• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Technologies.org

Technology Trends: Follow the Money

  • Technology Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Technology Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

Samsung Breaks New Ground with Mass Production of Industry’s Smallest 0.64μm-pixel Mobile Image Sensor

June 9, 2021 By admin Leave a Comment

Samsung’s most versatile image sensor offers 50Mp options for both front and rear-facing cameras

Combined pixel technology advancements reduce chip size while enhancing light sensitivity and phase detection capabilities

SEOUL, South Korea – Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., a world leader in advanced semiconductor technology, today introduced the industry’s first 0.64-micrometer (μm)-pixel image sensor, the 50-megapixel (Mp) Samsung ISOCELL JN1. Equipped with the latest pixel technologies such as enhanced ISOCELL 2.0, Smart-ISO and Double Super PDAF, the JN1 can capture more vivid images on the industry’s smallest 50Mp mobile sensor.

“Samsung’s advanced pixel technologies have once again pushed boundaries with the utmost precision to develop an image sensor with the industry’s smallest pixel size, yet with powerful performance. The new ISOCELL JN1 at 0.64μm will be able to equip tomorrow’s sleekest smartphones with ultra-high resolution mobile photographs,” said Duckhyun Chang, executive vice president of the sensor business at Samsung Electronics. “As we drive our commitment to innovation in pixel technologies, we will continue to bring a wide range of mobile image sensor offerings to the market.”

A new addition to Samsung’s high-resolution image sensor lineup, the JN1 employs ISOCELL 2.0 technology with added enhancements that improve light sensitivity by around 16-percent. For low-light environments, the sensor utilizes Samsung’s four-to-one pixel binning technology, Tetrapixel, which merges four adjacent 0.64μm-pixels into one big 1.28μm-pixel to quadruple light sensitivity for brighter 12.5Mp photographs.

With such advanced technologies all embedded in a small 1/2.76-inch optical format, the ISOCELL JN1 is the most versatile image sensor yet from Samsung. Through close collaboration with ecosystem partners, the JN1 is compatible with existing 1/2.8-inch products, allowing the sensor to be used for front-facing, ultra-wide or telephoto cameras, in addition to standard wide camera options. This means that users can take highly detailed selfies or group pictures in an amazing 50Mp resolution, as well as high-resolution video at up to 4K and high-zoom ratios. The smaller sensor can also reduce the height of the camera module by around 10-percent, minimizing the camera bulge for slimmer and more streamlined designs in next-generation smartphones.

For enhanced dynamic range, the ISOCELL JN1 comes with Smart-ISO, a technology that changes the conversion gain based on the environment’s illumination level. Smart-ISO uses Low ISO mode in bright settings to retain detail in the highlights, and High ISO in low-lit environments to reduce readout noise and generate excellent low-light performance. Using Smart-ISO, the JN1 also offers inter-scene HDR in mixed-light settings for optimum exposure levels derived from two separate readouts, from Low and High ISOs, that are merged to create a final image.

For faster auto-focus, the ISOCELL JN1 integrates improved Double Super PD. The previous Super PD technology used specially designed oval-shaped micro-lenses over two adjacent pixels arranged side by side to detect phases. Double Super PD features twice the density of pixels (1/16) used for phase detection than Super PD (1/32), enabling the same auto-focus performance even in environments with about 60-percent less illumination levels. For smooth crystal-clear videos, the image sensor supports up to 4K resolution video recording at 60 frames-per-second (fps) or full HD at 240fps.

The Samsung ISOCELL JN1 is currently in mass production.

* Editor’s Note: Actual performance may vary depending on device and user environment.

* Samsung first announced its ISOCELL technology in 2013, which reduces color crosstalk between pixels by placing a physical barrier, allowing small-sized pixels to achieve higher color fidelity. Based on this technology, Samsung introduced the industry’s first 1.0um-pixel image sensor in 2015 and a 0.9-pixel sensor in 2017. Samsung continues to enhance its pixel isolation methods with ISOCELL Plus and the ISOCELL 2.0 technologies.

About Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
Samsung inspires the world and shapes the future with transformative ideas and technologies. The company is redefining the worlds of TVs, smartphones, wearable devices, tablets, digital appliances, network systems, and memory, system LSI, foundry and LED solutions. For the latest news, please visit the Samsung Newsroom at http://news.samsung.com.

Filed Under: Tech

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • From Desk to Flight: High-Value 3D Printing Ideas for a Home Premise
  • Positron AI Raises $230M Series B, Redefines the Economics of AI Inference
  • What You Can Build in Loveable, and Why It Feels Different
  • Forrester Sees Global Tech Spending Hitting $5.6 Trillion in 2026 as AI Drives Growth Despite Tariffs
  • Chiplets Explained: How Modern Chips Are Really Built
  • January 31, 2026 — Tech & Markets Day Digest
  • DealHub Raises $100M to Redefine Enterprise Quote-to-Revenue
  • Preply Reaches $1.2B Valuation After $150M Series D to Scale Human-Led, AI-Enhanced Language Learning
  • Datarails Raises $70M Series C to Turn the CFO’s Office into an AI-Native Nerve Center
  • Emergent Raises $70M Series B as AI Turns Software Creation Into an Entrepreneurial Commodity

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Cybersecurity Market
Accrual Launches With $75M to Push AI-Native Automation Into Core Accounting Workflows
Europe’s Digital Sovereignty Moment, or How Regulation Became a Competitive Handicap
Palantir Q4 2025: From Earnings Beat to Model Re-Rating
Baseten Raises $300M to Dominate the Inference Layer of AI, Valued at $5B
Nvidia’s China Problem Is Self-Inflicted, and Washington Should Stop Pretending Otherwise
USPS and the Theater of Control: How Government Freezes Failure in Place
Skild AI Funding Round Signals a Shift Toward Platform Economics in Robotics
Saks Sucks: Luxury Retail’s Debt-Fueled Mirage Collapses
Alpaca’s $1.15B Valuation Signals a Maturity Moment for Global Brokerage Infrastructure
The Immersive Experience in the Museum World
CyberCube Appoints Chris Methven as CEO, Signaling Next Phase of Growth
Modveon Raises $10M to Build a Verified Operating System for Governments and Citizens
Modirum Platforms Joins Digital Defence Ecosystem Finland to Expand Europe’s Secure Digital Defence Capabilities
Salt Typhoon Reaches Scandinavia: When Telecom Espionage Goes Public in Norway
SentinelOne Expands AI Security to the First Mile, Redefining How Enterprises Protect AI Systems
NETSCOUT SYSTEMS Q3 FY2026: Quiet Acceleration, Better Mix, and a Cautious Turn Toward Growth
India’s Cyber Delegation Arrives in Tel Aviv for CyberTech 2026
Andersen Consulting Expands Cybersecurity and Legal Tech Capabilities in Strategic HaystackID Partnership
Lionsgate Network to Present AI-Powered Crypto Fraud Solutions at CyberTech Tel Aviv 2026
Cybertech 2026, January 26–28, Tel Aviv Expo

Media Partners

  • Market Research Media
  • Technology Conferences
When the Market Wants a Story, Not Numbers: Rethinking AMD’s Q4 Selloff
BBC and the Gaza War: How Disproportionate Attention Reshapes Reality
Parallel Museums: Why the Future of Art Might Be Copies, Not Originals
ClickHouse Series D, The $400M Bet That Data Infrastructure, Not Models, Will Decide the AI Era
AI Productivity Paradox: When Speed Eats Its Own Gain
Voice AI as Infrastructure: How Deepgram Signals a New Media Market Segment
Spangle AI and the Agentic Commerce Stack: When Discovery and Conversion Converge Into One Layer
PlayStation and the Quiet Power Center of a $200 Billion Gaming Industry
Adobe FY2025: AI Pulls the Levers, Cash Flow Leads the Story
Canva’s 2026 Creative Shift and the Rise of Imperfect-by-Design
Chiplet Summit 2026, February 17–19, Santa Clara Convention Center, Santa Clara, California
MIT Sloan CIO Symposium Innovation Showcase 2026, May 19, 2026, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Humanoid Robot Forum 2026, June 22–25, Chicago
Supercomputing Asia 2026, January 26–29, Osaka International Convention Center, Japan
Chiplet Summit 2026, February 17–19, Santa Clara Convention Center, Santa Clara, California
HumanX, 22–24 September 2026, Amsterdam
CES 2026, January 7–10, Las Vegas
Humanoids Summit Tokyo 2026, May 28–29, 2026, Takanawa Convention Center
Japan Pavilion at CES 2026, January 6–9, Las Vegas
KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Europe 2026, 23–26 March, Amsterdam

Copyright © 2022 Technologies.org

Media Partners: Market Analysis & Market Research and Exclusive Domains, Photography