Title :
A Low-Power Photon-Counter Front-End Dedicated to NIRS Brain Imaging
Author :
Kamrani, Ehsan ; Lesage, Frederic ; Sawan, Mohamad
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Ecole Polytech. de Montreal, Montréal, QC, Canada
Abstract :
This paper introduces a new miniaturized on-chip photodetector front-end targeted for portable near infrared spectroscopy as a noninvasive tool for real-time brain imaging. It includes silicon avalanche photodiodes (SiAPDs) with dual detection modes using a transimpedance amplifier (TIA) with on-chip gain/bias control, and a controllable mixed (active-passive) quench circuit, with tunable hold-off time, and a novel gated quench-reset technique. This integrated photoreceiver front-end has been fabricated using submicrometer standard CMOS technologies with a minimum fill-factor of 95%. Fabricated SiAPDs exhibit avalanche gains of 35 and 22 at 10 and 18 V bias voltages with red-shifted peak photon-detection efficiency and dark count-rates of 114 and 4 kHz (at 1 V excess bias voltage). The TIA consumes 1-mW power, and offers a transimpedance gain of 250 MV/A, a tunable bandwidth (1 kHz-1 GHz), and an input current referred noise <;10 fA/√Hz at 1 kHz. The photon-counter exhibits a quench-time of 10 ns with a 0.4-mW power-consumption with an adaptive hold-off time control. The on-chip integration of SiAPDs and front-end circuit, reduced the power-consumption and after-pulsing, and increased the sensitivity.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; avalanche photodiodes; brain; elemental semiconductors; infrared detectors; infrared spectroscopy; low-power electronics; medical image processing; mixed analogue-digital integrated circuits; operational amplifiers; photodetectors; silicon; APD; NIRS Brain Imaging; Si; TIA; avalanche gain; avalanche photodiode; bandwidth 1 kHz to 1 GHz; controllable mixed quench circuit; dark count rate; dual detection mode; fill factor; frequency 114 kHz; frequency 4 kHz; gated quench-reset technique; integrated photoreceiver frontend; low power photon counter frontend; miniaturized on-chip photodetector frontend; on-chip integration; onchip bias control; onchip gain control; portable near infrared spectroscopy; power 0.4 mW; power 1 mW; real-time brain imaging; red shifted peak photon detection efficiency; submicrometer standard CMOS technology; time 10 ns; transimpedance amplifier; tunable hold-off time; voltage 10 V; voltage 18 V; CMOS integrated circuits; Cathodes; Detectors; Logic gates; Photonics; Resistors; Transistors; Avalanche Photodiode; Avalanche photodiode; Brain Imaging; High- Speed Photon-Counting; Low-Power Integrated Circuit; brain imaging; high-speed photon-counting; low-power integrated circuit;
Journal_Title :
Sensors Journal, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/JSEN.2015.2399432