Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1784301 Infrared Physics & Technology 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We present a digital hardware architecture for real-time NUC in IR embedded imagers.•We designed and implemented a prototype in a field-programmable gate array (FPGA).•We designed and simulated a custom integrated circuit version of the architecture.•We present experimental results from the FPGA prototype.

We present a digital fixed-point architecture that performs real-time nonuniformity correction in infrared (IR) focal plane arrays using the Constant Range algorithm. The circuit estimates and compensates online the gains and offsets of a first-order nonuniformity model using pixel statistics from the video stream. We demonstrate our architecture with a prototype built on a Xilinx Spartan-6 XC6SLX45T field-programmable gate array (FPGA), which can process an IR video stream from a FLIR Tau 2 long-wave IR camera with a resolution of 640×480640×480 14-bit pixels at up to 238 frames per second (fps) with low resource utilization and adds only 13 mW to the FPGA power. Post-layout simulations of a custom integrated circuit implementation of the architecture on a 32 nm CMOS process show that the circuit can operate at up to 900 fps at the same resolution, and consume less than 4.5 mW.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
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