4.6 Article

A Low-Noise CMOS THz Imager Based on Source Modulation and an In-Pixel High-Q Passive Switched-Capacitor N-Path Filter

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 16, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s16030325

Keywords

high-Q; terahertz imaging; bandpass filter; CMOS; N-path; tunable; low noise; G(m)-C; terahertz direct detection; sub-millimeter wave detectors; inductorless filter; sub-millimeter wave imaging

Funding

  1. CEA LETI

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This paper presents the first low noise complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) terahertz (THz) imager based on source modulation and in-pixel high-Q filtering. The [GRAPHICS] focal plane array has been fully integrated in a [GRAPHICS] m standard CMOS process. The sensitivity has been improved significantly by modulating the active THz source that lights the scene and performing on-chip high-Q filtering. Each pixel encompass a broadband bow tie antenna coupled to an N-type metal-oxide-semiconductor (NMOS) detector that shifts the THz radiation, a low noise adjustable gain amplifier and a high-Q filter centered at the modulation frequency. The filter is based on a passive switched-capacitor (SC) N-path filter combined with a continuous-time broad-band G [GRAPHICS] -C filter. A simplified analysis that helps in designing and tuning the passive SC N-path filter is provided. The characterization of the readout chain shows that a Q factor of 100 has been achieved for the filter with a good matching between the analytical calculation and the measurement results. An input-referred noise of [GRAPHICS] V RMS has been measured. Characterization of the chip with different THz wavelengths confirms the broadband feature of the antenna and shows that this THz imager reaches a total noise equivalent power of [GRAPHICS] nW at 270 GHz and [GRAPHICS] nW at 600 GHz.

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