Abstract
Correlation-Assisted Direct Time-of-Flight (CA-dToF) is demonstrated for the first time on a large 320 × 240-pixel SPAD array sensor that includes on-chip high-speed timing support circuitry. SPAD events are processed in-pixel, avoiding data communication over the array and/or storage bottlenecks. This is accomplished by sampling two orthogonal triangle waves that are synchronized with short light pulses illuminating the scene. Using small switched-capacitor circuits, exponential moving averaging (EMA) is applied to the sampled voltages, delivering two analog voltages (VQ2, VI2). These contain the phase delay, or the time of flight between the light pulse and photon's time of arrival (ToA). Uncorrelated ambient photons and dark counts are averaged out, leaving only their associated shot noise impacting the phase precision. The QVGA camera allows for capturing depth-sense images with sub-cm precision over a 6 m range of detection, even with a small PDE of 0.7% at an 850 nm wavelength.