The Surprising Benefits of Hysteresis in Unlimited Sampling: Theory, Algorithms and Experiments
Dorian Florescu, Felix Krahmer, Ayush Bhandari

TL;DR
This paper introduces a generalized model for the Unlimited Sensing Framework that incorporates hysteresis and transient effects, demonstrating that hysteresis can improve signal recovery and enabling more flexible hardware implementations through combined theoretical and experimental validation.
Contribution
It presents the first recovery guarantees for a generalized USF model including hysteresis and transients, and demonstrates hardware experiments validating the approach.
Findings
Hysteresis has a beneficial effect on HDR signal recovery.
The proposed method relaxes hardware calibration requirements.
Hardware experiments confirm theoretical guarantees.
Abstract
The Unlimited Sensing Framework (USF) was recently introduced to overcome the sensor saturation bottleneck in conventional digital acquisition systems. At its core, the USF allows for high-dynamic-range (HDR) signal reconstruction by converting a continuous-time signal into folded, low-dynamic-range (LDR), modulo samples. HDR reconstruction is then carried out by algorithmic unfolding of the folded samples. In hardware, however, implementing an ideal modulo folding requires careful calibration, analog design and high precision. At the interface of theory and practice, this paper explores a computational sampling strategy that relaxes strict hardware requirements by compensating them via a novel, mathematically guaranteed recovery method. Our starting point is a generalized model for USF. The generalization relies on two new parameters modeling hysteresis and folding transients} in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors · Sensor Technology and Measurement Systems · Analog and Mixed-Signal Circuit Design
