Yoshiaki Hagiwara (July 4, 1948[1] – ) is a Japanese scientist, engineer, and inventor who spent his career at Sony developing image sensors and related technologies.
Hagiwara was elected Fellow of the IEEE in 2001, "For pioneering work on, and development of, solid-state imagers", for, among other things, his 1975 invention of a photodiode that was later branded by Sony the "hole accumulation device" (HAD), and which Sony and he claim as the origin of the pinned photodiode.[2][3]
Under his birth name Yoshiaki Tsuneo Daimon, he earned his BS degree in electrical engineering and physics at the California Institute of Technology in 1971,[4] followed by is MS degree in 1972 and Ph.D. in 1975 at the same place,[1] under the guidance of his advisor Carver Mead. He changed his name to Hagiwara on getting married in 1974.
The first mass-produced consumer CCD video camera, the CCD-G5, was released by Sony in 1983, based on a prototype developed by Hagiwara in 1981.[5]
See also
References
- 1 2 Mead, Carver A.; Richard D. Pashley; Lee D. Britton; Yoshiaki T. Daimon; S. F. Sando (October 1976). "128-bit Multicomparator" (PDF). IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits. 11 (5): 692–695. Bibcode:1976IJSSC..11..692M. doi:10.1109/JSSC.1976.1050799. S2CID 27262034.
- ↑ Sony Corporation. "Pinned Photodiode Adopted for Back-Illuminated CMOS Image Sensors". Retrieved 7 March 2022.
- ↑ Hagiwara, Yoshiaki (December 2021). "Invention and Historical Development Efforts of Pinned Buried Photodiode". 2021 International Conference on Electrical, Computer and Energy Technologies (ICECET). pp. 1–6. doi:10.1109/ICECET52533.2021.9698439. ISBN 978-1-6654-4231-2. S2CID 246751831. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
- ↑ The Big T (PDF). California Institute of Technology. 1971. p. 94.
- ↑ Hagiwara, Yoshiaki (2001). "Microelectronics for Home Entertainment". In Oklobdzija, Vojin G. (ed.). The Computer Engineering Handbook. CRC Press. pp. 41–6. ISBN 978-0-8493-0885-7.