Skip to main content

Toshiba upgrades solid-state Lidar

Toshiba's Lidar operates in a variety of lighting and weather conditions to 200m
By Ben Spencer July 6, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Toshiba says its Lidar can monitor snow cover or objects in the road (© Oskari Porkka | Dreamstime.com)

Toshiba has upgraded its solid-state Lidar which it says maintains a maximum detection range of 200m and will advance progress in autonomous driving. 

The company is expanding the application to monitor transportation infrastructure, in such areas as early detection of road subsidence or landslides, snow cover or falls of objects onto roads.

Akihide Sai, senior research scientist at Toshiba’s corporate research & development centre, says: “We have secured technologies essential for a compact, high-resolution, long-range solid-state Lidar that is robust and simple to install."

"We anticipate demand for such a versatile technology in both the autonomous driving and transportation infrastructure monitoring markets.”

Current monitoring of transportation infrastructure relies on cameras, but Toshiba points out their performance is degraded by low light and bad weather.

The new Lidar is expected to realise clear, long-distance, robust 3D scanning and object detection in a variety of lighting and weather conditions. 

Toshiba achieved a compact Lidar through upgrades to its silicon photo-multiplier (SiPM), a light-receiving chip that consists of light-receiving cells controlled by transistors. 

The new chip has a smaller transistor module, and eliminates the buffer layer that protected the transistors with newly developed insulating trenches between the transistors and the light-receiving cells, the firm adds. 

The potential issue of low light-sensitivity from using smaller transistors was solved with the addition of a high-withstand voltage section to raise the voltage input to the light-receiving cell. 

According to Toshiba, these innovations have reduced the size of the SiPM by 75% while enhancing its light sensitivity by 50% against the July 2020 previous model.

More SiPM can now be arrayed in the same package, which the company insists boosts resolution to 1,200 x 80 pixels, a four-times improvement.

Toshiba is to continue to support safer transportation by promoting its LiDAR technologies for autonomous driving and transportation infrastructure monitoring. Continued R&D is expected to further advance the Lidar’s detection range and image resolution. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Moscow planning improvements to city’s ITS system
    March 17, 2016
    Buoyed by the success of its recent ITS introductions, the authorities in Moscow are planning additions to the system as Eugene Gerden discovered. The government of Russia’s capital, Moscow, plans further improvement to the city’s transport systems, partly through the introduction of new ITS technologies and the modernisation of existing systems. At the beginning of 2015 the Moscow government completed the introduction of a new ITS infrastructure in the city, which, according to Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin
  • Smart technology keeps infrastructure operating safely
    August 30, 2013
    US Departments of Transportation (DOTs) are using smart technology to warn civil engineers when something is wrong with the infrastructure, says the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Association (AASHTO). Sensors installed on bridges, in roadways, and on maintenance vehicles are communicating real-time performance and weather data, allowing engineers to solve problems before they occur. "Most people look at a road or a bridge and never realise the technology that today's modern tra
  • Itron announces winners of inaugural smart city challenge
    June 20, 2019
    Itron has chosen Instrumentation Technologies (I-Tech) and Noesis.Network as winners of its inaugural smart city challenge. The companies won the awards for designing Internet of Things (IoT) solutions for London and Glasgow, after developing solutions using Itron’s developer tools and IoT networks in both UK cities. In London, I-Tech designed a two-step solution to improve safety around the River Thames by allowing the city to monitor lifebelts and pinpoint the locations of a person in need of rescue su
  • IEEE survey reveals driverless cars are the future
    July 15, 2014
    IEEE has released the findings of a survey that revealed expert opinions about the future of driverless cars, from challenges to mass adoption, essential autonomous technologies, features in the car of the future, and geographic adoption. More than 200 researchers, academicians, practitioners, university students, society members and government agencies in the field of autonomous vehicles, participated in the survey. When survey respondents were asked to assign a ranking to six possible roadblocks to th