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Korean nanotech firm shows new sensor design
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(Wednesday, January 11, 2006 - 13:19 EST)

Among the announcements at this year's Consumer Electronics Show, we missed one item that sounds rather interesting - if its performance meets up with claims.

At the show, Korean nanotechology company Planet82 took the opportunity to demonstrate its Single Carrier Modulation Photo Detector (SMPD) image sensor in the USA for the first time. The company claims that SMPD image sensors offer 2000 times greater light sensitivity than other sensor types, and further claims that with their design it is possible to take "clear" images in light levels equivalent to one lux (the same brightness as from a single candle at a distance of one meter). The press release goes on to suggest that useable pictures would also be possible as low as "up to 0.1 lux".

The technology is said to be able to be manufactured on standard CMOS production lines, and will initially be used in CCTV cameras, camera phones, and vehicle rear-view cameras. The company also claims the sensors to be "ideally suited" to use in digital cameras and camcorders. Current prototypes are said to offer black and white images only, but color versions are apparently planned.

Original Source Press Release:

Planet82 Demonstrates World's First Image Sensor That Takes Digital Pictures in the Dark, Without a Flash

First Nanotechnology-Based Image Sensor Debuts in the United States at CES

LAS VEGAS, NV -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 01/05/2006 -- Planet82 Inc., a global leader of nanotechnology, announced today the first U.S. demonstration of its innovative and highly sensitive image sensor, Single Carrier Modulation Photo Detector (SMPD), which uses nanotechnology to enable cameras to take high resolution photos or video in the dark -- without a flash.

The world's first chip of its kind, Planet82's SMPD image sensor is 2,000 times more sensitive to light than other image sensors. Until now, taking a picture in the dark without a flash or taking a picture of a candle-lit birthday cake without any other light in the room would yield a dark photograph. Planet82 makes it possible to take clear images even when the light level is less than 1 lux (or up to 0.1 lux). One lux is equivalent to the brightness from one candle one meter away in a dark room. Human eyes can barely distinguish images at less than 1 lux.

"Planet82's SMPD image sensor will change how professional and amateur photographers and videographers capture images and video," said Dr. Hoon Kim, Ph.D., and chief technology officer for Planet82 and director of the Nano Scale Quantum Devices Research Center at the Korea Electronics Technology Institute (KETI). "We're thrilled to bring our technology to the United States, and show how effective it truly is at taking pictures and video without any light."

Current image sensors generally need hundreds of thousands of photons to perceive light. Planet82's SMPD image sensor is designed to perceive light using only a handful of photons. To make this possible, Planet82 applied the principles of quantum mechanics to produce thousands of electrons out of one photon. It also minimized the aperture ratio and increased the number of pixels per unit density on the chip -- boasting low unit production cost and power consumption.

Planet82's SMPD image sensor can be mass-produced using standard CMOS process without additional investment for facilities. It is half the size of the current CCD image sensor used in digital cameras and closed circuit television cameras (CCTVs), and CMOS image sensors used in camera phones. Additionally, digital cameras and camera phones have low sensitivity to dim light, therefore making it difficult to take a picture in the dark without a flash. As the market for these devices continues to grow exponentially, so too will the market for image sensors. iSuppli estimates that the global image sensor market will reach $9.4 billion by 2008.

Planet82 expects SMPD image sensor will firstly be available in CCTVs, camera phones and vehicle rear-view sensors in Q1/Q2 2006. The SMPD technology also makes it ideally suited for applications in healthcare, the military, environmental industries and more, as well as electrical appliances such as digital cameras or camcorders.

About Planet82
Headquartered in Seoul, Korea, Planet82 is a global leader of nanotechnology. In 2003, Planet82 acquired the patent and intellectual property rights to mass produce nano photodiode and nano biotechnology services from the Korea Electronics Technology Institute (KETI). Today, Planet82 leads the development of the world's first Single Carrier Modulation Photo Detector image sensor (SMPD) image sensor, enabling cameras to take high resolution photos or video in the dark -- without a flash. Planet82 is listed on KOSDAQ.

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