Richard CanonNews / Thursday, October 14, 2021 / Categories: Rumors, Canon Patents This post may contain affiliate links(s). An affiliate link means I may earn advertising/referral fees if you make a purchase through my link, without any additional cost to you. It helps to keep this site afloat. Thank you in advance for your support. If you like what we do here, maybe buy me a coffee. Canon Patent Applications: Stacked Sensor Developments There were quite a few stacked sensor patents in this week's haul, so I decided it best to categorize them all here. Patent Application 2021-166345 This is a Dual Pixel AF stacked sensor and Canon is looking to patent a method of reducing the amount of AD circuits per dual pixel pair. If I'm reading this correctly, this method has a high number of ADC's per sensor. Loosely described in the patent (810a/b and 1110a/b) is "read out circuit" which I'm going to assume is the analog to digital readout. Since that is what they are looking to improve in this patent application. What makes me intrigued is that this patent application describes a "near" global shutter sensor, without the charge-hold circuity. The idea is that the more readout ADC's you have the more simultaneously you can read the sensor. it looks like in this case Canon is reading 3 pixels with 2 ADC's. Patent Application 2021-166369 This next patent is a global shutter sensor. Each pixel is split into two with a high sensitivity pixel and a low sensitivity pixel. While no mention of a higher dynamic range is mentioned, I would think that would be a happy by-product of such a sensor. As it is, Canon is looking to improve the image capture by reducing variations caused by the charge transfer (when a global shutter moves the charge from the photodiode to storage). Patent Application 2021-166395 This patent application describes a stacked sensor, with pads at each pixel to handle transfer of the analog information from the photodiode layer to the processing layer. Canon shows embodiments of 2 layers and up to 3 layers but little detail as to why they would choose a third layer (additional AF processing and/or memory would be the normal reasons). The general idea of this patent application is to provide a high-performance sensor with as low a cost as possible. For a stacked sensor and its related applications (cameras and video cameras) this is something we can certainly get behind. Patent Application 2021-166242 This patent application discusses a sensor using quantum dots and an organic film for light capture. Let's just roll things forward 2 decades with this patent application ;) Quantum dots are looking to replace CMOS "photodiodes" as the light capture. There's a great general write-up on the technology here at IEEE. Canon is looking at suppressing afterimages from the conversion, and also increasing the sensor's heat resistance. Richard CanonNewsRichard CanonNews Richard has been using Canon cameras since the 1990s, with his first being the now legendary EOS-3. Since then, Richard has continued to use Canon cameras and now focuses mostly on infrared photography. Richard is the founder and editor of CanonNews since 2017, and has worked as a writer on CanonRumors and other websites in the past. Other posts by Richard CanonNews Contact author Facebook page Related articles Patent Application: Lens Auto-Aperture Control Patent Application for Canon RF 16-28mm F2.8, 16-28mm F2.8-4 and 16-28mm F4 designs Canon Patent Application: High Magnification Super Telephoto Zooms Canon Patent Application: Curious Catadioptric Optical System Canon Patent Application: Drone Camera Assembly Previous Article Canon launches the "stealth" PowerShot ZOOM - Black Edition Next Article 2021 5DayDeal Photography Bundle is live! Print Tags: SensorCanon Patent ApplicationStacked Sensor Please login or register to post comments.