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InVisage Technologies

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American semiconductor company
This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(October 2023)
InVisage Technologies
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustrySemiconductors
FoundedOctober 2006; 18 years ago (2006-10)
FounderTed Sargent
HeadquartersMenlo Park,California
Key people
Jess Lee, CEO
ParentApple Inc.
Websiteinvisage.com

InVisage Technologies is afablesssemiconductor company known for producing a technology called QuantumFilm, an image sensor technology that improves the quality of digital photographs taken with a cell phone camera. The company is based inMenlo Park, CA.

History

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InVisage Technologies was founded by the company's current CTO Ted Sargent, a professor from theUniversity of Toronto.[1] While developing transmitters and receivers in his lab at U of T, he discovered an especially sensitive receiver, which formed the basis of InVisage's QuantumFilm technology.[2] Sargent then secured the rights to the technology and founded InVisage in October 2006.[3] The company applied this technology toward mobile phone cameras.[4] In 2007, Jess Lee, a former vice president from OmniVision Technologies, joined InVisage as the company's CEO.[5] Syrus Madavi serves as the company's chairman of the board of directors, having joined InVisage in 2012.[6]

In February 2013, it was announced that the company had received $20 million in a Series D funding round led byGGV Capital that included Nokia Growth Partners as a new investor, with the company expecting to begin shipping devices with their sensors in the second quarter of 2014.[7]

On November 9, 2017,Apple, Inc. acquired InVisage Technologies.[8]

QuantumFilm Technology

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QuantumFilm Technology involves the creation of a film to coat the image sensors used in a cellphone camera, allowing it to capture more light, improving the quality of the images taken.[9][10] A typical camera phone pixel sensor is made up of several layers, with a layer of colored plastic or glass acting as a color filter sitting on top of several layers of metal connecting silicon electronic transistors together, which is itself on top of a base layer ofsilicon used by the sensor's electronic transistors and photodetectors. The light coming to the sensor has to pass through the layers of metal before reaching the silicon, a weak light absorber, so the sensor detects only about 25 percent of the light that makes up the image.[11] QuantumFilm places a layer of semiconducting crystals - calledquantum dots - on top of the chip, which allows the chip to absorb more light, place more pixels in a smaller space, and create sharper images.[12]

Using quantum dots is more efficient at capturing light than traditional silicon-based image sensor chips (capturing 90-95% of the light that hits it), giving the sensors higher sensitivity in low light as well as higher resolution.[3][13] And while traditional image sensors read an image from top to bottom (which can create a blurred image when the subject is moving), quantum dots detect the entire image at the same moment, reducing the chance for distortion.[14]

Invisage holds patents related to the development of QuantumFilm technology, as well as its applications towardoptoelectronic devices.[15]

Awards

[edit]

In 2010, InVisage's QuantumFilm technology was awardedThe Wall Street Journal Technology Innovation Award.[16] In 2011, the company received a gold award from theInternational Imaging Industry Association's (I3A) VISION 2020 Imaging Innovation for its QuantumFilm technology.[17]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Prof. Ted Sargent | Sargent Group". Light.utoronto.ca. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  2. ^"EEWeb Pulse - Issue 71 by EEWeb". ISSUU. 5 November 2012. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  3. ^ab"DEMO: InVisage's QuantumFilm enables gorgeous camera phone pictures". VentureBeat. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  4. ^SPIE Europe Ltd."Timer set for silicon sensor switchover". Optics.org. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  5. ^Jess Lee."Jess Lee: Executive Profile & Biography - Businessweek". Investing.businessweek.com. Retrieved2013-11-26.[dead link]
  6. ^Syrus P. Madavi."Syrus Madavi: Executive Profile & Biography - Businessweek". Investing.businessweek.com. Archived fromthe original on March 14, 2014. Retrieved2013-11-26.
  7. ^"Smartphone imaging startup InVisage gets over $20M - Silicon Valley Business Journal". Bizjournals.com. 2013-02-14. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  8. ^"TechCrunch". 9 November 2017.
  9. ^Vance, Ashlee (March 22, 2010)."Company Sees Leap for Cellphone Cameras".The New York Times. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  10. ^"Demo tech conference: What to watch for". Content.usatoday.com. 2010-03-22. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  11. ^Greenemeier, Larry (2013-11-14)."Light Improvement: Could Quantum Dots Boost the Quality of Cell Phone Pix?". Scientific American. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  12. ^"Camera-phones: Dotty but dashing". The Economist. 2010-04-08. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  13. ^Shankland, Stephen (2010-03-21)."InVisage aims to remake camera sensor market | Deep Tech - CNET News". News.cnet.com. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  14. ^"InVisage's Revolutionary QuantumShutter Image Sensor". Azosensors.com. 2010-09-30. Archived fromthe original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  15. ^"InVisage Technologies, Inc. - Patent applications". Faqs.org. Retrieved2013-11-26.
  16. ^"InVisage's QuantumFilm Image Sensor Wins Prestigious Wall Street Journal Award". Azosensors.com. 2010-10-01. Archived fromthe original on 2018-08-23. Retrieved2013-11-18.
  17. ^"InVisage Receives Gold Award for QuantumFilm Technology". Azonano.com. 2011-06-24. Retrieved2013-11-18.

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