Brave new world of graphene sensors

I think I read somewhere that the Bayer array may not be needed with this type of sensor, with it being possible to read the energy spectrum directly from the amount of energy deposited on each sensing cell. Of course, it could be wishful thinking on my part with a little reading incomprehension thrown in for good measure.
 
okay, so we are talking about 10 stop better performance, 5 times cheaper production and a technology which can be used with the pre-existing manufacturing setup.. :boogie: Yay for us amateur enthusiasts and the camera companies.

A bold prediction from someone with little experience, but this may turn out to be a bad news for the professionals. Of course the skillset and experience would still matter, but we all know what happened to the photography industry once cheap SLRs became availalble to the general public. At the very least the competition would increase manifold!
 
Interesting article and defintely a promissing technology.

However since this article was published mid 2013, it seems to have become quiet around the subject graphene photosensor - Recherche Google

Well, it will be quiet up the the day the first camera hits the market. :)
I guess the first one with a graphene sensor will be some mobile phone. Nokia has patented some already.

I guess it will be a funny day.
 
I think I read somewhere that the Bayer array may not be needed with this type of sensor, with it being possible to read the energy spectrum directly from the amount of energy deposited on each sensing cell. Of course, it could be wishful thinking on my part with a little reading incomprehension thrown in for good measure.
I can't see that could work in a photographic type application where multiple photons are detected.
The energy detected will be the number of photons times the energy of each individual photon (planks constant times its frequency).
The frequency range covered is likely to be at least an order of magnitude (it's listed as broad spectrum & specifically mentions visible & infrared) so some detected photons will have 10 times the energy of others.
1 blue photon would have the about same energy as 10 infra red photons.
Even just within the visible 2 violet photons (~300kJ/mol each) can have the same energy as 3 orange ones (~200kJ/mol each).
 
Let's not jump the gun and think this is a clear replacement for photographic camera sensors. It may not have a very good dynamic range and for all we know the color rendition from a bayer array of these things could suck.

It may only be useful for scientific equipment, traffic cams, thermal imaging and security cameras.
 
We can't even get Foveon sensos to work as well as their Bayer counterparts. It's gonna be 200 years before we see these in consumer cameras lol
 
We can't even get Foveon sensos to work as well as their Bayer counterparts. It's gonna be 200 years before we see these in consumer cameras lol
Apparently there are problems to separate noise from the true signal.
 

Most reactions

Back
Top