antiblooming
Antiblooming refers to techniques used in light-sensing devices such as charge-coupled device (CCD) and complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) image sensors to prevent blooming, the unwanted spreading of charge from a saturated pixel into neighboring pixels when capturing very bright light. The goal is to preserve image quality in high-contrast scenes by limiting charge spillover.
In CCDs, anti-blooming gates (ABG) and drain structures divert excess charge away from the photosensitive node
Antiblooming has been important in astronomy and high-contrast imaging, where bright stars can saturate detectors, as
Limitations and trade-offs include potential reductions in effective full-well capacity or dynamic range near saturation, added
Related topics include blooming, full-well capacity, CCD sensors, and CMOS sensors.