TY - THES ID - 148639883 TI - Master thesis : Characterization of the performance of an analog Image acquisition chain using a custom-made automated test bench AU - Grodent, Antoine AU - Vanderbemden, Philippe AU - Brixhe, Lionel AU - Redouté, Jean-Michel AU - Vanderheyden, Benoît PY - 2019 PB - Liège Université de Liège (ULiège) DB - UniCat KW - ADC KW - Characterization KW - Input referred noise KW - Differential Non Linearity KW - Integral Non Linearity KW - PCB KW - Test bench KW - VISA KW - Electronics KW - Ingénierie, informatique & technologie > Ingénierie électrique & électronique UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:148639883 AB - High-Performance cameras are being used in an increasing number of applications. It requires designs that are more and more challenging. In order to validate these camera designs, a reusable automated test setup has been implemented to characterize the static performances of an image acquisition chain. This automated test setup features the characterization of the input referred noise, the integral non linarity (INL), the differential non linearity (DNL), the gain error, the offset error and the total unadjusted error (TUE) of the chain. By collecting samples out of the acquisition chains to build histograms, the static parameters can be computed. By using samples associated to a DC level applied to the acquisition chain and by computing the standard deviation of the built histogram, the input referred noise is computed. Based on coherent sampling condition, a sine signal is applied to the acquisition chain. The collected samples allow to build a sine histogram that can be compared with an ideal sine histogram in order to compute the TUE, the INL, the DNL, the gain and the offset error. In order to validate the measurement methods, a custom PCB has been designed. The PCB features the acquisition chains to test, as well as a FPGA and a USB interface to collect data on an external computer. After having programmed the FPGA to interface with the acquisition chain and the USB port, samples can be collected. A remote control of the signal sources (DC and sine generator) has also been implemented using a VISA interface to ease the acquisition and automate the test process. From the collected samples the static performances of the acquisition chain can be computed. The computation is done in post processing on a computer. From these computed performances, the test protocol can be validated. Most of the obtained results are already promising since they are coherent with the theoretical ones, even if improvements can still be brought to them. ER -