Talk by David Stoppa on 'Time of Flight 3D Sensing and Imaging: detectors, readout circuits and data processing' at TUG, Nov 28th 2018

#3D #sensing #imaging
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This talk is a IEEE SSC Distinguished Lecture hosted jointly with a lecture in the course on "Selected Topics in Analog Circuit Design" at TU Graz.s

In the past few years we have assisted to a tremendous increase of the number of applications requiring highly sophisticated electronic systems capable of taking autonomous decisions during the interaction with complex environments and scenarios. Depth sensors represent a fundamental enabling technology for such applications, allowing reconstructing a complete 3D model of the surrounding environment, thus increasing the reliability and robustness of automatic objects classification. Several depth-sensing technologies are available, and it is becoming more and more evident that the optimal solution relies on a clever combination and optimization of multiple techniques, through a careful optimization at system level of a multitude of parameters. The main goal of this talk is to provide an in-depth overview of state-of-the-art ToF detectors technologies focusing on the main advantages and disadvantages of the two key competing detector classes, i.e. photo-demodulators or SPADs, and their natural implementation in indirect-/direct-ToF systems through key examples from commercial and academic implementations.



  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

  Registration



  • Date: 28 Nov 2018
  • Time: 02:00 PM to 06:00 PM
  • All times are (UTC+01:00) Vienna
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  • TU Graz
  • Inffeldgasse 12EG
  • Graz, Steiermark
  • Austria 8010
  • Room Number: HS Integrierte Schaltungen

  • Contact Event Host
  • Univ.-Prof. Dipl.-Ing. Dr.techn. Bernd Deutschmann
    Graz University of Technology

    Institute of Electronics

    Inffeldgasse 12, 8010 Graz, Austria

  • Co-sponsored by Gernot Hueber


  Speakers

David Stoppa of ams AG, Rüschlikon, Canton of Zürich, Switzerland

Topic:

Time of Flight 3D Sensing and Imaging: detectors, readout circuits and data processing

In the past few years we have assisted to a tremendous increase of the number of applications requiring highly sophisticated electronic systems capable of taking autonomous decisions during the interaction with complex environments and scenarios. Depth sensors represent a fundamental enabling technology for such applications, allowing reconstructing a complete 3D model of the surrounding environment, thus increasing the reliability and robustness of automatic objects classification. Several depth-sensing technologies are available, and it is becoming more and more evident that the optimal solution relies on a clever combination and optimization of multiple techniques, through a careful optimization at system level of a multitude of parameters. The main goal of this talk is to provide an in-depth overview of state-of-the-art ToF detectors technologies focusing on the main advantages and disadvantages of the two key competing detector classes, i.e. photo-demodulators or SPADs, and their natural implementation in indirect-/direct-ToF systems through key examples from commercial and academic implementations.

Biography:

 David Stoppa (SM’12-M’97) received the Laurea degree in Electronics Engineering from Politecnico of Milan, Italy, in 1998, and the Ph.D. degree in Microelectronics from the University of Trento, Italy, in 2002. He is the head of the Integrated Radiation and Image Sensors research unit at FBK where he has been working as a research scientist since 2002 and as group leader of the Smart Optical Sensors and Interfaces group from 2010 to 2013. Since 2000 he has been teaching at the Telecommunications Engineering faculty of the University of Trento, courses of Analogue Electronics and Microelectronics. His research interests are mainly in the field of CMOS integrated circuits design, image sensors and biosensors. He has authored or co-authored more than 120 papers in international journals and presentations at international conferences, and holds several patents in the field of image sensors. Since 2011 he served as program committee member of the ‘International Solid-State Circuits Conference’ (ISSCC) and the SPIE ‘Videometrics, Range Imaging and Applications’ conference, and was technical committee member of ‘International Image Sensors Workshop’ (IISW) in 2009, 2013, 2015 and 2017. He was a Guest Editor for IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits special issues on ISSCC’14 in 2015 and ISSCC European Regional Chair in 2017. Dr. Stoppa received the 2006 European Solid-State Circuits Conference Best Paper Award.