HOME CONTACT US SITEMAP
OPTRONICS 2012

HOME > COMMUNITY > Industry Trends
Subject [EXPO 2013 PREVIEW] Osram unveils a powerful energy-saving smartphone sensor
Name Administrator Date 2013.05.20 Click 770


The digital SFH 7776 sensor contains an infrared LED (IRED) and two detectors and performs two different functions. It registers the ambient brightness in order to control the display backlighting so that it can always be easily read but consumes as little power as possible. It also deactivates the touch function on the display as soon as you hold the phone up to your ear during a phone call. To do this the sensor emits infrared light that is reflected by approaching objects, such as your ear.


With a working range of up to 16 centimeters and its small size, the SFH 7776 has been designed specifically for use in smartphones and other mobile devices. Thanks to the excellent sensitivity of the detector the component does not need lenses to bundle the emitted infrared light. As a result, it has an impressively small height of only 1.35 millimeters. With its black casing the sensor is virtually invisible even behind transparent phone covers. Its low power consumption is also an important factor in terms of its suitability for mobile devices – in standby mode it only needs 0.8 mA.


Behind dark covers


The SFH 7776 is extremely sensitive to ambient light. With a detection limit of 0.002 lux (lx) it can even be used behind dark casing panels. Designers can place the sensor anywhere and do not need a special translucent window. "The SFH 777x series gives our customers a complete family of multifunctional sensors for an extremely wide range of phone covers", said Dirk Sossenheimer, responsible for intelligent sensor applications at Osram Opto Semiconductors. What`s more, the SFH 7776 is designed so that the ambient light sensor doesn´t react to short-term fluctuations in the brightness of various lamp types, caused for example by changes in the power supply frequency. This ensures that the display backlighting remains constant.


No crosstalk with the proximity sensor


Crosstalk – an effect in which the emitted infrared light is reflected by the smartphone casing directly onto the receiver – is eliminated by the SFH 7776 in the component itself. Designers no longer need to provide separate optical barriers between the IRED and the detector, which makes it much easier to create robust, uncomplicated solutions for different setups.


Since the SFH 7776 covers the complete working range from 0 to 16 mm it would even react to direct contact ("zero distance detection"). The touch function of the display is therefore reliably deactivated even in marginal situations. "Overall, the SFH 7776 overcomes various challenges in terms of proximity and ambient light detection in the component itself, so designers can integrate the product in smartphones relatively easily", added Dirk Sossenheimer.







Global News Network `AVING`

by Lee Gerald (www.aving.net)

Comedd showcase Color filter lesl full-color OLED microdisplays at SID-2013
Cree announces new color LEDs in XP 3.45×3.45-mm package