Toshiba developed the "
double-gate floating surface transistor" sensor, which had a lateral APS structure, with each pixel containing a buried-channel MOS photogate and a
PMOS output amplifier. Between 1989 and 1992,
Canon developed the base-stored image sensor (BASIS), which used a vertical APS structure similar to the Olympus sensor, but with
bipolar transistors rather than MOSFETs. while active-pixel sensors began being used for low-resolution high-function applications such as retina simulation and high-energy particle detectors. However, CCDs continued to have much lower temporal noise and fixed-pattern noise and were the dominant technology for consumer applications such as
camcorders as well as for broadcast
cameras, where they were displacing
video camera tubes. The CMOS active-pixel sensor, a type of
metal–oxide–semiconductor (MOS)
image sensor, was developed by
Mitsubishi Electric in 1992 and
NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 1993. It came after active-pixel sensors that were developed using PMOS technology in Japan by Toshiba. It had a lateral APS structure similar to the Toshiba sensor, but was fabricated with CMOS rather than PMOS transistors. The CMOS sensor with PPD technology was further advanced and refined by R. M. Guidash in 1997, K. Yonemoto and H. Sumi in 2000, and I. Inoue in 2003. This led to CMOS sensors achieve imaging performance on par with CCD sensors, and later exceeding CCD sensors. The video industry switched to CMOS cameras with the advent of
high-definition video (HD video), as the large number of pixels would require significantly higher power consumption with CCD sensors, which would overheat and drain batteries. CMOS sensors went on to have a significant cultural impact, leading to the mass proliferation of
digital cameras and
camera phones, which bolstered the rise of
social media and
selfie culture, and impacted social and political movements around the world. In recent years, the CMOS sensor technology has spread to medium-format photography with
Phase One being the first to launch a medium format digital back with a Sony-built CMOS sensor. In 2012, Sony introduced the
stacked CMOS BI sensor. Boyd Fowler of
OmniVision is known for his work in CMOS image sensor development. His contributions include the first digital-pixel CMOS image sensor in 1994; the first scientific linear CMOS image sensor with single-electron RMS read noise in 2003; the first multi-megapixel scientific area CMOS image sensor with simultaneous
high dynamic range (86 dB), fast readout (100 frames/second) and ultra-low read noise (1.2e- RMS) (sCMOS) in 2010. He also patented the first CMOS image sensor for inter-oral dental X-rays with clipped corners for better patient comfort. By the late 2010s CMOS sensors had largely if not completely replaced CCD sensors, as CMOS sensors can not only be made in existing semiconductor production lines, reducing costs, but they also consume less power, just to name a few advantages. (
see below)
HV-CMOS HV-CMOS devices are a specialty case of ordinary CMOS sensors used in high-voltage applications (for detection of
high-energy particles) like CERN
Large Hadron Collider where a high-breakdown voltage up to ~30-120V is necessary. Such devices are not used for high-voltage switching though. HV-CMOS are typically implemented by ~10 μm deep n-doped depletion zone (n-well) of a transistor on a p-type
wafer substrate. ==Comparison to CCDs==