© Semiconductor Components Industries, LLC, 2008
January, 2017 Rev. 7
1Publication Order Number:
MT9V034/D
MT9V034
1/3‐Inch Wide‐VGA CMOS
Digital Image Sensor
General Description
The MT9V034 is a 1/3-inch wide-VGA format CMOS active-pixel
digital image sensor with global shutter and high dynamic range
(HDR) operation. The sensor has specifically been designed to support
the demanding interior and exterior surveillance imaging needs, which
makes this part ideal for a wide variety of imaging applications in
real-world environments.
This wide-VGA CMOS image sensor features ON Semiconductors
breakthrough low-noise CMOS imaging technology that achieves
CCD image quality (based on signal-to-noise ratio and low-light
sensitivity) while maintaining the inherent size, cost, and integration
advantages of CMOS.
The active imaging pixel array is 752 H x 480 V. It incorporates
sophisticated camera functions on-chip-such as binning 2 x 2 and
4 x 4, to improve sensitivity when operating in smaller resolutions-as
well as windowing, column and row mirroring. It is programmable
through a simple two-wire serial interface.
The MT9V034 can be operated in its default mode or be
programmed for frame size, exposure, gain setting, and other
parameters. The default mode outputs a wide-VGA-size image at 60
frames per second (fps).
An on-chip analog-to-digital converter (ADC) provides 10 bits per
pixel. A 12-bit resolution companded for 10 bits for small signals can
be alternatively enabled, allowing more accurate digitization for
darker areas in the image.
In addition to a traditional, parallel logic output the MT9V034 also
features a serial low-voltage differential signaling (LVDS) output. The
sensor can be operated in a stereo-camera, and the sensor, designated
as a stereo-master, is able to merge the data from itself and the
stereo-slave sensor into one serial LVDS stream.
The sensor is designed to operate in a wide temperature range
(–30°C to +70°C).
Features
Array format: Wide-VGA, Active 752 H x 480 V (360,960 Pixels)
Global Shutter Photodiode Pixels; Simultaneous Integration and
Readout
RGB Bayer or Monochrome: NIR Enhanced Performance for Use
with Non-visible NIR Illumination
Readout Modes: Progressive or Interlaced
Shutter Efficiency: >99%
Simple Two-wire Serial Interface
Real-Time Exposure Context Switching Dual Register Set
Register Lock Capability
Window Size: User Programmable to any Smaller Format (QVGA,
CIF, QCIF). Data Rate can be Maintained Independent of Window
Size
Binning: 2 x 2 and 4 x 4 of the Full Resolution
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See detailed ordering and shipping information on page 2 of
this data sheet.
ORDERING INFORMATION
CLCC48 11.43 x 11.43
CASE 848AN
ADC: On-chip, 10-bit Column-parallel
(Option to Operate in 12-bit to 10-bit
Companding Mode)
Automatic Controls: Auto Exposure Control
(AEC) and Auto Gain Control (AGC);
Variable Regional and Variable Weight
AEC/AGC
Support for Four Unique Serial Control
Register IDs to Control Multiple Imagers on
the Same Bus
Data Output Formats:
Single Sensor Mode:
10-bit Parallel/stand-alone
8-bit or 10-bit Serial LVDS
Stereo Sensor Mode:
Interspersed 8-bit Serial LVDS
High Dynamic Range (HDR) Mode
Applications
Security
High Dynamic Range Imaging
Unattended Surveillance
Stereo Vision
Video as Input
Machine Vision
Automation
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Table 1. KEY PERFORMANCE PARAMETERS
Parameter Value
Optical Format 1/3-inch
Active Imager Size 4.51 mm (H) x 2.88 mm (V)
5.35 mm diagonal
Active Pixels 752 H x 480 V
Pixel Size 6.0 x 6.0 μm
Color Filter Array Monochrome or color RGB Bayer
Shutter Type Global Shutter
Maximum Data Rate
Master Clock
27 Mp/s
27 MHz
Full Resolution 752 x 480
Frame Rate 60 fps (at full resolution)
ADC Resolution 10-bit column-parallel
Responsivity 4.8 V/lux-sec (550 nm)
Dynamic Range >55 dB linear;
>100 dB in HDR mode
Supply Voltage 3.3 V ± 0.3 V (all supplies)
Power Consumption <160 mW at maximum data rate
(LVDS disabled); 120 μW standby
power at 3.3 V
Operating Temperature –30°C to + 70°C ambient
Packaging 48-pin CLCC
ORDERING INFORMATION
Table 2. AVAILABLE PART NUMBERS
Part Number Product Description Orderable Product Attribute Description
MT9V034C12STCDP VGA 1/3” GS CIS Dry Pack with Protective Film
MT9V034C12STCDR VGA 1/3” GS CIS Dry Pack without Protective Film
MT9V034C12STMDP VGA 1/3” GS CIS Dry Pack with Protective Film
MT9V034C12STMDR VGA 1/3” GS CIS Dry Pack without Protective Film
MT9V034C12STMDR1 VGA 1/3” GS CIS Dry Pack Single Tray without Protective Film
MT9V034C12STMTP VGA 1/3” GS CIS Tape & Reel with Protective Film
MT9V034C12STMTR VGA 1/3” GS CIS Tape & Reel without Protective Film
MT9V034D00STMC13CC1200 VGA 1/3” GS CIS Die Sales, 200 mm Thickness
MT9V034W00STMC13CC1750 VGA 1/3” GS CIS Wafer Sales, 750 mm Thickness
MT9V034
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Parallel
Video
Data Out
Serial
Register
I/O
Control Register
ADCs
ActivePixel
Sensor (APS)
Array
752H x 480V Timing and Control
Digital Processing
Analog Processing
Serial Video
LVDS Out
Slave Video LVDS In
(for stereo applications only)
Figure 1. Block Diagram
Figure 2. 48Pin CLCC Package Pinout Diagram
123456 44 43
19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
42
41
40
39
38
37
36
35
34
33
32
31
LVDSGND
BYPASS_CLKIN_N
BYPASS_CLKIN_P
SER_DATAIN_N
SER_DATAIN_P
LVDSGND
DGND
VDD
DOUT5
DOUT 6
DOUT 7
DOUT8
D
OUT 3
DOUT 4
VAAPIX
V
AA
AGND
NC
NC
V
AA
AGND
STANDBY
RESET_BAR
S_CTRL_ADR1
DOUT 9
LINE_VALID
FRAME_VALID
STLN_OUT
EXPOSURE
SDATA
SCLK
STFRM_OUT
LED_OUT
OE
RSVD
S_CTRL_ADR0
VDDLVDS
SER_DATAOUT_P
SER_DATAOUT_N
SHFT_CLKOUT_P
NSHFT_CLKOUT_
VDD
GND
D
SYSCLK
PIXCLK
OUT0
D
OUT1
D
OUT2
D
48 47 46 45
MT9V034
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BALL DESCRIPTIONS
Table 3. BALL DESCRIPTIONS
52-Ball IBA Numbers Symbol Type Description Note
29 RSVD Input Connect to DGND. 1
10 SER_DATAIN_N Input Serial data in for stereoscopy (differential negative).
Tie to 1KΩ pull-up (to 3.3 V) in non-stereoscopy
mode.
11 SER_DATAIN_P Input Serial data in for stereoscopy (differential positive).
Tie to DGND in non-stereoscopy mode.
8 BYPASS_CLKIN_N Input Input bypass shift-CLK (differential negative). Tie to
1KΩ pull-up (to 3.3 V) in non-stereoscopy mode.
9 BYPASS_CLKIN_P Input Input bypass shift-CLK (differential positive). Tie to
DGND in non-stereoscopy mode.
23 EXPOSURE Input Rising edge starts exposure in snapshot and slave
modes.
25 SCLK Input Two-wire serial interface clock. Connect to VDD with
1.5 K resistor even when no other two-wire serial
interface peripheral is attached.
28 OE Input DOUT enable pad, active HIGH. 2
30 S_CTRL_ADR0 Input Two-wire serial interface slave address select
(see Table 6).
31 S_CTRL_ADR1 Input Two-wire serial interface slave address select
(see Table 6).
32 RESET_BAR Input Asynchronous reset. All registers assume defaults.
33 STANDBY Input Shut down sensor operation for power saving.
47 SYSCLK Input Master clock (26.6 MHz; 13 MHz – 27 MHz).
24 SDATA I/O Two-wire serial interface data. Connect to VDD with
1.5 K resistor even when no other two-wire serial
interface peripheral is attached.
22 STLN_OUT I/O Output in master modestart line sync to drive slave
chip in-phase; input in slave mode.
26 STFRM_OUT I/O Output in master modestart frame sync to drive a
slave chip in-phase; input in slave mode.
20 LINE_VALID Output Asserted when DOUT data is valid.
21 FRAME_VALID Output Asserted when DOUT data is valid.
15 DOUT5 Output Parallel pixel data output 5.
16 DOUT6 Output Parallel pixel data output 6.
17 DOUT7 Output Parallel pixel data output 7.
18 DOUT8 Output Parallel pixel data output 8.
19 DOUT9 Output Parallel pixel data output 9.
27 LED_OUT Output LED strobe output.
41 DOUT4 Output Parallel pixel data output 4.
42 DOUT3 Output Parallel pixel data output 3.
43 DOUT2 Output Parallel pixel data output 2.
44 DOUT1 Output Parallel pixel data output 1.
45 DOUT0 Output Parallel pixel data output 0.
46 PIXCLK Output Pixel clock out. DOUT is valid on rising edge of this
clock.
2 SHFT_CLKOUT_N Output Output shift CLK (differential negative).
MT9V034
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Table 3. BALL DESCRIPTIONS (continued)
52-Ball IBA Numbers NoteDescriptionTypeSymbol
3 SHFT_CLKOUT_P Output Output shift CLK (differential positive).
4 SER_DATAOUT_N Output Serial data out (differential negative).
5 SER_DATAOUT_P Output Serial data out (differential positive).
1, 14 VDD Supply Digital power 3.3 V.
35, 39 VAA Supply Analog power 3.3 V.
40 VAAPIX Supply Pixel power 3.3 V.
6 VDDLVDS Supply Dedicated power for LVDS pads.
7, 12 LVDSGND Ground Dedicated GND for LVDS pads.
13, 48 DGND Ground Digital GND.
34, 38 AGND Ground Analog GND.
36, 37 NC NC No connect. 3
1. Pin 29, (RSVD) must be tied to GND.
2. Output enable (OE) tri-states signals DOUT0–DOUT9, LINE_VALID, FRAME_VALID, and PIXCLK.
3. No connect. These pins must be left floating for proper operation.
Figure 3. Typical Configuration (Connection) Parallel Output Mode
SYSCLK
LINE_VALID
FRAME_VALID
PIXCLK
DOUT(9:0)
STANDBY
EXPOSURE
RSVD
S_CTRL_ADR0
S_CTRL_ADR1
LVDSGND
LED_OUT
ERROR
S
DATA
SCLK
RESET_BAR
OE
VDDLVDS
AGNDDGND
VDD VAA VAAPIX
Master Clock
0.1 F
To Controller
STANDBY from
Controller or
Digital GND
TwoWire
Serial Interface
VDD VAA VAAPIX
To LED output
10K
1.5KΩ
Ω
μ
Note: LVDS signals are to be left floating.
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PIXEL DATA FORMAT
Pixel Array Structure
The MT9V034 pixel array is configured as 809 columns
by 499 rows, shown in Figure 4. The dark pixels are
optically black and are used internally to monitor black
level. Of the left 52 columns, 36 are dark pixels used for row
noise correction. Of the top 14 rows of pixels, two of the dark
rows are used for black level correction. Also, three black
rows from the top black rows can be read out by setting the
show dark rows bit in the Read Mode register; setting show
dark columns will display the 36 dark columns. There are
753 columns by 481 rows of optically active pixels. While
the sensors format is 752 x 480, one additional active
column and active row are included for use when horizontal
or vertical mirrored readout is enabled, to allow readout to
start on the same pixel. This one pixel adjustment is always
performed, for monochrome or color versions. The active
area is surrounded with optically transparent dummy pixels
to improve image uniformity within the active area. Neither
dummy pixels nor barrier pixels can be read out.
Figure 4. Pixel Array Description
(0, 0)
3 barrier + 38 (1 + 36 addressed + 1) dark
+ 9 barrier + 2 light dummy
2 barrier + 2 light dummy
2 barrier + 2 light dummy
active pixel
light dummy pixel
dark pixel
barrier pixel
4.92 x 3.05mm 2
Pixel Array
809 x 499 (753 x 481 active)
6.0 μm pixel
2 barrier + 8 (2 + 4 addressed + 2) dark + 2 barrier + 2 light dummy
Figure 5. Pixel Color Pattern Detail RGB Bayer (Top Right Corner)
Active Pixel (0,0)
Array Pixel (4,14)
Row Readout Direction
B
G
B
G
B
G
G
R
G
R
G
R
G
R
G
R
G
R
G
R
G
R
G
R
G
R
G
R
G
R
B
G
B
G
B
G
B
G
B
G
B
G
B
G
B
G
B
G
Column Readout Direction
MT9V034
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COLOR (RGB BAYER) DEVICE LIMITATIONS
The color version of the MT9V034 does not support or
offers reduced performance for the following
functionalities.
Pixel Binning
Pixel binning is done on immediate neighbor pixels only,
no facility is provided to skip pixels according to a Bayer
pattern. Therefore, the result of binning combines pixels of
different colors. See “Pixel Binning” for additional
information.
Interlaced Readout
Interlaced readout yields one field consisting only of red
and green pixels and another consisting only of blue and
green pixels. This is due to the Bayer pattern of the CFA.
Automatic Black Level Calibration
When the color bit is set (R0x0F[1]=1), the sensor uses
black level correction values from one green plane, which
are applied to all colors. To use the calibration value based
on all dark pixels’ offset values, the color bit should be
cleared.
Defective Pixel Correction
For defective pixel correction to calculate replacement
pixel values correctly, for color sensors the color bit must be
set (R0x0F[1] = 1). However, the color bit also applies
unequal offset to the color planes, and the results might not
be acceptable for some applications.
Other Limiting Factors
Black level correction and row-wise noise correction are
applied uniformly to each color. The row-wise noise
correction algorithm does not work well in color sensors.
Automatic exposure and gain control calculations are made
based on all three colors, not just the green channel. High
dynamic range does operate in color; however,
ON Semiconductor strongly recommends limiting use to
linear operation where good color fidelity is required.
MT9V034
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OUTPUT DATA FORMAT
The MT9V034 image data can be read out in a progressive
scan or interlaced scan mode. Valid image data is surrounded
by horizontal and vertical blanking, as shown in Figure 6.
The amount of horizontal and vertical blanking is
programmable through R0x05 and R0x06, respectively
(R0xCD and R0xCE for context B). LV is HIGH during the
shaded region of the figure. See “Output Data Timing” for
the description of FV timing.
Figure 6. Spatial Illustration of Image Readout
P
0,0
P
0,1
P
0,2 .....................................P
0,n1P
0,n
P
1,0
P
1,1
P
1,2 .....................................P
1,n1P
1,n
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
P
m1,0
P
m1,1 .....................................P
m1,n1Pm1,n
P
m,0 P
m,1 .....................................P
m,n1P
m,n
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 ..................................... 00 00 00
00 00 00 ..................................... 00 00 00
00 00 00 ..................................... 00 00 00
00 00 00 ..................................... 00 00 00
VALID IMAGE HORIZONTAL
BLANKING
VERTICAL BLANKING VERTICAL/HORIZONTAL
BLANKING
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OUTPUT DATA TIMING
The data output of the MT9V034 is synchronized with the
PIXCLK output. When LINE_VALID (LV) is HIGH, one
10-bit pixel datum is output every PIXCLK period.
Figure 7. Timing Example of Pixel Data
LINE_VALID
PIXCLK
DOUT(9:0) P
0
(9:0) P
1
(9:0) P2
(9:0) P
3
(9:0) P
4
(9:0) P
n1
(9:0) P
n
(9:0)
Valid Image DataBlanking Blanking
...
...
...
...
The PIXCLK is a nominally inverted version of the master
clock (SYSCLK). This allows PIXCLK to be used as a clock
to latch the data. However, when column bin 2 is enabled, the
PIXCLK is HIGH for one complete master clock master
period and then LOW for one complete master clock period;
when column bin 4 is enabled, the PIXCLK is HIGH for two
complete master clock periods and then LOW for two
complete master clock periods. It is continuously enabled,
even during the blanking period. Setting R0x72 bit[4] = 1
causes the MT9V034 to invert the polarity of the PIXCLK.
The parameters P1, A, Q, and P2 in Figure 8 are defined
in Table 4.
Figure 8. Row Timing and FRAME_VALID/LINE_VALID Signals
P1 A QA QAP2
Number of master clocks
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
...
...
...
Table 4. FRAME TIME
Parameters Name Equation
Default Timing at
26.66 MHz
AActive data time Context A: R0x04
Context B: R0xCC
752 pixel clocks
= 752 master
= 28.2 μs
P1 Frame start blanking Context A: R0x05 - 23
Context B: R0xCD - 23
71 pixel clocks
= 71 master
= 2.66 μs
P2 Frame end blanking 23 (fixed) 23 pixel clocks
= 23 master
= 0.86 μs
QHorizontal blanking Context A: R0x05
Context B: R0xCD
94 pixel clocks
= 94 master
= 3.52 μs
A+Q Row time Context A: R0x04 + R0x05
Context B: R0xCC + R0xCD
846 pixel clocks
= 846 master
= 31.72 μs
VVertical blanking Context A: (R0x06) x (A + Q) + 4
Context B: (R0xCE) x (A + Q) + 4
38,074 pixel clocks
= 38,074 master
= 1.43 ms
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Table 4. FRAME TIME (continued)
Parameters
Default Timing at
26.66 MHz
EquationName
Nrows x (A + Q) Frame valid time Context A: (R0x03) × (A + Q)
Context B: (R0xCB) x (A + Q)
406,080 pixel clocks
= 406,080 master
= 15.23 ms
FTotal frame time V + (Nrows x (A + Q)) 444,154 pixel clocks
= 444,154 master
= 16.66 ms
Sensor timing is shown above in terms of pixel clock and
master clock cycles (refer to Figure 7). The recommended
master clock frequency is 26.66 MHz. The vertical blanking
and the total frame time equations assume that the
integration time (Coarse Shutter Width plus Fine Shutter
Width) is less than the number of active rows plus the
blanking rows minus the overhead rows:
Window Height )Vertical Blanking *2(eq.1)
If this is not the case, the number of integration rows must
be used instead to determine the frame time, as shown in
Table 5. In this example it is assumed that the Coarse Shutter
Width Control is programmed with 523 rows, and the Fine
Shutter Width Total is zero.
For Simultaneous mode, if the exposure time registers
(Coarse Shutter Width Total plus Fine Shutter Width Total)
exceed the total readout time, then the vertical blanking time
is internally extended automatically to adjust for the
additional integration time required. This extended value is
not written back to the vertical blanking registers. The
Vertical Blank register can be used to adjust frame-to-frame
readout time. This register does not affect the exposure time
but it may extend the readout time.
Table 5. FRAME TIMELONG INTEGRATION TIME
Parameter Name
Equation
(Number of Master Clock Cycles)
Default Timing
at 26.66 MHz
V’ Vertical blanking (long integration time) Context A:
(R0x0B + 2 R0x03) y (A + Q) + R0xD5 + 4
Context B:
(R0xD2 + 2 R0xCB) x (A + Q) + R0xD8 + 4
38,074 pixel
clocks
= 38,074 master
= 1.43 ms
FTotal frame time (long integration time) Context A: (R0x0B + 2) y (A + Q) + R0xD5 +4
Context B: (R0xD2 + 2) x (A + Q) + R0xD8 +4
444,154 pixel
clocks
= 444,154 master
= 16.66 ms
1. The MT9V034 uses column parallel analog-digital converters; thus short row timing is not possible. The minimum total row time is 704
columns (horizontal width + horizontal blanking). The minimum horizontal blanking is 61 for normal mode, 71 for column bin 2 mode, and
91 for column bin 4 mode. When the window width is set below 643, horizontal blanking must be increased. In binning mode, the minimum
row time is R0x04+R0x05 = 704.
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SERIAL BUS DESCRIPTION
Registers are written to and read from the MT9V034
through the two-wire serial interface bus. The MT9V034 is
a serial interface slave with four possible IDs (0x90, 0x98,
0xB0 and 0xB8) determined by the S_CTRL_ADR0 and
S_CTRL_ADR1 input pins. Data is transferred into the
MT9V034 and out through the serial data (SDATA) line. The
SDATA line is pulled up to VDD off-chip by a 1.5KΩ resistor.
Either the slave or master device can pull the SDATA line
down-the serial interface protocol determines which device
is allowed to pull the SDATA line down at any given time. The
registers are 16-bit wide, and can be accessed through 16- or
8-bit two-wire serial interface sequences.
Protocol
The two-wire serial interface defines several different
transmission codes, as shown in the following sequence:
1. a start bit
2. the slave device 8-bit address
3. a(n) (no) acknowledge bit
4. an 8-bit message
5. a stop bit
Start Bit
The start bit is defined as a HIGH-to-LOW transition of
the data line while the clock line is HIGH.
Slave Address
The 8-bit address of a two-wire serial interface device
consists of 7 bits of address and 1 bit of direction. A “0” in
the LSB of the address indicates write mode, and a “1”
indicates read mode. As indicated above, the MT9V034
allows four possible slave addresses determined by the two
input pins, S_CTRL_ADR0 and S_CTRL_ADR1.
Acknowledge Bit
The master generates the acknowledge clock pulse. The
transmitter (which is the master when writing, or the slave
when reading) releases the data line, and the receiver
indicates an acknowledge bit by pulling the data line LOW
during the acknowledge clock pulse.
No-Acknowledge Bit
The no-acknowledge bit is generated when the data line is
not pulled down by the receiver during the acknowledge
clock pulse. A no-acknowledge bit is used to terminate a
read sequence.
Stop Bit
The stop bit is defined as a LOW-to-HIGH transition of
the data line while the clock line is HIGH.
Sequence
A typical READ or WRITE sequence begins by the
master sending a start bit. After the start bit, the master sends
the slave device’s 8-bit address. The last bit of the address
determines if the request is a read or a write, where a “0”
indicates a WRITE and a “1” indicates a READ. The slave
device acknowledges its address by sending an
acknowledge bit back to the master.
If the request was a WRITE, the master then transfers the
8-bit register address to which a WRITE should take place.
The slave sends an acknowledge bit to indicate that the
register address has been received. The master then transfers
the data 8 bits at a time, with the slave sending an
acknowledge bit after each 8 bits. The MT9V034 uses 16-bit
data for its internal registers, thus requiring two 8-bit
transfers to write to one register. After 16 bits are transferred,
the register address is automatically incremented, so that the
next 16 bits are written to the next register address. The
master stops writing by sending a start or stop bit.
A typical READ sequence is executed as follows. First the
master sends the write mode slave address and 8-bit register
address, just as in the write request. The master then sends
a start bit and the read mode slave address. The master then
clocks out the register data 8 bits at a time. The master sends
an acknowledge bit after each 8-bit transfer. The register
address is automatically incremented after every 16 bits is
transferred. The data transfer is stopped when the master
sends a no-acknowledge bit. The MT9V034 allows for 8-bit
data transfers through the two-wire serial interface by
writing (or reading) the most significant 8 bits to the register
and then writing (or reading) the least significant 8 bits to
Byte-Wise Address register (0x0F0).
Bus Idle State
The bus is idle when both the data and clock lines are
HIGH. Control of the bus is initiated with a start bit, and the
bus is released with a stop bit. Only the master can generate
the start and stop bits.
Table 6. SLAVE ADDRESS MODES
{S_CTRL_ADR1, S_CTRL_ADR0} Slave Address Write/Read Mode
00 0x90 Write
0x91 Read
01 0x98 Write
0x99 Read
10 0xB0 Write
0xB1 Read
11 0xB8 Write
0xB9 Read
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Data Bit Transfer
One data bit is transferred during each clock pulse. The
two-wire serial interface clock pulse is provided by the
master. The data must be stable during the HIGH period of
the serial clock-it can only change when the two-wire serial
interface clock is LOW. Data is transferred 8 bits at a time,
followed by an acknowledge bit.
TWO-WIRE SERIAL INTERFACE SAMPLE READ AND WRITE SEQUENCES
16-Bit Write Sequence
A typical write sequence for writing 16 bits to a register
is shown in Figure 9. A start bit given by the master,
followed by the write address, starts the sequence. The
image sensor then gives an acknowledge bit and expects the
register address to come first, followed by the 16-bit data.
After each 8-bit the image sensor gives an acknowledge bit.
All 16 bits must be written before the register is updated.
After 16 bits are transferred, the register address is
automatically incremented, so that the next 16 bits are
written to the next register. The master stops writing by
sending a start or stop bit.
Figure 9. Timing Diagram Showing a WRITE to Reg0x09 with the Value 0x0284
SCLK
SDATA
START ACK
0xBA ADDR
ACK ACK ACK
STOP
Reg0x09 1000 0100
0000 0010
16-Bit Read Sequence
A typical read sequence is shown in Figure 10. First the
master has to write the register address, as in a write
sequence. Then a start bit and the read address specifies that
a read is about to happen from the register. The master then
clocks out the register data 8 bits at a time. The master sends
an acknowledge bit after each 8-bit transfer. The register
address is auto-incremented after every 16 bits is
transferred. The data transfer is stopped when the master
sends a no-acknowledge bit.
Figure 10. Timing Diagram Showing a READ from Reg0x09, Returned Value 0x0284
SCLK
SDATA
START ACK
0xBA ADDR 0xB9 ADDR 0000 0010
Reg0x09
ACK ACK ACK
1000 0100
NACK
STOP
8-Bit Write Sequence
To be able to write 1 byte at a time to the register a special
register address is added. The 8-bit write is done by first
writing the upper 8 bits to the desired register and then
writing the lower 8 bits to the Bytewise Address register
(R0xF0). The register is not updated until all 16 bits have
been written. It is not possible to just update half of a register.
In Figure 11, a typical sequence for 8-bit writing is shown.
The second byte is written to the Bytewise register (R0xF0).
Figure 11. Timing Diagram Showing a Bytewise Write to R0x09 with the Value 0x0284
STO
P
R0xF0
ACKSTART
0xB8 ADDR
ACK
D
ATA
S
CLK
ACKACKACKACK
R0x09
0xB8 ADDR 0000 0010 1000 0100
START
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8-Bit Read Sequence
To read one byte at a time the same special register address
is used for the lower byte. The upper 8 bits are read from the
desired register. By following this with a read from the
Bytewise Address register (R0xF0) the lower 8 bits are
accessed (Figure 12). The master sets the no-acknowledge
bits shown.
Figure 12. Timing Diagram Showing a Bytewise Read from R0x09; Returned Value 0x0284
START
0xB9 ADDR
S
DATA
SCLK
STOP
ACKACKACK
R0x09
START
0xB8 ADDR 0000 0010
START
0xB9 ADDR
SDATA
SCLK
NACKACKACKACK
R0xF0
START
0xB8 ADDR 1000 0100
NACK
Register Lock
Included in the MT9V034 is a register lock (R0xFE)
feature that can be used as a solution to reduce the
probability of an inadvertent noise-triggered two-wire serial
interface write to the sensor. All registers, or only the Read
Mode registers– R0x0D and R0x0E, can be locked. It is
important to prevent an inadvertent two-wire serial interface
write to the Read Mode registers in automotive applications
since this register controls the image orientation and any
unintended flip to an image can cause serious results.
At power-up, the register lock defaults to a value of
0xBEEF, which implies that all registers are unlocked and
any two-wire serial interface writes to the register gets
committed.
Lock All Registers
If a unique pattern (0xDEAD) to R0xFE is programmed,
any subsequent two-wire serial interface writes to registers
(except R0xFE) are NOT committed. Alternatively, if the
user writes a 0xBEEF to the register lock register, all
registers are unlocked and any subsequent two-wire serial
interface writes to the register are committed.
Lock Only Read Mode Registers (R0x0D and R0x0E)
If a unique pattern (0xDEAF) to R0xFE is programmed,
any subsequent two-wire serial interface writes to R0x0D or
R0x0E are NOT committed. Alternatively, if the user writes
a 0xBEEF to register lock register, registers R0x0D and
R0x0E are unlocked and any subsequent two-wire serial
interface writes to these registers are committed.
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Real-Time Context Switching
In the MT9V034, the user may switch between two full
register sets (listed in Table 7) by writing to a context switch
change bit in register 0x07. This context switch will change
all registers (no shadowing) at the frame start time and have
the new values apply to the immediate next exposure and
readout time (frame n+1), except for shutter width and
V1-V4 control, which will take effect for next exposure but
will show up in the n+2 image.
Table 7. REAL-TIME CONTEXTSWITCHABLE REGISTERS
Register Name Register Number (Hex) For Context A Register Number (Hex) for Context B
Column Start 0x01 0xC9
Row Start 0x02 0xCA
Window Height 0x03 0xCB
Window Width 0x04 0xCC
Horizontal Blanking 0x05 0xCD
Vertical Blanking 0x06 0xCE
Coarse Shutter Width 1 0x08 0xCF
Coarse Shutter Width 2 0x09 0xD0
Coarse Shutter Width Control 0x0A 0xD1
Coarse Shutter Width Total 0x0B 0xD2
Fine Shutter Width 1 0xD3 0xD6
Fine Shutter Width 2 0xD4 0xD7
Fine Shutter Width Total 0xD5 0xD8
Read Mode 0x0D [5:0] 0x0E [5:0]
High Dynamic Range enable 0x0F [0] 0x0F [8]
ADC Resolution Control 0x1C [1:0] 0x1C [9:8]
V1 Control – V4 Control 0x31 0x34 0x39 0x3C
Analog Gain Control 0x35 0x36
Row Noise Correction Control 1 0x70 [1:0] 0x70 [9:8]
Tiled Digital Gain 0x80 [3:0] 0x98 [3:0] 0x80 [11:8] 0x98 [11:8]
AEC/AGC Enable 0xAF [1:0] 0xAF [9:8]
Recommended Register Settings
Table 8 describes new suggested register settings, and
descriptions of performance improvements and conditions:
Table 8. RECOMMENDED REGISTER SETTINGS AND PERFORMANCE IMPACT (RESERVED REGISTERS)
Register Current Default New Setting Performance Impact
R0x20 0x01C1 0x03C7 Recommended by design to improve performance in HDR mode and when frame
rate is low. We also recommended using R0x13 = 0x2D2E with this setting for
better column FPN.
NOTE: When coarse integration time set to 0 and fine integration time less than
456, R0x20 should be set to 0x01C7
R0x24 0x0010 0x001B Corrects pixel negative dark offset when global reset in R0x20[9] is enabled.
R0x2B 0x0004 0x0003 Improves column FPN.
R0x2F 0x0004 0x0003 Improves FPN at near-saturation.
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FEATURE DESCRIPTION
Operational Modes
The MT9V034 works in master, snapshot, or slave mode.
In master mode the sensor generates the readout timing. In
snapshot mode it accepts an external trigger to start
integration, then generates the readout timing. In slave mode
the sensor accepts both external integration and readout
controls. The integration time is programmed through the
two-wire serial interface during master or snapshot modes,
or controlled through an externally generated control signal
during slave mode.
Master Mode
There are two possible operation methods for master
mode: simultaneous and sequential. One of these operation
modes must be selected through the two-wire serial
interface.
Simultaneous Master Mode
In simultaneous master mode, the exposure period occurs
during readout. The frame synchronization waveforms are
shown in Figure 13 and Figure 14. The exposure and
readout happen in parallel rather than sequential, making
this the fastest mode of operation.
Figure 13. Simultaneous Master Mode Synchronization Waveforms #1
EXPOSURE TIME
FRAME TIME
tLED2FVSIM
LED_OUT
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
tLED2FVSIM
tVBLANK
Figure 14. Simultaneous Master Mode Synchronization Waveforms #2
EXPOSURE TIME
FRAME TIME
tLED2FVSIM
tVBLANK
tLEDOFF
LED_OUT
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
When exposure time is greater than the sum of vertical
blank and window height, the number of vertical blank rows
is increased automatically to accommodate the exposure
time.
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Sequential Master Mode
In sequential master mode the exposure period is followed
by readout. The frame synchronization waveforms for
sequential master mode are shown in Figure 15. The frame
rate changes as the integration time changes.
Figure 15. Sequential Master Mode Synchronization Waveforms
EXPOSURE
TIME
FRAME TIME
LED_OUT
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
tVBLANK
tLED2FVSEQ tFV2LEDSEQ
Snapshot Mode
In snapshot mode the sensor accepts an input trigger
signal which initiates exposure, and is immediately
followed by readout. Figure 16 shows the interface signals
used in snapshot mode. In snapshot mode, the start of the
integration period is determined by the externally applied
EXPOSURE pulse that is input to the MT9V034. The
integration time is preprogrammed at R0x0B or R0xD2
through the two-wire serial interface. After the frame’s
integration period is complete the readout process
commences and the syncs and data are output. Sensor in
snapshot mode can capture a single image or a sequence of
images. The frame rate may only be controlled by changing
the period of the user supplied EXPOSURE pulse train. The
frame synchronization waveforms for snapshot mode are
shown in Figure 17.
Figure 16. Snapshot Mode Interface Signals
CONTROLLER
EXPOSURE
SYSCLK
PIXCLK
LINE_VALID
FRAME_VALID
DOUT(9:0)
MT9V034
Figure 17. Snapshot Mode Frame Synchronization Waveforms
EXPOSURE
TIME
FRAME TIME
T
EW
T
E2E
T
LED2FV T
FV2E
T
VBLANK
T
E2LED
EXPOSURE
LED_OUT
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
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Slave Mode
In slave mode, the exposure and readout are controlled
using the EXPOSURE, STFRM_OUT, and STLN_OUT
pins. When the slave mode is enabled, STFRM_OUT and
STLN_OUT become input pins.
The start and end of integration are controlled by
EXPOSURE and STFRM_OUT pulses, respectively. While
a STFRM_OUT pulse is used to stop integration, it is also
used to enable the readout process.
After integration is stopped, the user provides
STLN_OUT pulses to trigger row readout. A full row of data
is read out with each STLN_OUT pulse. The user must
provide enough time between successive STLN_OUT
pulses to allow the complete readout of one row.
It is also important to provide additional STLN_OUT
pulses to allow the sensors to read the vertical blanking rows.
It is recommended that the user program the vertical blank
register (R0x06) with a value of 4, and achieve additional
vertical blanking between frames by delaying the
application of the STFRM_OUT pulse.
The elapsed time between the rising edge of STLN_OUT
and the first valid pixel data is calculated for context A by
[horizontal blanking register (R0x05) + 4] clock cycles. For
context B, the time is (R0xCD + 4) clock cycles.
Figure 18. Exposure and Readout Timing (Simultaneous Mode)
EXPOSURE
STFRM_OUT
STLN_OUT
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
LED_OUT
EXPOSURE
TIME
tEW
tSF2SF
tSF2FV
tE2SF
tE2LED tSF2LED
tFV2SF
tSFW
1. Not drawn to scale.
2. Frame readout shortened for clarity.
3. Simultaneous progressive scan readout mode shown.
Note:
Figure 19. Exposure and Readout Timing (Sequential Mode)
tEW
EXPOSURE
TIME
tE2SF tSF2SF
tSF2FV tFV2E
tSFW
tSF2LED
tE2LED
EXPOSURE
STFRM_OUT
STLN_OUT
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
LED_OUT
Note: 1. Not drawn to scale.
2. Frame readout shortened for clarity.
3. STLN_OUT pulses are optional during exposure time.
4. Sequential progressive scan readout mode shown.
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Signal Path
The MT9V034 signal path consists of a programmable
gain, a programmable analog offset, and a 10-bit ADC. See
“Black Level Calibration” for the programmable offset
operation description.
Figure 20. Signal Path
Pixel Output
(reset minus signal)
Offset Correction
Voltage (R0x48 or
result of BLC)
10 (12) bit ADC ADC Data
(9:0)
Gain Selection
(R0x35 or R0x36 or
result of AGC) VREF
(R0x2C)
C2
C1
S
On-Chip Biases
ADC Voltage Reference
The ADC voltage reference is programmed through
R0x2C, bits 2:0. The ADC reference ranges from 1.0 V to
2.1 V. The default value is 1.4 V. The increment size of the
voltage reference is 0.1 V from 1.0 V to 1.6 V (R0x2C[2:0]
values 0 to 6). At R0x2C[2:0] = 7, the reference voltage
jumps to 2.1 V.
It is very important to preserve the correct values of the
other bits in R0x2C. The default register setting is 0x0004.
This corresponds to 1.4 V at this setting 1 mV input to the
ADC equals approximately 1 LSB.
V_Step Voltage Reference
This voltage is used for pixel high dynamic range
operations, programmable from R0x31 through R0x34 for
Context A, or R0x39 through R0x3B for context B.
Chip Version
Chip version register R0x00 is read-only.
Window Control
Registers Column Start A/B, Row Start A/B, Window
Height A/B (row size), and Window Width (column size)
A/B control the size and starting coordinates of the window.
The values programmed in the window height and width
registers are the exact window height and width out of the
sensor. The window start value should never be set below
four.
To read out the dark rows set bit 6 of R0x0D. In addition,
bit 7 of R0x0D can be used to display the dark columns in
the image. Note that there are Show Dark settings only for
Context A.
Blanking Control
Horizontal Blank and Vertical Blank registers R0x05 and
R0x06 (B: 0xCD and R0xCE), respectively, control the
blanking time in a row (horizontal blanking) and between
frames (vertical blanking).
Horizontal blanking is specified in terms of pixel
clocks.
Vertical blanking is specified in terms of numbers of
rows.
The actual imager timing can be calculated using Table 4
and Table 5 which describe “Row Timing and FV/LV
signals”.The minimum number of vertical blank rows is 4.
Pixel Integration Control
Total Integration
Total integration time is the result of coarse shutter width
and fine shutter width registers, and depends also on whether
manual or automatic exposure is selected.
The actual total integration time, tINT is defined as:
INT *INTCoarse )INTFint
tt t (eq. 2)
= (number of rows of integration x row time) + (number
of pixels of integration x pixel time)
where:
Number of Rows of Integration
(Auto Exposure Control: Enabled)
When automatic exposure control (AEC) is enabled, the
number of rows of integration may vary from frame to
frame, with the limits controlled by R0xAC (minimum
coarse shutter width) and R0xAD (maximum coarse shutter
width).
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Number of Rows of Integration
(Auto Exposure Control: Disabled)
If AEC is disabled, the number of rows of integration
equals the value in R0x0B
or
If context B is enabled, the number of rows of integration
equals the value in R0xD2.
Number of Pixels of Integration
The number of fine shutter width pixels is independent of
AEC mode (enabled or disabled):
Context A: the number of pixels of integration equals
the value in R0xD5.
Context B: the number of pixels of integration equals
the value in R0xD8.
Row Timing
Context A : Row time +(R0x04 )R0x05)
(eq. 3)
master clock periods
Context B : Row time +(R0xCC )R0xCD)
(eq. 4)
master clock periods
Typically, the value of the Coarse Shutter Width Total
registers is limited to the number of rows per frame (which
includes vertical blanking rows), such that the frame rate is
not affected by the integration time. If the Coarse Shutter
Width Total is increased beyond the total number of rows per
frame, the user must add additional blanking rows using the
Vertical Blanking registers as needed. See descriptions of
the Vertical Blanking registers, R0x06 and R0xCE in Table
1 and Table 2 of the MT9V034 register reference.
A second constraint is that tINT must be adjusted to avoid
banding in the image from light flicker. Under 60 Hz flicker,
this means the frame time must be a multiple of 1/120 of a
second. Under 50 Hz flicker, the frame time must be a
multiple of 1/100 of a second.
Changes to Integration Time
With automatic exposure control disabled (R0xAF[0] for
context A, or R0xAF[8] for context B) and if the total
integration time (R0x0B or R0xD2) is changed through the
two-wire serial interface while FV is asserted for frame n,
the first frame output using the new integration time is frame
(n + 2). Similarly, when automatic exposure control is
enabled, any change to the integration time for frame n first
appears in frame (n + 2) output.
The sequence is as follows:
1. During frame n, the new integration time is held in
the R0x0B or R0D2 live register.
2. Prior to the start of frame (n + 1) readout, the new
integration time is transferred to the exposure
control module. Integration for each row of frame
(n + 1) has been completed using the old
integration time. The earliest time that a row can
start integrating using the new integration time is
immediately after that row has been read for frame
(n + 1). The actual time that rows start integrating
using the new integration time is dependent on the
new value of the integration time.
3. When frame (n + 2) is read out, it is integrated
using the new integration time. If the integration
time is changed (R0x0B or R0xD2 written) on
successive frames, each value written is applied to
a single frame; the latency between writing a value
and it affecting the frame readout remains at two
frames.
MT9V034
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Figure 21. Latency of Exposure Register in Master Mode
idle idle
write new exposure value (Exp “B”)
Exp “A” Exp “A”
framestart
Readout Exp “A” Readout Exp “A” Readout Exp “B” Readout Exp “B” Readout Exp “B”
Twowire
serial Interface
(Input)
LED_OUT
(Output)
FRAME_VALID
(Output)
AECsample writes
new exposure
value (Exp “B”)
AECsample point
Exp “B”Exp “B”Exp “B”
frame n frame n+1 frame n+2
new image available
at output
framestart
activates new
exposure value
(Exp “B”)
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Exposure Indicator
The exposure indicator is controlled by:
R0x1B LED_OUT Control
The MT9V034 provides an output pin, LED_OUT, to
indicate when the exposure takes place. When R0x1B bit 0
is clear, LED_OUT is HIGH during exposure. By using
R0x1B, bit 1, the polarity of the LED_OUT pin can be
inverted.
High Dynamic Range
High dynamic range is controlled by:
Table 9. HIGH DYNAMIC RANGE
Context A Context B
High Dynamic Enable R0x0F[0] R0x0F[8]
Shutter Width 1 R0x08 R0xCF
Shutter Width 2 R0x09 R0xD0
Shutter Width Control R0x0A R0xD1
V_Step Voltages R0x31R0x34 R0x39R0x3C
In the MT9V034, high dynamic range (by setting R0x0F,
bit 0 or 8 to 1) is achieved by controlling the saturation level
of the pixel (HDR or high dynamic range gate) during the
exposure period. The sequence of the control voltages at the
HDR gate is shown in Figure 22. After the pixels are reset,
the step voltage, V_Step, which is applied to HDR gate, is
set up at V1 for integration time t1, then to V2 for time t2,
then V3 for time t3, and finally it is parked at V4, which also
serves as an antiblooming voltage for the photodetector.
This sequence of voltages leads to a piecewise linear pixel
response, illustrated (approximately) in Figure 22 and
Figure 23.
Figure 22. Sequence of Control Voltages at the HDR Gate
t2t3
V4~0.8V
Exposure
t1
HDR
Voltage
VAA (3.3V)
V1~1.4V V2~1.2V V3~1.0V
Figure 23. Sequence of Voltages in a Piecewise Linear Pixel Response
dV1
dV2
dV3
1/t11/t21/t3
Output
Light Intensity
MT9V034
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The parameters of the step voltage V_Step which take
values V1, V2, and V3 directly affect the position of the knee
points in Figure 23.
Light intensities work approximately as a reciprocal of the
partial exposure time. Typically, t1 is the longest exposure,
t2 shorter, and so on. Thus the range of light intensities is
shortest for the first slope, providing the highest sensitivity.
The register settings for V_Step and partial exposures are:
V1 = R0x31, bits 5:0 (Context B: R0x39, bits 5:0)
V2 = R0x32, bits 5:0 (Context B: R0x3A, bits 5:0)
V3 = R0x33, bits 5:0 (Context B: R0x3B, bits 5:0)
V4 = R0x34, bits 5:0 (Context B: R0x3C, bits 5:0)
tINT = t1 + t2 + t3
There are two ways to specify the knee points timing, the
first by manual setting and the second by automatic knee
point adjustment. Knee point auto adjust is controlled for
context A by R0x0A[8] (where default is ON), and for
context B by R0xD1[8] (where default is OFF).
When the knee point auto adjust enabler is enabled (set
HIGH), the MT9V034 calculates the knee points
automatically using the following equations:
1+INT *2*3(eq. 5)
tttt
2+INT x (1ń2)R0x0A[3:0] or R0xD1[3:0] (eq. 6)
tt
2+INT x (1ń2)R0x0A[7:4] or R0xD1[7:4] (eq. 7)
tt
As a default for auto exposure, t2 is 1/16 of tINT, t3 is 1/64
of tINT.
When the auto adjust enabler is disabled (set LOW), t1, t2,
and t3 may be programmed through the two-wire serial
interface:
1+Coarse SW1 (row *times) )Fine SW1 (pixel *times) (eq. 8)
t
2+Coarse SW2 *Coarse SW1 )Fine SW2 *Fine SW1 (eq. 9)
t
+Coarse Total Shutter Width )Fine Shutter Width Total *1*2
(eq. 10)
t3+Total Integration *1*2
tt
tt
For context A these become:
1+R0x08 )R0xD3 (eq. 11)
t
2+R0x09 *ROx08 )R0xD4 *R0xD3 (eq. 12)
t
3+R0x0B )R0xD4 *1*2(eq. 13)
ttt
For context B these are:
1+R0xCF )R0xD6 (eq. 14)
t
2+R0xD0 *ROxCF )R0xD7 *R0xD6 (eq. 15)
t
3+R0xD2 )R0xD8 *1*2(eq. 16)
ttt
In all cases above, the coarse component of total
integration time may be based on the result of AEC or values
in Reg0x0B and Reg0xD2, depending on the settings.
Similar to Fine Shutter Width Total registers, the user
must not set the Fine Shutter Width 1 or Fine Shutter Width
2 register to exceed the row time (Horizontal Blanking +
Window Width). The absolute maximum value for the Fine
Shutter Width registers is 1774 master clocks.
ADC Companding Mode
By default, ADC resolution of the sensor is 10-bit.
Additionally, a companding scheme of 12-bit into 10-bit is
enabled by the ADC Companding Mode register. This mode
allows higher ADC resolution, which means less
quantization noise at low-light, and lower resolution at high
light, where good ADC quantization is not so critical
because of the high level of the photon’s shot noise.
Figure 24. 12- to 10-Bit Companding Chart
256
512
768
1,024
4,0962,048
1,024512256
4 to 1 Companding (512 2047 384 767)
8 to 1 Companding (2,048 4095 768 1023)
10-bit
Codes
12-bit
Codes
2 to 1 Companding (256 511 256 383)
No companding (0 255 0 255)
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Gain Settings
Changes to Gain Settings
When the analog gain (R0x35 for context A or R0x36 for
context B) or the digital gain settings (R0x80R0x98) are
changed, the gain is updated on the next frame start. The gain
setting must be written before the frame boundary to take
effect the next frame. The frame boundary is slightly after
the falling edge of Frame_Valid. In Figure 25 this is shown
by the dashed vertical line labeled Frame Start.
Both analog and digital gain change regardless of whether
the integration time is also changed simultaneously. Digital
gain will change as soon as the register is written.
Figure 25. Latency of Gain Register(s) in Master Mode
idle idle
write new gain value (Gain “B”)
framestart
Readout Gain “A” Readout Gain “B” Readout Gain “B” Readout Gain “B” Readout Gain “B”
Twowire
serial Interface
(Input)
LED_OUT
(Output)
FRAME_VALID
(Output)
framestart writes
new gain value
(Gain ”B”)
AGCsample point
Readout Gain “A”
AGCsample
activates new gain
value (Gain ”B”)
frame n frame n+1 frame n+2
new image available
at output
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Analog Gain
Analog gain is controlled by:
R0x35 Global Gain context A
R0x36 Global Gain context B
The formula for gain setting is:
Gain +Bits[6 : 0] 0.0625 (eq. 17)
The analog gain range supported in the MT9V034 is
1X4X with a step size of 6.25 percent. To control gain
manually with this register, the sensor must NOT be in AGC
mode. When adjusting the luminosity of an image, it is
recommended to alter exposure first and yield to gain
increases only when the exposure value has reached a
maximum limit.
Analog gain = bits (6:0) x 0.0625 for values 16–31
Analog gain = bits (6:0)/2 x 0.125 for values 32–64
For values 16–31: each LSB increases analog gain 0.0625
v/v. A value of 16 = 1X gain. Range: 1X to 1.9375X.
For values 32–64: each 2 LSB increases analog gain 0.125
v/v (that is, double the gain increase for 2 LSB). Range: 2X
to 4X. Odd values do not result in gain increases; the gain
increases by 0.125 for values 32, 34, 36, and so on.
Digital Gain
Digital gain is controlled by:
R0x99R0xA4 Tile Coordinates
R0x80R0x98 Tiled Digital Gain and Weight
In the MT9V034, the gain logic divides the image into 25
tiles, as shown in Figure 25. The size and gain of each tile
can be adjusted using the above digital gain control registers.
Separate tile gains can be assigned for context A and context
B.
Registers 0x99–0x9E and 0x9F–0xA4 represent the
coordinates X0/5–X5/5 and Y0/5–Y5/5 in Figure 25,
respectively.
Digital gains of registers 0x80–0x98 apply to their
corresponding tiles. The MT9V034 supports a digital gain
of 0.25–3.75X.
When binning is enabled, the tile offsets maintain their
absolute values; that is, tile coordinates do not scale with row
or column bin setting. Digital gain is applied as soon as
register is written.
NOTE: There is one exception, for the condition when
Column Bin 4 is enabled (R0x0D[3:2] or
R0x0E[3:2] = 2). For this case, the value for
Digital Tile Coordinate
X–direction must be doubled.
The formula for digital gain setting is:
Digital Gain +Bits[3 : 0] 0.25 (eq. 18)
Figure 26. Tiled Sample
Y0/5
Y1/5
Y2/5
Y3/5
Y4/5
Y5/5
x0_y0 x1_y0 x4_y0
x0_y1 x1_y1 x4_y1
x0_y2 x1_y2 x4_y2
x0_y3 x1_y3 x4_y3
x0_y4 x1_y4 x4_y4
X0/5 X1/5 X2/5 X3/5 X4/5 X5/5
MT9V034
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25
Black Level Calibration
Black level calibration is controlled by:
Frame Dark Average: R0x42
Dark Average Thresholds: R0x46
Black Level Calibration Control: R0x47
Black Level Calibration Value: R0x48
Black Level Calibration Value Step Size: R0x4C
The MT9V034 has automatic black level calibration
on-chip, and if enabled, its result may be used in the offset
correction shown in Figure 27.
Figure 27. Black Level Calibration Flow Chart
Pixel Output
(reset minus signal)
Offset Correction
Voltage (R0x48 or
result of BLC)
10 (12) bit ADC ADC Data
(9:0)
Gain Selection
(R0x35 or R0x36 or
result of AGC) VREF
(R0x2C)
C2
C1
S
The automatic black level calibration measures the
average value of pixels from 2 dark rows (1 dark row if row
bin 4 is enabled) of the chip. (The pixels are averaged as if
they were light-sensitive and passed through the appropriate
gain.)
This row average is then digitally low-pass filtered over
many frames (R0x47, bits 7:5) to remove temporal noise and
random instabilities associated with this measurement.
Then, the new filtered average is compared to a minimum
acceptable level, low threshold, and a maximum acceptable
level, high threshold.
If the average is lower than the minimum acceptable level,
the offset correction voltage is increased by a programmable
offset LSB in R0x4C. (Default step size is 2 LSB Offset =
1 ADC LSB at analog gain = 1X.)
If it is above the maximum level, the offset correction
voltage is decreased by 2 LSB (default).
To avoid oscillation of the black level from below to
above, the region the thresholds should be programmed so
the difference is at least two times the offset DAC step size.
In normal operation, the black level calibration
value/offset correction value is calculated at the beginning
of each frame and can be read through the two-wire serial
interface from R0x48. This register is an 8-bit signed two’s
complement value.
However, if R0x47, bit 0 is set to “1,” the calibration value
in R0x48 is used rather than the automatic black level
calculation result. This feature can be used in conjunction
with the “show dark rows” feature (R0x0D[6]) if using an
external black level calibration circuit.
The offset correction voltage is generated according to the
following formulas:
Offset Correction Voltage +(8 *bit signed twoȀs complement calibration value, –127 127) 0.25 mV
to (eq. 19)
ADC input voltage +(Pixel Output Voltage) Analog Gain )Offset Correction Voltage (Analog Gain )1) (eq. 20)
Defective Pixel Correction
Defective pixel correction is intended to compensate for
defective pixels by replacing their value with a value based
on the surrounding pixels, making the defect less noticeable
to the human eye. The locations of defective pixels are
stored in a ROM on chip during the manufacturing process;
the maximum number of defects stored is 32. There is no
provision for later augmenting the table of programmed
defects. In the defect correction block, bad pixels will be
substituted by either the average of its neighboring pixels, or
its nearest-neighbor pixel, depending on pixel location.
Defective Pixel Correction is enabled by R0x07[9]. By
default, correction is enabled, and pixels mapped in internal
ROM are replaced with corrected values. This might be
unacceptable to some applications, in which case pixel
correction should be disabled (R0x07[9] = 0).
Row-wise Noise Correction
Row-wise noise correction is controlled by the following
registers:
R0x70 Row Noise Control
R0x72 Row Noise Constant
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Row-wise noise cancellation is performed by calculating
a row average from a set of optically black pixels at the start
of each row and then applying each average to all the active
pixels of the row. Read Dark Columns register bit and Row
Noise Correction Enable register bit must both be set to
enable row-wise noise cancellation to be performed. The
behavior when Read Dark Columns register bit = 0 and Row
Noise Correction Enable register bit = 1 is undefined.
The algorithm works as follows:
Logical columns 755-790 in the pixel array provide 36
optically black pixel values. Of the 36 values, two smallest
value and two largest values are discarded. The remaining
32 values are averaged by summing them and discarding the
5 LSB of the result. The 10-bit result is subtracted from each
pixel value on the row in turn. In addition, a positive constant
will be added (Reg0x71, bits 7:0). This constant should be
set to the dark level targeted by the black level algorithm plus
the noise expected on the measurements of the averaged
values from dark columns; it is meant to prevent clipping
from negative noise fluctuations.
Pixel value +ADC value dark column average )R0x71[9 : 0]
(eq. 21)
Note that this algorithm does not work in color sensor.
Automatic Gain Control and Automatic Exposure
Control
The integrated AEC/AGC unit is responsible for ensuring
that optimal auto settings of exposure and (analog) gain are
computed and updated every frame.
AEC and AGC can be individually enabled or disabled by
R0xAF. When AEC is disabled (R0xAF[0] = 0), the sensor
uses the manual exposure value in coarse and fine shutter
width registers. When AGC is disabled (R0xAF[1] = 0), the
sensor uses the manual gain value in R0x35 or R0x36. See
“Pixel Integration Control” and the MT9V034 Developer
Guide, for more information.
Figure 28. Controllable and Observable AEC/AGC Registers
EXP. LPF
(R0xA8)
1
0
1
0
EXP. SKIP
(R0xA6)
Coarse Shutter
Width Total
AEC ENABLE
(R0xAF[0 or 8])
MAX. EXPOSURE (R0xBD)
MIN EXPOSURE (R0xAC)
AEC
UNIT
To exposure
timing control
AEC
OUTPUT
R0xBB
R0xBA
To analog
gain control
HISTOGRAM
GENERATOR
UNIT
AGC
UNIT
GAIN LPF
(R0xAB)
GAIN SKIP
(R0xA9)
MANUAL GAIN
A or B
AGC ENABLE
(R0xAF[1 or 9])
AGC OUTPUT
MAX. GAIN
(R0xAB)
MIN GAIN
DESIRED BIN
(desired luminance)
(R0xA5)
CURRENT BIN
(current luminance)
(R0xBC)
16
The exposure is measured in row-time by reading R0xBB.
The exposure range is 1 to 2047. The gain is measured in
gain-units by reading R0xBA. The gain range is 16 to 63
(unity gain = 16 gain-units; multiply by 1/16 to get the true
gain).
When AEC is enabled (R0xAF), the maximum auto
exposure value is limited by R0xBD; minimum auto
exposure is limited by AEC Minimum Exposure, R0xAC.
NOTE: AEC does not support sub-row timing;
calculated exposure values are rounded down to
the nearest row-time. For smoother response,
manual control is recommended for short
exposure times.
When AGC is enabled (R0xAF), the maximum auto gain
value is limited by R0xAB; minimum auto gain is fixed to
16 gain-units.
The exposure control measures current scene luminosity
and desired output luminosity by accumulating a histogram
of pixel values while reading out a frame. All pixels are used,
whether in color or mono mode. The desired exposure and
gain are then calculated from this for subsequent frame.
When binning is enabled, tuning of the AEC may be
required. The histogram pixel count register, R0xB0, may be
adjusted to reflect reduced pixel count. Desired bin register,
R0xA5, may be adjusted as required.
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Pixel Clock Speed
The pixel clock speed is same as the master clock
(SYSCLK) at 26.66 MHz by default. However, when
column binning 2 or 4 (R0x0D or R0x0E, bit 2 or 3) is
enabled, the pixel clock speed is reduced by half and
one-fourth of the master clock speed respectively. See “Read
Mode Options” and “Column Binning” for additional
information.
Hard Reset of Logic
The RC circuit for the MT9V034 uses a 10 kΩ resistor and
a 0.1 µF capacitor. The rise time for the RC circuit is 1µs
maximum.
Soft Reset of Logic
Soft reset of logic is controlled by:
R0x0C Reset
Bit 0 is used to reset the digital logic of the sensor while
preserving the existing two-wire serial interface
configuration. Furthermore, by asserting the soft reset, the
sensor aborts the current frame it is processing and starts a
new frame. Bit 1 is a shadowed reset control register bit to
explicitly reset the automatic gain and exposure control
feature.
These two bits are self-resetting bits and also return to “0”
during two-wire serial interface reads.
STANDBY Control
The sensor goes into standby mode by setting STANDBY
to HIGH. Once the sensor detects that STANDBY is
asserted, it completes the current frame before disabling the
digital logic, internal clocks, and analog power enable
signal. To release the sensor out from the standby mode,
reset STANDBY back to LOW. The LVDS must be powered
to ensure that the device is in standby mode. See ”Appendix
A – Power-On Reset and Standby Timing” for more
information on standby.
Monitor Mode Control
Monitor mode is controlled by:
R0xD9 Monitor Mode Enable
R0xC0 Monitor Mode Image Capture Control
The sensor goes into monitor mode when R0xD9[0] is set
to HIGH. In this mode, the sensor first captures a
programmable number of frames (R0xC0), then goes into a
sleep period for five minutes. The cycle of sleeping for five
minutes and waking up to capture a number of frames
continues until R0xD9[0] is cleared to return to normal
operation.
In some applications when monitor mode is enabled, the
purpose of capturing frames is to calibrate the gain and
exposure of the scene using automatic gain and exposure
control feature. This feature typically takes less than 10
frames to settle. In case a larger number of frames is needed,
the value of R0xC0 may be increased to capture more
frames.
During the sleep period, none of the analog circuitry and
a very small fraction of digital logic (including a five-minute
timer) is powered. The master clock (SYSCLK) is therefore
always required.
Read Mode Options
(Also see “Output Data Format” and “Output Data
Timing”).
Column Flip
By setting bit 5 of R0x0D or R0x0E the readout order of
the columns is reversed, as shown in Figure 29.
Row Flip
By setting bit 4 of R0x0D or R0x0E the readout order of
the rows is reversed, as shown in Figure 30.
Figure 29. Readout of Six Pixels in Normal and Column Flip Output Mode
LINE_VALID
Normal readout
DOUT(9:0)
Reverse readout
DOUT(9:0)
P4,1
(9:0)
P4,n
(9:0) P4,n1
(9:0) P4,n2
(9:0) P4,n3
(9:0) P4,n4
(9:0) P4,n5
(9:0)
P4,2
(9:0) P4,3
(9:0) P4,4
(9:0) P4,5
(9:0) P4,6
(9:0)
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Figure 30. Readout of Six Rows in Normal and Row Flip Output Mode
FRAME_VALID
Normal readout
DOUT(9:0)
Reverse readout
DOUT(9:0)
Row4
(9:0) Row5
(9:0) Row6
(9:0) Row7
(9:0) Row8
7(9:0) Row9
(9:0)
Row9
(9:0) Row8
(9:0) Row7
(9:0) Row6
(9:0) Row5
7(9:0) Row4
(9:0)
Pixel Binning
In addition to windowing mode in which smaller
resolutions (CIF, QCIF) are obtained by selecting a smaller
window from the sensor array, the MT9V034 also provides
the ability to down-sample the entire image captured by the
pixel array using pixel binning.
There are two resolution options: binning 2 and binning
4, which reduce resolution by two or by four, respectively.
Row and column binning are separately selected. Image
mirroring options will work in conjunction with binning.
For column binning, either two or four columns are
combined by averaging to create the resulting column. For
row binning, the binning result value depends on the
difference in pixel values: for pixel signal differences of less
than 200 LSBs, the result is the average of the pixel values.
For pixel differences of greater than 200 LSBs, the result is
the value of the darker pixel value.
Binning operation increases SNR but decreases
resolution. Enabling row bin2 and row bin4 improves frame
rate by 2x and 4x respectively. Column binning does not
increase the frame rate.
Row Binning
By setting bit 0 or 1 of R0x0D or R0x0E, only half or
one-fourth of the row set is read out, as shown in Figure 30.
The number of rows read out is half or one-fourth of the
value set in R0x03. The row binning result depends on the
difference in pixel values: for pixel signal differences less
than 200 LSB’s, the result is the average of the pixel values.
For pixel differences of 200 LSB’s or more, the result is
the value of the darker pixel value.
Column Binning
For column binning, either two or four columns are
combined by averaging to create the result. In setting bit 2
or 3 of R0x0D or R0x0E, the pixel data rate is slowed down
by a factor of either two or four, respectively. This is due to
the overhead time in the digital pixel data processing chain.
As a result, the pixel clock speed is also reduced accordingly.
Figure 31. Readout of 8 Pixels in Normal and Row Bin Output Mode
LINE_VALID
Normal readout
DOUT(9:0)
Row4
(9:0)
Row5
(9:0)
Row6
(9:0)
Row7
(9:0)
Row8
(9:0)
Row9
(9:0)
Row10
(9:0)
Row11
(9:0)
LINE_VALID
Row Bin 2 readout
DOUT(9:0)
Row4
(9:0)
Row6
(9:0)
Row8
(9:0)
LINE_VALID
Row Bin 4 readout
DOUT(9:0)
Row4
(9:0)
Row8
(9:0)
Row10
(9:0)
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Figure 32. Readout of 8 Pixels in Normal and Column Bin Output Mode
LINE_VALID
Normal readout
PIXCLK
PIXCLK
PIXCLK
D1
(9:0)
D2
(9:0)
D3
(9:0)
D4
(9:0)
D5
(9:0)
D6
(9:0)
D7
(9:0)
D8
(9:0)
LINE_VALID
Column Bin 2 readout D1
(9:0) D3
(9:0) D5
(9:0) D7
(9:0)
LINE_VALID
Column Bin 4 readout
DOUT(9:0)
D1
(9:0)
D5
(9:0)
DOUT(9:0)
DOUT(9:0)
Interlaced Readout
The MT9V034 has two interlaced readout options. By
setting R0x07[2:0] = 1, all the even-numbered rows are read
out first, followed by a number of programmable field
blanking rows (set by R0xBF[7:0]), then the odd-numbered
rows, and finally the vertical blanking rows. By setting
R0x07[2:0] = 2 only one field row is read out.
Consequently, the number of rows read out is half what is
set in the window height register. The row start register
determines which field gets read out; if the row start register
is even, then the even field is read out; if row start address
is odd, then the odd field is read out.
Figure 33. Spatial Illustration of Interlaced Image Readout
P
4,1
P
4,2
P
4,3 .....................................P4,n1P4,n
P
6,0
P
6,1
P
6,2 .....................................P6,n1P6,n
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
P
m2,0
P
m2,2.....................................Pm2,n2P
m2,n
P
m,2 P
m,2 .....................................Pm,n1Pm,n
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 .................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 ..................................... 00 00 00
00 00 00 ..................................... 00 00 00
00 00 00 ............................................................................................. 00 00 00
00 00 00 ............................................................................................. 00 00 00
VALID IMAGE Even Field HORIZONTAL
BLANKING
VERTICAL BLANKING
P
5,1
P
5,2
P
5,3 .....................................P
5,n1P5,n
P
7,0
P
7,1
P
7,2 .....................................P
7,n1P7,n
P
m3,1
P
m3,2 .....................................P
m3,n1
P
m3,n
P
m,1 P
m,1 .....................................P
m,n1P
m,n
VALID IMAGE Odd Field
FIELD BLANKING
When interlaced mode is enabled, the total number of
blanking rows are determined by both Field Blanking
register (R0xBF) and Vertical Blanking register (R0x06 or
R0xCE). The followings are their equations.
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Field Blanking +R0xBF[7 : 0] (eq. 22)
Vertical Blanking +R0x06[8 : 0] R0xBF[7 : 0] (contextA) or R0xCE[8 : 0] R0xBF[7 : 0] (contextB) (eq. 23)
with
minimum vertical blanking requirement +4 (absolute minimum operate; see Vertical Blanking Registers description for VBlank minimums
(eq. 24)
for valid image output)
Similar to progressive scan, FV is logic LOW during the
valid image row only. Binning should not be used in
conjunction with interlaced mode.
LINE_VALID
By setting bit 2 and 3 of R0x72, the LV signal can get three
different output formats. The formats for reading out four
rows and two vertical blanking rows are shown in Figure 34.
In the last format, the LV signal is the XOR between the
continuous LV signal and the FV signal.
Figure 34. Different LINE_VALID Formats
Default
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
Continuously
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
XOR
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
LVDS Serial (Stand-Alone/Stereo) Output
The LVDS interface allows for the streaming of sensor
data serially to a standard off-the-shelf deserializer up to
eight meters away from the sensor. The pixels (and controls)
are packeted-12-bit packets for stand-alone mode and 18-bit
packets for stereoscopy mode. All serial signalling (CLK
and data) is LVDS. The LVDS serial output could either be
data from a single sensor (stand-alone) or stream-merged
data from two sensors (self and its stereoscopic slave pair).
The appendices describe in detail the topologies for both
stand-alone and stereoscopic modes.
There are two standard deserializers that can be used. One
for a stand-alone sensor stream and the other from a
stereoscopic stream. The deserializer attached to a
stand-alone sensor is able to reproduce the standard parallel
output (8-bit pixel data, LV, FV, and PIXCLK). The
deserializer attached to a stereoscopic sensor is able to
reproduce 8-bit pixel data from each sensor (with embedded
LV and FV) and pixel-clk. An additional (simple) piece of
logic is required to extract LV and FV from the 8-bit pixel
data. Irrespective of the mode (stereoscopy/stand-alone),
LV and FV are always embedded in the pixel data.
In stereoscopic mode, the two sensors run in lock-step,
implying all state machines are in the same state at any given
time. This is ensured by the sensor-pair getting their sys-clks
and sys-resets in the same instance. Configuration writes
through the two-wire serial interface are done in such a way
that both sensors can get their configuration updates at once.
The inter-sensor serial link is designed in such a way that
once the slave PLL locks and the data-dly, shft-clk-dly and
stream-latency-sel are configured, the master sensor streams
valid stereo content irrespective of any variation voltage
and/or temperature as long as it is within specification. The
configuration values of data-dly, shft-clk-dly and
stream-latency-sel are either predetermined from the
board-layout or can be empirically determined by reading
back the stereo-error flag. This flag is asserted when the two
sensor streams are not in sync when merged. The combo_reg
is used for out-of-sync diagnosis.
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Figure 35. Serial Output Format for a 6x2 Frame
Internal
PIXCLK
Internal
Parallel
Data
Internal
Line_Valid
Internal
Frame_Valid
External
Serial
Data Out
P41 P43
P42 P44 P45 P46 P54 P55 P56P52
P51 P53
1023 1023
01
P41 P42 P46 21
P44
P43 P45 P51 P52 P56 2
P54
P53 P55 3
1. External pixel values of 0, 1, 2, 3, are reserved (they only convey control information). Any raw pixel of value 0, 1, 2 and 3 will be substituted
with 4.
2. The external pixel sequence 1023, 0, 1023 is a reserved sequence (conveys control information for legacy support of MT9V021 applications).
Any raw pixel sequence of 1023, 0, 1023 will be substituted with an output serial stream of 1023, 4, 1023.
LVDS Output Format
In stand-alone mode, the packet size is 12 bits (2 frame bits
and 10 payload bits); 10-bit pixels or 8-bit pixels can be
selected. In 8-bit pixel mode (R0xB6[0] = 0), the packet
consists of a start bit, 8-bit pixel data (with sync codes), the
line valid bit, the frame valid bit and the stop bit. For 10-bit
pixel mode (R0xB6[0] = 1), the packet consists of a start bit,
10-bit pixel data, and the stop bit.
Table 10. LVDS PACKET FORMAT IN STAND-ALONE MODE (Stereoscopy Mode Bit De-Asserted)
12-Bit Packet
use_10-bit_pixels Bit De-Asserted
(8-Bit Mode)
use_10-bit_pixels Bit Asserted
(10-Bit Mode)
Bit[0] 1’b1 (Start bit) 1’b1 (Start bit)
Bit[1] PixelData[2] PixelData[0]
Bit2] PixelData[3] PixelData[1]
Bit[3] PixelData[4] PixelData[2]
Bit4] PixelData[5] PixelData[3]
Bit[5] PixelData[6] PixelData[4]
Bit[6] PixelData[7] PixelData[5]
Bit[7] PixelData[8] PixelData[6]
Bit[8] PixelData[9] PixelData[7]
Bit[9] Line_Valid PixelData[8]
Bit[10] Frame_Valid PixelData[9]
Bit[11] 1’b0 (Stop bit) 1’b0 (Stop bit)
In stereoscopic mode, the packet size is 18 bits (2 frame
bits and 16 payload bits). The packet consists of a start bit,
the master pixel byte (with sync codes), the slave byte (with
sync codes), and the stop bit.)
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Table 11. LVDS PACKET FORMAT IN STEREOSCOPY MODE (Stereoscopy Mode Bit Asserted)
18-bit Packet Function
Bit[0] 1’b1 (Start bit)
Bit[1] MasterSensorPixelData[2]
Bit[2] MasterSensorPixelData[3]
Bit[3] MasterSensorPixelData[4]
Bit[4] MasterSensorPixelData[5]
Bit[5] MasterSensorPixelData[6]
Bit[6] MasterSensorPixelData[7]
Bit[7] MasterSensorPixelData[8]
Bit[8] MasterSensorPixelData[9]
Bit[9] SlaveSensorPixelData[2]
Bit[10] SlaveSensorPixelData[3]
Bit[11] SlaveSensorPixelData[4]
Bit[12] SlaveSensorPixelData[5]
Bit[13] SlaveSensorPixelData[6]
Bit[14] SlaveSensorPixelData[7]
Bit[15] SlaveSensorPixelData[8]
Bit[16] SlaveSensorPixelData[9]
Bit[17] 1’b0 (Stop bit)
Control signals LV and FV can be reconstructed from their
respective preceding and succeeding flags that are always
embedded within the pixel data in the form of reserved
words.
Table 12. RESERVED WORDS IN THE PIXEL DATA STREAM
Pixel Data Reserved Word Flag
0Precedes frame valid assertion
1Precedes line valid assertion
2Succeeds line valid de-assertion
3Succeeds frame valid de-assertion
When LVDS mode is enabled along with column binning
(bin 2 or bin 4, R0x0D[3:2], the packet size remains the same
but the serial pixel data stream repeats itself depending on
whether 2X or 4X binning is set:
For bin 2, LVDS outputs double the expected data
(post-binning pixel 0,0 is output twice in sequence,
followed by pixel 0,1 twice, ).
For bin 4, LVDS outputs 4 times the expected data
(pixel 0,0 is output 4 times in sequence followed by
pixel 0,1 times 4, ).
The receiving hardware will need to undersample the
output stream, getting data either every 2 clocks (bin 2) or
every 4 (bin 4) clocks.
If the sensor provides a pixel whose value is 0,1, 2, or 3
(that is, the same as a reserved word) then the outgoing serial
pixel value is switched to 4.
LVDS Enable and Disable
The Table 13 and Table 14 further explain the state of the
LVDS output pins depending on LVDS control settings.
When the LVDS block is not used, it may be left powered
down to reduce power consumption.
Table 13. SER_DATAOUT_* STATE
R0xB1[1]
LVDS power
down
R0xB3[4]
LVDS data power
down SER_DATAOUT_*
0 0 Active
0 1 Active
1 0 Z
1 1 Z
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Table 14. SHFT_CLK_* STATE
R0xB1[1]
LVDS power down
R0xB2[4]
LVDS shift-clk power down SHFT_CLKOUT_*
0 0 Active
0 1 Z
1 0 Z
1 1 Z
1. ERROR pin: When the sensor is not in stereo mode, the ERROR pin is at LOW.
LVDS Data Bus Timing
The LVDS bus timing waveforms and timing
specifications are shown in Table 15 and Figure 36.
Figure 36. LVDS Timing
Data Rise/Fall Time
(10% 90%) Data Setup Time Data Hold Time
LVDS Data Output
LVDS Clock Output
(Shft_CLKOUT_N/P)
(SER_DATAOUT_N/P)
Clock Rise/Fall Time
(10% 90%)
Clock Jitter
Table 15. LVDS AC TIMING SPECIFICATIONS
(VPWR = 3.3 V ±0.3 V; TJ = – 30°C to +70°C; output load = 100 Ω; frequency 27 MHz)
Parameter Minimum Typical Maximum Unit
LVDS clock rise time 0.22 0.30 ns
LVDS clock fall time 0.22 0.30 ns
LVDS data rise time 0.28 0.30 ns
LVDS data fall time 0.28 0.30 ns
LVDS data setup time 0.3 0.67 ns
LVDS data hold time 0.1 1.34 ns
LVDS clock jitter 92 ps
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ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS
Table 16. DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS OVER TEMPERATURE
(VPWR = 3.3 V ±0.3 V; TJ = – 30°C to +70°C; Output Load = 10 pF; Frequency 13 MHz to 27 MHz; LVDS off)
Symbol Definition Condition Min. Typ. Max. Unit
VIH Input HIGH voltage VPWR 1.4 V
VIL Input LOW voltage 1.3 V
IIN Input leakage current No pull-up resistor;
VIN = VPWR or VGND
5 5 mA
VOH Output HIGH voltage IOH = 4.0 mA VPWR 0.3 V
VOL Output LOW voltage IOL = 4.0 mA 0.3 V
IOH Output HIGH current VOH = VDD 0.7 11 mA
IOL Output LOW current VOL = 0.7 11 mA
IPWRAAnalog supply current Default settings 12 20 mA
IPIX Pixel supply current Default settings 1.1 3 mA
IPWRDDigital supply current Default settings,
CLOAD = 10 pF
42 60 mA
ILVDS LVDS supply current Default settings with
LVDS on
13 16 mA
IPWRA
Standby
Analog standby supply current STDBY = VDD 0.2 3 mA
IPWRD
Standby
Clock Off
Digital standby supply current
with clock off
STDBY = VDD,
CLKIN = 0 MHz
0.1 10 mA
IPWRD
Standby
Clock On
Digital standby supply current
with clock on
STDBY= VDD,
CLKIN = 27 MHz
1 2 mA
Table 17. DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (VPWR = 3.3 V ±0.3 V; TA = Ambient = 25°C)
Symbol Definition Condition Min. Typ. Max. Unit
LVDS Driver DC Specifications
|VOD|Output differential voltage
RLOAD = 100
W + 1%
250 400 mV
|DVOD|Change in VOD between
complementary output states
50 mV
VOS Output offset voltage 1.0 1.2 1.4 V
DVOS Pixel array current 35 mV
IOS Digital supply current ±10 mA
IOZ Output current when driver is tri-state ±1mA
LVDS Receiver DC Specifications
VIDTH+ Input differential |VGPD| < 925mV –100 100 mV
Iin Input current ±20 mA
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Table 18. ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
Symbol Parameter Min. Max. Unit
VSUPPLY Power supply voltage
(all supplies)
–0.3 4.5 V
ISUPPLY Total power supply
current
200 mA
IGND Total ground current 200 mA
VIN DC input voltage –0.3 VDD + 0.3 V
VOUT DC output voltage –0.3 VDD + 0.3 V
TSTG1Storage temperature –50 +150 °C
Stresses exceeding those listed in the Maximum Ratings table may damage the device. If any of these limits are exceeded, device functionality
should not be assumed, damage may occur and reliability may be affected.
1. This is a stress rating only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in
the operational sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended
periods may affect reliability.
Table 19. AE ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
(VPWR = 3.3 V ±0.3 V; TJ= –30°C to +70°C; Output Load = 10 pF)
Symbol Definition Condition Min. Typ. Max. Unit
SYSCLK Input clock frequency Note 1 13.0 26.6 27.0 MHz
Clock duty cycle 45.0 50.0 55.0 %
tRInput clock rise time 3 5 ns
tFInput clock fall time 3 5 ns
tPLHPSYSCLK to PIXCLK propagation delay CLOAD = 10 pF 4 6 8 ns
tPD PIXCLK to valid DOUT(9:0) propagation delay CLOAD = 10 pF –3 0.6 3 ns
tSD Data setup time 14 16 ns
tHD Data hold time 14 16
tPFLR PIXCLK to LV propagation delay CLOAD = 10 pF 5 7 9 ns
tPFLF PIXCLK to FV propagation delay CLOAD = 10 pF 5 7 9 ns
Propagation Delays for PIXCLK and Data Out Signals
The pixel clock is inverted and delayed relative to the
master clock. The relative delay from the master clock
(SYSCLK) rising edge to both the pixel clock (PIXCLK)
falling edge and the data output transition is typically 7ns.
Note that the falling edge of the pixel clock occurs at
approximately the same time as the data output transitions.
See Table 19 for data setup and hold times.
Figure 37. Propagation Delays for PIXCLK and Data Out Signals
tPD
tR
tF
tPLHP
tHD
tSD
SYSCLK
PIXCLK
DOUT(9:0)
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Propagation Delays for FRAME_VALID and
LINE_VALID Signals
The LV and FV signals change on the same rising master
clock edge as the data output. The LV goes HIGH on the
same rising master clock edge as the output of the first valid
pixel’s data and returns LOW on the same master clock
rising edge as the end of the output of the last valid pixel’s
data.
As shown in the “Output Data Timing”, FV goes HIGH
143 pixel clocks before the first LV goes HIGH. It returns
LOW 23 pixel clocks after the last LV goes LOW.
Figure 38. Propagation Delays for FRAME_VALID and LINE_VALID Signals
PIXCLK
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
tPFLF
tPFLR
PIXCLK
FRAME_VALID
LINE_VALID
Two-Wire Serial Bus Timing
Detailed timing waveforms and parameters for the
two-wire serial interface bus are shown in Figure 39 and
Table 20.
Figure 39. Two-Wire Serial Bus Timing Parameters
SSr
tSU;STO
tSU;STA
tHD;STA tHIGH
tLOW tSU;DAT
tHD;DAT
tf
SDATA
SCLK
PS
tBUF
tr
tf
trtHD;STA
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Table 20. TWO-WIRE SERIAL BUS CHARACTERISTICS (fEXTCLK = 27 MHz; VPWR = 3.3 V +0.3 V; TA = 25°C)
Parameter Symbol
Standard-Mode Fast-Mode
Unit
Min Max Min Max
SCLK Clock Frequency fSCL 0 100 0 400 KHz
After this period, the first clock pulse is generated tHD;STA 4.0 0.6 μs
LOW period of the SCLK clock tLOW 4.7 1.3 μs
HIGH period of the SCLK clock tHIGH 4.0 0.6 μs
Setup time for a repeated START condition tSU;STA 4.7 0.6 μs
Data hold time: tHD;DAT 043.455060.95μs
Data setup time tSU;DAT 250 1006ns
Rise time of both SDATA and SCLK signals tr1000 20 +
0.1Cb7300 ns
Fall time of both SDATA and SCLK signals tf300 20 +
0.1Cb7300 ns
Setup time for STOP condition tSU;STO 4.0 0.6 μs
Bus free time between a STOP and START condition tBUF 4.7 1.3 μs
Capacitive load for each bus line Cb 400 400 pF
Serial interface input pin capacitance CIN_SI 3.3 3.3 pF
SDATA max load capacitance CLOAD_SD 30 30 pF
SDATA pullup resistor RSD 1.5 4.7 1.5 4.7 KΩ
1. This table is based on I2C standard (v2.1 January 2000). Philips Semiconductor.
2. Two-wire control is I2C-compatible.
3. All values referred to VIHmin = 0.9 VDD and VILmax = 0.1VDD levels. Sensor EXCLK = 27 MHz.
4. A device must internally provide a hold time of at least 300 ns for the SDATA signal to bridge the undefined region of the falling edge of SCLK.
5. The maximum tHD;DAT has only to be met if the device does not stretch the LOW period (tLOW) of the SCLK signal.
6. A Fast-mode I2C-bus device can be used in a Standard-mode I2C-bus system, but the requirement tSU;DAT 250 ns must then be met. This
will automatically be the case if the device does not stretch the LOW period of the SCLK signal. If such a device does stretch the LOW period
of the SCLK signal, it must output the next data bit to the SDATA line tr max + tSU;DAT = 1000 + 250 = 1250 ns (according to the Standard-mode
I2C-bus specification) before the SCLK line is released.
7. Cb = total capacitance of one bus line in pF.
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Minimum Master Clock Cycles
In addition to the AC timing requirements described in
Table 20, the two-wire serial bus operation also requires
certain minimum master clock cycles between transitions.
These are specified in Figures 40 through 45, in units of
master clock cycles.
Figure 40. Serial Host Interface Start Condition Timing
SCLK
4
S
DATA
4
Figure 41. Serial Host Interface Stop Condition Timing
SCLK
4
S
DATA
4
Note: All timing are in units of master clock cycle.
Figure 42. Serial Host Interface Data Timing for WRITE
SCLK
4
S
DATA
4
Note: SDATA is driven by an off-chip transmitter.
Figure 43. Serial Host Interface Data Timing for Read
SCLK
5
S
DATA
Note: SDATA is pulled LOW by the sensor, or allowed to be pulled HIGH by a pull-up resistor off-chip.
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Figure 44. Acknowledge Signal Timing After an 8-Bit WRITE to the Sensor
SCLK
Sensor pulls down
S
DATA pin
6
S
DATA
3
Figure 45. Acknowledge Signal Timing After an 8-Bit READ from the Sensor
SCLK
Sensor tristates SDATA pin
(turns off pull down)
7
S
DATA
6
Note: After a READ, the master receiver must pull down SDATA to acknowledge receipt of data bits. When read sequence is
complete, the master must generate a “No Acknowledge” by leaving SDATA to float HIGH. On the following cycle,
a start or stop bit may be used.
Figure 46. Typical Quantum Efficiency RGB Bayer
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Figure 47. Typical Quantum Efficiency Monochrome
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APPENDIX A – POWER-ON RESET AND STANDBY TIMING
There are no constraints concerning the order in which the
various power supplies are applied; however, the MT9V034
requires reset to operate properly at power-up. Refer to
Figure 48 for the power-up, reset, and standby sequences.
Figure 48. Power-up, Reset, Clock and Standby Sequence
SYSCLK
TwoWire Serial I/F
SCLK,SDATA
RESET_BAR
VDD,VDDLVDS,
V
AA,VAAPIX
DATA OUTPUT
STANDBY
MIN 10 SYSCLK cycles
PreStandby Standby
Wake
up Active
Driven = 0
LowPower nonLowPower
Does not
respond to
serial
interface
when
STANDBY = 1
DOUT[9:0]
Power
up
nonLowPower
MIN 20 SYSCLK cycles
MIN 10 SYSCLK cycles
Active Power
down
DOUT[9:0]
Note 3
MIN 10 SYSCLK cycles
1. All output signals are defined during initial power-up with RESET_BAR held LOW without SYSCLK being active. To properly
reset the rest of the sensor, during initial power-up, assert RESET_BAR (set to LOW state) for at least 750 ns after all power
supplies have stabilized and SYSCLK is active (being clocked). Driving RESET_BAR to LOW state does not put the part in
a low power state.
2. Before using two-wire serial interface, wait for 10 SYSCLK rising edges after RESET_BAR is de-asserted.
3. Once the sensor detects that STANDBY has been asserted, it completes the current frame readout before entering standby
mode. The user must supply enough SYSCLKs to allow a complete frame readout. See Table 4, “Frame Time,” for more
information.
4. In standby, all video data and synchronization output signals are driven to a low state.
5. In standby, the two-wire serial interface is not active.
Notes:
APPENDIX B: ELECTRICAL IDENTIFICATION OF CFA TYPE
In order to identify the CFA type (RGB Bayer, Monochrome) that
a specific MT9V034 has been, the following table may be used.
Table 21. ELECTRICAL IDENTIFICATION OF CFA
CFA R0x6B[11:9] R0x6B[8:0]
RGB 6 4
Mono 0 4
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Seating
plane
4.4
11.43
5.215 5.715
Lid material: borosilicate glass 0.55 thickness
Wall material: alumina ceramic
Substrate material: alumina ceramic 0.7 thickness
8.8
4.4 5.715
4.84
5.215
0.8
TYP 1.75
0.8 TYP
8.8
48 1
10.9 ±0.1
CTR
47X
1.0 ±0.2
48X R 0.15
48X
0.40 ±0.05
11.43
10.9 ±0.1
CTR
Lead finish:
Au plating, 0.50 microns
minimum thickness
over Ni plating, 1.27 microns
minimum thickness
2.3 ±0.2
1.7
Note: 1. Optical center = package center.
First
clear
pixel
Optical
center1
C
A
B
Optical
area
Optical area:
Maximum rotation of optical area relative to package edges: 1º
Maximum tilt of optical area relative to
seating plane A : 50 microns
Maximum tilt of optical area relative to
top of cover glass D : 100 microns
A
D
0.90
for reference only
1.400 ±0.125
0.35
for reference only
V CTR
0.20 A B C
H CTR
Image
sensor die:
0.675 thickness
0.10 A
0.05
0.24X
CLCC48 11.43 x 11.43
CASE 848AN
0.20 A B C
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