CMOS optical centroid processor for an integrated Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor

A Shack Hartmann wavefront sensor is used to detect the distortion of light in an optical wavefront. It does this by sampling the wavefront with an array of lenslets and measuring the displacement of focused spots from reference positions. These displacements are linearly related to the local wavefr...

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Main Author: Pui, Boon Hean
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13846/
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author Pui, Boon Hean
author_facet Pui, Boon Hean
author_sort Pui, Boon Hean
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description A Shack Hartmann wavefront sensor is used to detect the distortion of light in an optical wavefront. It does this by sampling the wavefront with an array of lenslets and measuring the displacement of focused spots from reference positions. These displacements are linearly related to the local wavefront tilts from which the entire wavefront can be reconstructed. In most Shack Hartmann wavefront sensors, a CCD is used to sample the entire wavefront, typically at a rate of 25 to 60 Hz, and a whole frame of light spots is read out before their positions are processed. This results in a data bottleneck. In this design, parallel processing is achieved by incorporating local centroid processing for each focused spot, thereby requiring only reduced bandwidth data to be transferred off-chip at a high rate. To incorporate centroid processing at the sensor level requires high levels of circuit integration not possible with a CCD technology. Instead a standard 0.7J..lmCMOS technology was used but photodetector structures for this technology are not well characterised. As such characterisation of several common photodiode structures was carried out which showed good responsitivity of the order of 0.3 AIW. Prior to fabrication on-chip, a hardware emulation system using a reprogrammable FPGA was built which implemented the centroiding algorithm successfully. Subsequently, the design was implemented as a single-chip CMOS solution. The fabricated optical centroid processor successfully computed and transmitted the centroids at a rate of more than 2.4 kHz, which when integrated as an array of tilt sensors will allow a data rate that is independent of the number of tilt sensors' employed. Besides removing the data bottleneck present in current systems, the design also offers advantages in terms of power consumption, system size and cost. The design was also shown to be extremely scalable to a complete low cost real time adaptive optics system.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:34:34Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-13846
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:34:34Z
publishDate 2004
recordtype eprints
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spelling nottingham-138462025-02-28T11:27:20Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13846/ CMOS optical centroid processor for an integrated Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor Pui, Boon Hean A Shack Hartmann wavefront sensor is used to detect the distortion of light in an optical wavefront. It does this by sampling the wavefront with an array of lenslets and measuring the displacement of focused spots from reference positions. These displacements are linearly related to the local wavefront tilts from which the entire wavefront can be reconstructed. In most Shack Hartmann wavefront sensors, a CCD is used to sample the entire wavefront, typically at a rate of 25 to 60 Hz, and a whole frame of light spots is read out before their positions are processed. This results in a data bottleneck. In this design, parallel processing is achieved by incorporating local centroid processing for each focused spot, thereby requiring only reduced bandwidth data to be transferred off-chip at a high rate. To incorporate centroid processing at the sensor level requires high levels of circuit integration not possible with a CCD technology. Instead a standard 0.7J..lmCMOS technology was used but photodetector structures for this technology are not well characterised. As such characterisation of several common photodiode structures was carried out which showed good responsitivity of the order of 0.3 AIW. Prior to fabrication on-chip, a hardware emulation system using a reprogrammable FPGA was built which implemented the centroiding algorithm successfully. Subsequently, the design was implemented as a single-chip CMOS solution. The fabricated optical centroid processor successfully computed and transmitted the centroids at a rate of more than 2.4 kHz, which when integrated as an array of tilt sensors will allow a data rate that is independent of the number of tilt sensors' employed. Besides removing the data bottleneck present in current systems, the design also offers advantages in terms of power consumption, system size and cost. The design was also shown to be extremely scalable to a complete low cost real time adaptive optics system. 2004 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13846/1/420354.pdf Pui, Boon Hean (2004) CMOS optical centroid processor for an integrated Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Optics Adaptive Metal oxide semiconductors Complementary
spellingShingle Optics
Adaptive
Metal oxide semiconductors
Complementary
Pui, Boon Hean
CMOS optical centroid processor for an integrated Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor
title CMOS optical centroid processor for an integrated Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor
title_full CMOS optical centroid processor for an integrated Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor
title_fullStr CMOS optical centroid processor for an integrated Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor
title_full_unstemmed CMOS optical centroid processor for an integrated Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor
title_short CMOS optical centroid processor for an integrated Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor
title_sort cmos optical centroid processor for an integrated shack-hartmann wavefront sensor
topic Optics
Adaptive
Metal oxide semiconductors
Complementary
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13846/