KEYWORDS: Sensors, National Ignition Facility, Imaging systems, Diagnostics, Fringe analysis, Pulsed laser operation, Camera shutters, Cameras, Spatial resolution, Near field
Characterization data for the Icarus 2 hybrid-CMOS (hCMOS) imager using near-infrared (NIR) laser pulses is presented. The Icarus 2 hCMOS imagers are four-frame burst mode cameras, with a 1024 x 512 pixel array and 25μm spatial resolution. Designed and built by Sandia National Laboratory for the Ultra-Fast X-ray Imager (UXI) program where they have been used to capture X-ray images at LLNL’s National Ignition Facility and during HED physics experiments. Temporal and spatial characterization is performed using NIR, 1053nm and 1064nm, laser pulses ranging from 43-ps to 20ns. Specific results include gate response, internal reflections, off-gate sensitivity, side-to-side timing skew, and response to a characteristic NIF-like laser pulse. Comparisons between a commercial gated, intensified CCD camera and a commercial time-integrated CMOS camera are included when relevant.
In this paper characterization data for two versions of a gated hybrid-CMOS image sensor are presented. These sensors, referred to as Icarus and Icarus 2, are two and four frame burst mode cameras respectively, with 1024 x 512 pixel array and 25μm spatial resolution. Designed and built by Sandia National Laboratory for the Ultra-Fast X-ray Imager (UXI) program, they have been used to capture X-ray images at LLNL’s National Ignition Facility and during High Energy Density Physics (HEDP) experiments. Performance data including timing mode, oscillator performance, and gate widths for the Icarus series sensors is covered; this is the first reported data for the four frame Icarus 2 sensors. Additional impacts on device performance due to diode passivation layer for low energy electron sensitivity and low signal linearity are presented. A discussion of oscillator performance, bond wire inductance, and linear response is also covered.
L. Claus, A. Boone, T. England, L. Fang, Q. Looker, B. Mitchell, A. Montoya, J. Porter, M. Sanchez, A. Vigil, E. Hurd, A. Carpenter, M. Dayton, C. Durand, G. Rochau
The Daedalus camera is a second-generation imager for the Ultra-Fast X-ray Imager (UXI) program, achieving 1 ns, time-gated, multi-frame image sets for High Energy Density (HED) physics experiments. Daedalus includes a 1024 x 512 pixel array with 25 μm spatial resolution with three frames of storage per pixel with three times larger full well (1.5 million e-) than the last generation camera, Icarus. Daedalus incorporates an improved timing generation and distribution concept to facilitate broader user configurability and application space while improving timing resolution to 1 ns. Electrical timing measurements demonstrated 1 nanosecond shutters. Analog dynamic range is sufficient to provide the expected full well. Read noise of 210 e- has been measured, exceeding design goals. Sandia National Laboratories is a multimission laboratory managed and operated by National Technology and Engineering Solutions of Sandia LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Honeywell International Inc. for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-NA0003525.
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