• 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 Introduces Its First ISOCELL Image Sensor Tailored for Automotive Applications

July 13, 2021 By admin Leave a Comment

ISOCELL Auto 4AC is a viewing camera sensor for surround view monitors or rear-view cameras in HD resolution

The sensor’s CornerPixel™ solution allows enhanced field of view for safer driving

SEOUL, Korea – Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., a world leader in advanced semiconductor technology, today introduced ISOCELL Auto 4AC, an automotive image sensor that offers advanced 120-decibel (dB) high dynamic range (HDR) and LED flicker mitigation (LFM) especially for surround-view monitors (SVM) or rear-view cameras (RVC) in high-definition resolution (1280 x 960). The new sensor is Samsung’s first imaging solution optimized for automotive applications.

“The new ISOCELL Auto 4AC combines Samsung’s innovative and market-proven image sensor technologies with a unique CornerPixel™ solution for advanced HDR and LFM capabilities, offering exceptional viewing experiences regardless of lighting conditions,” said Duckhyun Chang, executive vice president of sensor business at Samsung Electronics. “Starting with the ISOCELL Auto 4AC, we plan to expand our automotive sensor lineup to areas such as camera monitor systems (CMS), autonomous driving and in-cabin monitoring.”

Various lighting situations on the road may pose obstacles to the driver. Quick transitions from a low-lit environment to a brighter one, such as exiting a tunnel, may require a few seconds for the driver’s eyes to adjust. Also, flickering from LED headlamps or road signage, such as street lamps and traffic lights, could become increasingly noticeable on the automotive system’s camera screen.

The ISOCELL Auto 4AC offers a safer driving experience with an enhanced field of view for the driver with its CornerPixel™ technology. The technology features a specialized pixel structure that mitigates LED light over 90-hertz (Hz). Within a single pixel area, it embeds two photodiodes, one 3.0µm pixel for viewing low light images, and a 1.0µm pixel placed at the corner of the big pixel for brighter environments. With two photodiodes capturing images in different exposures simultaneously, the sensor offers up to 120dB HDR with minimal motion blur, allowing smoother transitions between dark and bright areas while preserving more details of the road ahead.

To minimize LED flickering, the smaller photodiode’s exposure time can be extended, preventing pulsing LED light from being displayed as flickering on the camera screen. This delivers a more pleasant viewing experience for the driver and more accurate image data on LED-embedded objects for the automotive system to recognize.

The Samsung ISOCELL Auto 4AC comes in a 1/3.7-inch optical format with 1.2 million 3.0-micrometer (µm) pixels, and for streamlined client system installations, an image signal processor (ISP) is embedded within the sensor.

The 4AC meets stringent AEC-Q100 Grade 2 qualifications, including a -40°C to 125°C operating temperature range, and is currently in mass production.

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.

* 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.

Filed Under: Tech Tagged With: Samsung, automotive, image sensor

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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

Footer

Recent Posts

  • Apple After WWDC 2026: 35% of iPhone Volume Can’t Run Siri AI Yet
  • The Semiconductor Rotation Myth: There Is No Rotation Out of Semi Stocks, Only Profit-Taking
  • The AI Selloff Repriced Valuation, Not Demand
  • Apple’s Next-Generation Apple Intelligence Is Built on Google’s Gemini Models
  • Itera Emerges From Stealth With Fluid Circuit Board That Rewires in Under a Minute
  • Quantum Computing Stocks Are Down. They Are Not at the Bottom.
  • The Humanoid Trap: Form Factor as Distraction in Industrial Robotics
  • Hark Raises $700M Series A at $6B: The Vertical Integration Bet on Personal AI
  • Apple Brings Apple Intelligence to Accessibility, Adds Wheelchair Eye Control for Vision Pro
  • RADAR Raises $170M to Bring Real-Time Inventory Intelligence to Physical Retail

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Cybersecurity Market
  • App Coding
SpaceX IPO (SPCX): A $1.75 Trillion Valuation Built on Selling 4% of the Company to People Who Watch Rocket Launches
What a Trillion-Dollar Cloudflare Actually Requires
The Repricing and the Drain: How SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic Rewire the Index
Quantum Computing Equities: Market Segment Memo
Quantum Computing Stocks Face Violent Selloff the Moment Markets Reopen Tuesday
The $2.6 Trillion Signal: What Gartner’s AI Spending Forecast Actually Tells You
The Productivity Is Already Here. The Bubble Narrative Is Not.
The Collingridge Dilemma
Why Memory Prices Won’t Come Down
The Bill Comes Due
Fable 5’s Export Ban: When AI Vulnerability Discovery Became a National Security Cyber Weapon
Global Scam Losses Near Half a Billion, One in Seven Consumers Hit in 2025
Google’s $32 Billion Wiz Bet Meets the OT Grid: Hitachi Becomes Its Critical-Infrastructure Channel
Cybersecurity Stocks Fall Friday as Nasdaq’s 4.2% Tech Rout Sweeps Up CrowdStrike and Palo Alto
IdentityTheft.org Sells for $30,000 on Sedo
Infosecurity Europe 2026, June 2–4, London
Ocean Launches From Stealth With $28 Million to Reinvent Email Security Using AI Agents
Salt Typhoon, Volt Typhoon, Flax Typhoon: China’s 2024 Campaign Against U.S. Infrastructure
Foreign Criminal Cyberattacks Against the United States: Ransomware, Botnets, and Financial Fraud
Iran’s Cyber Operations: Infrastructure Attacks, Election Interference, and IRGC Proxies
DigitalOcean Launches AI-Native Cloud at Deploy 2026
Verdent Updates AI Platform to Function as a Full Engineering Team for Solo Builders
The Side Project App Is Not Dead. The Side Project App Business Is.
The App Monetization Landscape Has Changed and Most Teams Have Not Caught Up
Building Offline-First Mobile Apps Is Harder Than It Looks and Worth It
State Management in React Native Has Too Many Options and One Right Answer
Mobile Accessibility Is the Case Developers Keep Ignoring
Testing Mobile Apps at Scale Without Losing Your Mind
App Store Optimization in 2026 Is a Different Game Than It Was
Cross-Platform vs Native: The Honest Assessment Nobody Gives You

Media Partners

  • Market Research Media
  • Technology Conferences
  • API Coding
Tuesday Open: AI Earnings Engine Holds the Line as Iran Overhang Fades to Noise
China’s U.S. Treasury Holdings: The Great Repositioning (2021–2025)
Infographic: Why the 2025 CIPA Data Proves the APS-C Renaissance is Real
How WiFi Changed Media
Canva Acquires Simtheory and Ortto to Build End-to-End Work Platform
Netflix Price Hikes, The Economics of Dominance in a Saturated Streaming Market
America’s Brands Keep Winning Even as America Itself Slips
Kioxia’s Storage Gambit: Flash Steps Into the AI Memory Hierarchy
Mamdani Strangling New York
The Rise of Faceless Creators: Picsart Launches Persona and Storyline for AI Character-Driven Content
Cloudflare Connect San Francisco, October 19–22, Moscone West
WWDC 2026 Keynote, June 8, 2026, Apple Park, Cupertino
Baird 2026 Global Consumer, Technology & Services Conference, June 2–4, New York
D.A. Davidson Technology Conference, June 11, 2026, Nashville
Bank of America Global Technology Conference, June 4, 2026, San Francisco
William Blair Growth Stock Conference, June 3, 2026, Chicago
TD Cowen Technology, Media & Telecom Conference, May 27, 2026, New York
J.P. Morgan Global Technology, Media and Communications Conference, May 18–20, 2026, Boston
Technology Investor Conference Circuit, May–June 2026
Automate 2026 Sets Its Agenda Around AI’s Role in Industrial Transformation, June 22–25, 2026, McCormick Place in Chicago
Why Private Domain Data Is the Real Key to AI That Actually Works
Orkes Raises $60M to Bring Production-Grade AI Orchestration to Enterprise Developers
Form.io Launches MCP Server and Agentic Coding Toolset for Governed Enterprise AI Development
Appdome Upgrades MobileBOT Defense With Identity-First Mobile API Protection
Five SDK Generators Compared: Speakeasy, Stainless, Fern, APIMatic, and OpenAPI Generator
API Monetization Models That Work and the Ones That Drive Developers Away
gRPC in Production: What the Documentation Doesn't Tell You
Event-Driven Architecture vs Request-Response: Choosing the Right Communication Pattern
The Business Case for Internal APIs That Most Engineering Leaders Ignore
Breaking Changes: How to Avoid Shipping Them and What to Do When You Must

Copyright © 2026 Technologies.org

Media Partners: Market Analysis · Market Research · Referently · Photography