The technologies and the markets that use them continue
to mature, but the comparison is still a lot like apples vs. oranges:
they can both be good for you. Teledyne DALSA offers both.
CCD (charge coupled device) and CMOS (complementary metal oxide
semiconductor) image sensors are two different
technologies for capturing images digitally.
Each has unique strengths and weaknesses giving advantages in different
applications.
Neither is categorically superior to the other, although vendors selling
only one technology have usually claimed otherwise.
In the last five years much has changed with both technologies, and many
projections regarding the demise or ascendence of either have been
proved false. The current situation and outlook for both technologies is
vibrant, but a new framework exists for considering the relative
strengths and opportunities of CCD and CMOS imagers.
Both types of imagers convert light into electric charge and process it into electronic signals.
In a CCD sensor, every pixel's charge is transferred through a very limited number of output nodes (often just one) to be
converted to voltage, buffered, and sent off-chip as an analog signal. All of the pixel can be devoted to light capture,
and the output's uniformity (a key factor in image quality) is high.
In a CMOS sensor, each pixel has its own charge-to-voltage
conversion, and the sensor often also includes amplifiers,
noise-correction, and digitization
circuits, so that the chip outputs digital bits. These other functions
increase the design complexity and reduce the area available for light
capture. With each pixel doing its own conversion, uniformity is lower.
But the chip can be built to require less off-chip circuitry for basic
operation. For more details on device architecture and operation, see
our original
"CCD vs. CMOS: Facts and Fiction" article and its 2005 update,
"CMOS vs. CCD: Maturing Technologies, Maturing Markets."
CCDs and CMOS imagers were both invented in the late 1960s and 1970s
(DALSA founder and CEO Dr. Savvas Chamberlain was a pioneer in
developing
both technologies). CCD became dominant, primarily because they gave far
superior images
with the fabrication technology available. CMOS image sensors required
more uniformity and smaller features than
silicon wafer foundries could deliver at the time. Not until the 1990s
did lithography develop to the point that designers could begin making a
case for CMOS imagers again. Renewed interest in CMOS was based on
expectations of lowered power consumption, camera-on-a-chip integration,
and lowered fabrication costs from the reuse of mainstream logic and
memory device fabrication. While all of these benefits are possible in
theory, achieving them in practice while simultaneously delivering high
image quality has taken far more time, money, and process adaptation
than original projections suggested (see "CMOS Development's Winding Path" below).
Both CCDs and CMOS imagers can offer excellent imaging performance
when designed properly. CCDs have traditionally provided the performance
benchmarks in the photographic, scientific, and industrial
applications that demand the highest image quality (as measured in
quantum efficiency and noise) at
the expense of system size. CMOS imagers offer more integration (more
functions on the chip), lower power dissipation (at the chip level),
and the possibility of smaller system size, but they have often
required tradeoffs between image quality and device cost. Today there
is no clear line dividing the types of applications each can serve. CMOS
designers have devoted intense effort to achieving high image quality,
while CCD designers have lowered their power requirements and pixel
sizes. As a result, you can find CCDs in low-cost low-power cellphone
cameras and CMOS sensors in high-performance professional and industrial
cameras, directly contradicting the early stereotypes. It is worth
noting that the producers succeeding with "crossovers" have almost
always been established players with years of deep experience in both
technologies.
Costs are similar at the chip level. Early CMOS proponents claimed
CMOS imagers would be much cheaper because
they could be produced on the same high-volume wafer processing lines as
mainstream logic or memory chips.
This has not been the case. The accommodations required for good imaging
perfomance have required
CMOS designers to iteratively develop specialized, optimized,
lower-volume mixed-signal fabrication processes--very much like those
used for CCDs.
Proving out these processes at successively smaller lithography nodes
(0.35um, 0.25um, 0.18um...) has been slow and expensive; those with a
captive foundry have an advantage because they can better maintain the
attention of the process engineers.
CMOS cameras may require fewer components and less power, but
they still generally require companion chips to optimize image
quality, increasing cost and reducing the advantage they gain from lower
power consumption. CCD devices are less complex than CMOS, so they cost
less to design. CCD fabrication processes also tend to be more mature
and optimized; in general, it will cost less (in both design and
fabrication) to yield a CCD than a CMOS imager for a specific
high-performance application. However, wafer size can be a dominating
influence on device cost; the larger the wafer, the more devices it can
yield, and the lower the cost per device. 200mm is fairly common for
third-party CMOS foundries while third-party CCD foundries tend to offer
150mm. Captive foundries use 150mm, 200mm, and 300mm production for
both CCD and CMOS.
The larger issue around pricing is sustainability. Since many CMOS start-ups pursued high-volume, commodity applications
from a small base of business, they priced below costs to win business. For some, the risk paid off
and their volumes provided enough margin for viability. But
others had to raise their prices, while still others went out of business entirely.
High-risk startups can be interesting
to venture capitalists, but imager customers require long-term stability and support.
While cost advantages have been difficult to realize and on-chip
integration has been slow to arrive, speed is one area where CMOS
imagers can demonstrate considerable strength because of the relative
ease of parallel output structures. This gives them great potential in
industrial applications.
CCDs and CMOS will remain complementary. The choice continues to
depend on the application and the vendor more than the technology.
Teledyne DALSA's approach is "technology-neutral": we are one of the few
vendors able to offer real solutions with both CCDs and CMOS.
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