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Hand interacting with structured light pattern for 3D optical sensing and biometric recognition

Real-time imaging and sensing: where performance can’t wait.

Real-time sensing performance is defined before the first signal is processed. Optical precision, material stability and system integration determine whether meaningful information can be captured at all. SCHOTT sensing vision glass materials provide the stability and reproducibility required for reliable sensing systems.
Signal quality

Defined by signal quality. Enabled by materials. Built on glass.

The “power of now” is the moment when imaging and sensing systems must deliver not just fast signals, but high accuracy and reliable information — without delay, correction, or second chances.

Real-time performance is rarely limited by software or processing speed. It is determined much earlier, by signal-to-noise ratio, sensitivity, optical precision and material stability – factors embedded deep within the system.

Real-time imaging and sensing start before the signal

Real-time imaging and sensing describe a system’s ability to perceive and respond with precision exactly when information is needed. In applications like automotive interior sensing, driver monitoring, advanced driver assistance, mobile authentication, and industrial perception, meaningful performance depends on one thing: the quality of the captured signal.

Once optical or mechanical information degraded, no amount of downstream processing can fully restore it. System performance is shaped by physical limits: including optical homogeneity, thermal expansion behavior, mechanical stability, and long-term material integrity.

At its core, reliable real-time performance depends on material-defined system behavior — and on glass-based platforms that convert physical principles into stable, high-quality signals.


Optical sensor chip with glass layer enabling stable signal transmission and precise sensing performance

Beyond speed: the role of signal quality and sensitivity

Real-time performance is often equated with processing speed or latency. In reality, it is defined much earlier, during the design phase, by signal quality, sensitivity, and stability.  

Even small physical deviations can disproportionately impact sensing performance:

  • Surface deviations and material inhomogeneity distort optical paths and reduce signal-to-noise ratios.
  • Mechanical stress and aging increase noise and drift, silently eroding sensitivity over time.
  • Thermal expansion mismatches create micro-misalignments that compromise signal fidelity.

These factors determine whether meaningful information can be captured at all.

Physical requirements
Sensing domains

Mission-critical imaging and sensing

In mission-critical environments, imaging and sensing systems operate close to their physical limits. High sensitivity and reliable signal integrity are essential, placing strict demands on material quality and system stability.

Person using smartphone for mobile sensing applications

Mobile sensing

Mobile sensing enables face authentication, biometric access control, and 3D depth perception. Performance must remain consistent across millions of devices, without compromising sensitivity or signal consistency.

Key applications

  • Face authentication and biometrics
  • 3D sensing and depth perception
  • Scalable sensing systems
Automotive in-cabin sensing system with driver-assistance perception overlay

Automotive sensing

Automotive sensing systems – including in-cabin sensing, driver monitoring, ADAS and LiDAR –  must maintain accuracy over long lifetimes, despite vibration, temperature variations, and regulatory constraints.

Key applications

  • In-cabin sensing and driver monitoring
  • Environmental perception and ADAS
  • LiDAR
  • Long-term reliability and compliance

Core sensing and system domains

Sensing Vision combines material expertise and system understanding across complementary sensing domains.

CMOS image sensor module used in 3D sensing applications

Imaging systems

Optical sensing performance is defined before the first pixel is captured. Once degraded, optical information cannot be fully restored downstream.

MEMS pressure sensor package used in precision pressure sensing systems

Pressure sensing

Pressure sensing systems rarely fail suddenly. Instead, they degrade gradually as materials deform, age, or drift under mechanical and thermal stress.

Explore pressure sensing
Integration technologies

System and enablement and integration

High sensitivity in imaging and sensing systems cannot be achieved through signal processing alone. It depends on how well materials, structures, and integration technologies preserve signal quality throughout the entire system.

Wafer-level optics (WLO)

Wafer-level optics are unforgiving: any deviation is replicated across the entire wafer, with no opportunity for correction afterward.
<h3>Wafer-level optics (WLO)</h3>

Challenges

  • Wafer-level TTV (Total Thickness Variation) and warpage shift focus across sensor arrays.
  • Micro-misalignments degrade signal quality and reduce sensitivity.

Glass substrates with controlled planarity, low warpage, and defined thermal behavior preserve optical paths at scale, enabling compact, high precision systems with stable, reproducible signal quality.

Nanoimprint lithography

Nanoimprint lithography transfers optical functionality directly onto the surface, reducing component count and alignment effort – but shifting performance dependence onto material and surface quality. Any defect or deviation is replicated one-to-one into optical function.
<h3>Nanoimprint lithography</h3>

Challenges

  • Nanometer-scale fidelity across entire wafers.
  • Surface defects and inhomogeneities directly affect optical performance.
  • Thermal and mechanical stress alter nanoscale features over time.

Glass substrates provide the surface quality, planarity, and dimensional stability needed to keep nanoscale structures optically functional under real-world conditions.

Metalenses

Metalenses compress entire optical systems into a single planar element, eliminating alignment and mechanical adjustment – but also eliminating tolerance for error. Optical performance is now defined by nanoscale structures, making it directly dependent on material quality and stability.
<h3>Metalenses</h3>

Challenges

  • Extreme sensitivity to surface quality and optical homogeneity.
  • Thermal expansion impacts phase response.
  • Long-term stability without focus drift or performance degradation.

Glass substrates offer thermal stability, optical homogeneity, and dimensional control required to translate metasurface designs into predictable optical behavior.

Glass platforms

Why glass matters in imaging and sensing

Imaging and sensing systems rarely fail due to software alone. They fail when physical limits degrade signal quality, sensitivity and stability. Material properties define thermal stability, mechanical integrity, surface quality, and chemical resistance – all of which influence alignment, signal integrity, and long-term performance.


Glass material platforms for high-sensitivity imaging and sensing

High-performance systems do not rely on a single material property, but on glass compositions engineered to control thermal, mechanical, optical, and chemical behavior at the system level.

In high sensitivity architectures, material behavior directly defines signal quality. Small variations in thickness, homogeneity, or thermal expansion lead to misalignment, noise, and drift – issues that cannot be corrected later.

For more than 140 years, SCHOTT has developed specialty glass materials at the intersection of material science, precision processing, and system requirements. Glass is not just a passive carrier – it actively defines optical stability, mechanical behavior, and long-term reliability in imaging and sensing systems.

Why glass enables stable sensing performance

While polymers scale easily but introduce thermal drift and aging effects, and silicon integrates well electronically but imposes optical and packaging constraints, glass delivers precision, stability, and scalability – making it a functional contributor to imaging and sensing performance. Unlike alternatives, glass maintains its properties under real-world conditions, ensuring long-term consistency without compromising optical or mechanical performance.

D 263® T eco

Designed for high-precision optical systems and wafer-level integration, where thickness control and surface quality directly impact performance.Its low TTV and excellent surface properties enable high-fidelity replication and stable optical behavior across high-volume production.

D 263® T eco thin glass substrate for wafer-level nanoimprint and metalens applications

AF 32® eco

Engineered for thermally demanding environments and integrated optical stacks, where alignment stability is critical. Its low coefficient of thermal expansion and optical homogeneity ensure consistent performance under temperature cycling and long-term operation.

AF 32® eco thin glass substrate with low coefficient of thermal expansion for semiconductor and nanoimprint processes

BOROFLOAT® 33

Robust glass for demanding sensing environments, offering high transmission from UVA to VIS and NIR. BOROFLOAT® combines excellent optical clarity with strong chemical and mechanical resistance, an optimized coefficient of thermal expansion, and a broad thickness portfolio. Its consistent quality and reliable availability ensure stable performance and long-term precision under challenging conditions.

BOROFLOAT® 33 borosilicate glass substrates with defined thickness and thermal stability for precision optical applications

From material expertise to trusted development partnership

Developing high-performance imaging and sensing systems requires more than material selection. It demands a partner who understands system requirements and translates them into material behavior across the entire lifecycle.

SCHOTT supports sensing projects from early design to scalable production, focusing on predictability, stability, and long-term reliability. System performance is defined long before a system is activated – this is where material expertise becomes a trusted partnership.

Applications

Extending high-sensitivity principles across applications

The principles above apply beyond automotive and mobile systems. Wherever machines interpret physical signals, sensitivity, signal integrity, and material stability define performance. The same constraints apply across diverse sensing architectures:

    Person using a smartphone navigation app in a city environment
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    Robotics and navigation

    Autonomous systems rely on stable optical and sensor performance to navigate dynamic environments. High signal quality and mechanical stability are essential for reliable perception under vibration, temperature changes, and varying light conditions.

    Industrial robotic arm performing automated inspection on a production line
    2/3

    Industrial inspection

    Sensing systems must detect minimal deviations with high repeatability. Signal integrity and dimensional stability are critical for consistent process control over long production cycles.
    Medical monitoring using digital devices to measure vital signs
    3/3

    Medical sensing

    Medical applications require precise, reproducible measurements under strict regulations. Sensitivity, material stability, and predictable signal behavior are fundamental to building trust in diagnostic systems.

    Discuss your sensing challenge

    From wafer-level optics to advanced glass substrates, our experts help translate system requirements into reliable material solutions for imaging and sensing.

    Martin Naß

    Martin Naß

    Product Manager sensing vision

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