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Author

Chandra Mouli

Other affiliations: Aptina
Bio: Chandra Mouli is an academic researcher from Micron Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transistor & Field-effect transistor. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 216 publications receiving 3289 citations. Previous affiliations of Chandra Mouli include Aptina.


Papers
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Patent
Chandra Mouli1
28 Jun 2004
TL;DR: An imager having a pixel cell having an associated strained silicon layer increases charge transfer efficiency, decreases image lag, and improves blue response in imaging devices as discussed by the authors, which is an improvement over the non-strained silicon layer.
Abstract: An imager having a pixel cell having an associated strained silicon layer. The strained silicon layer increases charge transfer efficiency, decreases image lag, and improves blue response in imaging devices.

30 citations

Patent
Chandra Mouli1
29 Apr 2009
TL;DR: In this paper, the memory component includes a magnetoresistive material and has a resistance that is changeable via a current conducted through the diode and the magnetoregressive material.
Abstract: Some embodiments include memory cells including a memory component having a first conductive material, a second conductive material, and an oxide material between the first conductive material and the second conductive material. A resistance of the memory component is configurable via a current conducted from the first conductive material through the oxide material to the second conductive material. Other embodiments include a diode comprising metal and a dielectric material and a memory component connected in series with the diode. The memory component includes a magnetoresistive material and has a resistance that is changeable via a current conducted through the diode and the magnetoresistive material.

30 citations

Patent
Chandra Mouli1
22 Aug 2003
TL;DR: The pixel cell as mentioned in this paper is a pixel cell for an image sensor that includes a photodiode, which provides high gain, low noise, and low dark current, and can be configured to promote impact ionization by a first carrier type and suppress impact ionisation by a second carrier type.
Abstract: Embodiments of the present invention provide a pixel cell for an image sensor that includes a photodiode, which provides high gain, low noise, and low dark current. The pixel cell includes a photodiode comprising layers of a first material and at least a second material in contact with one another. The photodiode generates charge in response to light and also amplifies the charge. The layers may be configured to promote impact ionization by a first carrier type and suppress impact ionization by a second carrier type. The pixel cell also includes a gate of a transistor adjacent to the photodiode and may include readout circuitry for reading out the charge generated and amplified by the photodiode.

28 citations

Patent
Chandra Mouli1
23 Aug 2002
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a method for increasing the amount of deuterium incorporated into trap sites of a transistor device during a DEUTERIUM passivation anneal by electrically pre-stressing the fabricated device prior to a deUTERN.
Abstract: The present invention provides a novel method for increasing the amount of deuterium incorporated into trap sites of a transistor device during a deuterium passivation anneal by electrically pre-stressing the fabricated device prior to a deuterium anneal. The method of the present invention equally applies to SOI and CMOS technology. As a result, the incorporation of more deuterium during a deuterium anneal in the process flow reduces the number of undesirable trap sites.

28 citations

Patent
12 Nov 2003
TL;DR: In this article, a biased gate over a field isolation region and adjacent a pixel of an image sensor is used to isolate pixels in an array of pixels in a semiconductor device.
Abstract: Isolation methods and devices for isolating regions of a semiconductor device. The isolation structure and methods include forming a biased gate over a field isolation region and adjacent a pixel of an image sensor. The isolation methods also include forming an isolation gate over substantial portions of a field isolation region to isolate pixels in an array of pixels. The isolation method and structure further include forming an isolating trench in an active area and filling the trench with a doped conductive material containing silicon. There is also provided a method and structure for isolating the regions by providing a trench in an active area of a substrate, growing an epitaxial layer in the trench to fill the trench or to partially fill the trench and depositing an insulating material over the epitaxial layer and within the trench to completely fill the trench.

28 citations


Cited by
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Patent
01 Aug 2008
TL;DR: In this article, the oxide semiconductor film has at least a crystallized region in a channel region, which is defined as a region of interest (ROI) for a semiconductor device.
Abstract: An object is to provide a semiconductor device of which a manufacturing process is not complicated and by which cost can be suppressed, by forming a thin film transistor using an oxide semiconductor film typified by zinc oxide, and a manufacturing method thereof. For the semiconductor device, a gate electrode is formed over a substrate; a gate insulating film is formed covering the gate electrode; an oxide semiconductor film is formed over the gate insulating film; and a first conductive film and a second conductive film are formed over the oxide semiconductor film. The oxide semiconductor film has at least a crystallized region in a channel region.

1,501 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A signal-dependent noise model, which gives the pointwise standard-deviation of the noise as a function of the expectation of the pixel raw-data output, is composed of a Poissonian part, modeling the photon sensing, and Gaussian part, for the remaining stationary disturbances in the output data.
Abstract: We present a simple and usable noise model for the raw-data of digital imaging sensors This signal-dependent noise model, which gives the pointwise standard-deviation of the noise as a function of the expectation of the pixel raw-data output, is composed of a Poissonian part, modeling the photon sensing, and Gaussian part, for the remaining stationary disturbances in the output data We further explicitly take into account the clipping of the data (over- and under-exposure), faithfully reproducing the nonlinear response of the sensor We propose an algorithm for the fully automatic estimation of the model parameters given a single noisy image Experiments with synthetic images and with real raw-data from various sensors prove the practical applicability of the method and the accuracy of the proposed model

789 citations

Patent
01 Sep 2006
TL;DR: In this paper, a time-dependent algorithmic compensation function is applied to data output from a continuous analyte sensor to determine a time since sensor implantation and/or whether a newly initialized sensor has been used previously.
Abstract: Systems and methods for applying time-dependent algorithmic compensation functions to data output from a continuous analyte sensor. Some embodiments determine a time since sensor implantation and/or whether a newly initialized sensor has been used previously.

690 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: A small camera device called Cyclops is developed that bridges the gap between the computationally constrained wireless sensor nodes such as Motes, and CMOS imagers which, while low power and inexpensive, are nevertheless designed to mate with resource-rich hosts.
Abstract: Despite their increasing sophistication, wireless sensor networks still do not exploit the most powerful of the human senses: vision. Indeed, vision provides humans with unmatched capabilities to distinguish objects and identify their importance. Our work seeks to provide sensor networks with similar capabilities by exploiting emerging, cheap, low-power and small form factor CMOS imaging technology. In fact, we can go beyond the stereo capabilities of human vision, and exploit the large scale of sensor networks to provide multiple, widely different perspectives of the physical phenomena. To this end, we have developed a small camera device called Cyclops that bridges the gap between the computationally constrained wireless sensor nodes such as Motes, and CMOS imagers which, while low power and inexpensive, are nevertheless designed to mate with resource-rich hosts. Cyclops enables development of new class of vision applications that span across wireless sensor network. We describe our hardware and software architecture, its temporal and power characteristics and present some representative applications.

514 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
02 Nov 2005
TL;DR: Cyclops as discussed by the authors is a small camera device that bridges the gap between the computationally constrained wireless sensor nodes such as Motes, and CMOS imagers which, while low power and inexpensive, are nevertheless designed to mate with resource-rich hosts.
Abstract: Despite their increasing sophistication, wireless sensor networks still do not exploit the most powerful of the human senses: vision. Indeed, vision provides humans with unmatched capabilities to distinguish objects and identify their importance. Our work seeks to provide sensor networks with similar capabilities by exploiting emerging, cheap, low-power and small form factor CMOS imaging technology. In fact, we can go beyond the stereo capabilities of human vision, and exploit the large scale of sensor networks to provide multiple, widely different perspectives of the physical phenomena.To this end, we have developed a small camera device called Cyclops that bridges the gap between the computationally constrained wireless sensor nodes such as Motes, and CMOS imagers which, while low power and inexpensive, are nevertheless designed to mate with resource-rich hosts. Cyclops enables development of new class of vision applications that span across wireless sensor network. We describe our hardware and software architecture, its temporal and power characteristics and present some representative applications.

489 citations