Abstract
This article presents a monolithic light-to-digital converter (LDC) based on silicon nanowires. The silicon nanowires are arranged in a configuration, which allows cancellation for the offset due to dark leakage current and facilitates system-level chopping of the signal chain, including the nanowires. The readout integrated circuit (ROIC) has an analog front end (AFE) with a resistive-feedback transimpedance amplifier (TIA) to provide a constant voltage that strongly biases the nanowires. A programmable-gain switched-capacitor incremental delta–sigma analog-to-digital converter doubles the output of the TIA and feeds a digital back end that provides a decimated output. Finally, system-level chopping reduces the residual offset and 1/ ${f}$ noise, and 50-/60-Hz rejection suppresses interference from mains lighting. Fabricated in a 0.18- $\mu \text{m}$ CMOS process, the LDC has an input-referred current noise density of 235 fA/ $\surd $ Hz, and a dynamic range of 106.7, from 0.3 lx to 1.4 Mlx. The offset from the nanowires and the AFE is reduced to less than 30 $\mu \text{V}$ and offset drift of 193 nV/°C in a temperature range of −40 °C–85 °C. The AFE of the LDC draws 59.5 $\mu \text{A}$ at 3.3 V, and the digital back end draws $8~\mu \text{A}$ at 1.8 V.
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