2-to-1 and 4-to-1 MUX mode
2-to-1 and 4-to-1 MUX (Multiplexer) modes refer to the way multiple pixel outputs are combined and routed through fewer readout channels to trade off between data throughput, frame rate, and resolution.
What a MUX Does
A multiplexer selects one signal from multiple inputs and sends it to a single output path. In CIS, each “input” is a pixel column’s signal, and the “output” is a readout amplifier/ADC channel.
2-to-1 MUX Mode
- Operation:
- Two pixel columns share one readout channel.
- The sensor reads them sequentially within the same clock cycle group.
- Effect:
- Cuts the number of simultaneous readout channels in half.
- Reduces output data rate requirement (bandwidth).
- Can reduce power consumption.
- Frame rate is usually halved compared to full parallel readout.
- Use Case:
- When system interface bandwidth is limited.
- Lower frame rate or lower power applications.
4-to-1 MUX Mode
- Operation:
- Four pixel columns share one readout channel.
- The readout circuitry cycles through each of the four columns in turn.
- Effect:
- Reduces output data lanes to ¼ of full parallel readout.
- Significantly lowers required output bandwidth.
- Frame rate drops to about ¼ of maximum (unless ROI/windowing is applied).
- Use Case:
- Power-sensitive imaging.
- Applications where full frame rate is not required but the same resolution is needed.
- Simplifying downstream electronics.
Visualizing It
Imagine 8 pixel columns:
- Normal mode: 8 columns → 8 ADCs → 8 output lanes.
- 2-to-1 mode: 8 columns → 4 ADCs → 4 output lanes (each ADC serves 2 columns).
- 4-to-1 mode: 8 columns → 2 ADCs → 2 output lanes (each ADC serves 4 columns).
Advantages of MUX Modes
- Lower Interface Bandwidth: Smaller number of high-speed lanes.
- Lower Power Consumption: Fewer ADCs active at once.
- Flexibility: Can switch between high-speed/high-power and low-speed/low-power modes.
Trade-offs
- Lower frame rate unless combined with ROI or pixel binning.
- Possible slight increase in read noise if sharing analog circuits.
