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Smartphone-based sensing system using compact optical modules for imaging and biometric applications

Mobile sensing

Mobile sensing brings high-sensitivity optical perception into billions of compact devices. As systems shrink and scale, even the smallest material variations directly impact performance and user experience. SCHOTT glass materials enable stable optical behavior and reproducible sensing performance across high-volume manufacturing.
Overview

Performance is defined by variation at scale

Mobile sensing brings high-sensitivity optical perception into billions of everyday devices. From biometric authentication and 3D perception to augmented reality, consistency and reproducibility are non-negotiable across global manufacturing volumes.

As optical stacks shrink and integrate further, performance is defined not just by component precision, but by reproducible material behavior across millions of devices.

Stable refractive indices, high transmission in visible and near-infrared ranges, and controlled thermal expansion ensure consistent sensing performance long before calibration or software optimization even comes into play.

Unlike regulated or safety-critical environments, mobile sensing leaves no room for calibration, redundancy, or manual adjustment. Performance must be reliable by design. Invisible when it works, but immediately obvious when it fails.

Constraints

The unforgiving realities of mobile sensing

Mobile sensing operates under a unique and relentless combination of constraints:

  • Extreme miniaturization with minimal optical path lengths
  • High-volume manufacturing with near-zero performance variance
  • Stable signal behavior without post-production calibration or compensation
  • Longevity under lifetime, temperature, and usage cycles

At this scale, robustness is not achieved through correction or post-processing – it is achieved when material behavior is predictable enough that correction becomes unnecessary.

Mobile sensing systems must function as scalable, reproducible optical components, not as individually optimized devices.

Compact optical sensing module with integrated lenses and components illustrating miniaturized mobile sensing architecture

Why miniaturization amplifies material effects

As mobile sensing systems shrink, physical tolerances tighten dramatically:

  • Thinner substrates increase sensitivity to mechanical stress
  • Shorter optical paths magnify alignment deviations
  • Higher integration density leaves no room for compensation

At this point, sensing performance is no longer defined by nominal design intent alone. It is defined by how materials behave in real devices, at production scale.

Failure

Why mobile sensing fails at scale

Mobile sensing systems rarely fail due to missing features or weak algorithms. They fail when material-induced variance turns identical designs into inconsistent devices. At production scale, even minor thickness, alignment, or spectral variation directly impacts user experience and trust in the device.

Mobile sensing without a correction loop

At mobile scale, continuous calibration or downstream correction is not an option. Once devices leave the production line, material-induced variance defines sensing behavior immediately – across millions of units, with out delay or compensation.

System architectures

Functional sensing architectures in mobile devices

Mobile sensing systems are built around tightly integrated optical architectures. Each function combines emitters, optics, sensors, and materials into compact modules where optical stability, timing accuracy, and reproducibility directly define performance.

Structured light sensing

Structured light systems derive depth information by projecting a known light pattern onto an object and analyzing its deformation.
<h3>Structured light sensing</h3>

In mobile devices, performance is highly sensitive to optical homogeneity, spectral control, and mechanical stability. At scale, material-induced variation translates directly into:

  • Depth reconstruction errors
  • Inconsistent recognition behaviour
  • Inconsistent authentication behavior

What users perceive as a software issue is often a material variance issue at the module level. Typical system elements:

  • Dot projector
  • Flood illuminator
  • IR camera

Time-of-Flight (ToF) sensing

ToF systems calculate distance based on precise timing information. In mobile architectures, even minimal thickness variation or spectral drift impacts timing accuracy and signal-to-noise ratio.
<h3>Time-of-Flight (ToF) sensing</h3>

At scale, the causal chain is undeniable: even minor thickness or TTV variations lead to timing deviations, which in turn cause depth errors – and ultimately, loss of user trust.

As a result, depth precision and measurement stability depend as much on material stability across production batches as on electronics or algorithms. Typical system elements:

  • Emitter
  • Receiver
  • Narrow band filter
  • Diffusers
  • Diffractive optical elements

Stereo vision and camera-based perception

Stereo vision relies on precise geometric alignment across multiple optical paths. In mobile devices, variance between modules, not nominal design accuracy, defines real-world performance.
<h3>Stereo vision and camera-based perception</h3>

Thickness variation, thermal expansion, and mechanical drift directly affect:

  • Depth accuracy
  • Image consistency between devices
  • Long-term stability over the device lifetime

Typical system elements:

  • Camera modules
  • Lens cover glass
  • Filters
  • Spacers and alignment elements
Material solutions

Key optical components enabled by glass:

  • Image sensor covers
  • Wafer-level optics (WLO)
  • Microlens arrays
  • Narrow-band filter substrates
  • Diffractive optical elements

Selected materials

D 263® T

With tight thickness tolerances, low total thickness variation (TTV), and excellent surface quality, D 263® T enables high-fidelity replication and precise optical stacking in compact sensing modules.

Its uniform optical behavior ensures consistent performance across millions of devices, where even minimal variation directly impacts sensing accuracy.

Thin precision glass substrates with low TTV and high surface quality enabling consistent optical replication in mobile sensing

AF 32®

AF 32® combines low thermal expansion with high optical homogeneity, ensuring stable alignment and consistent performance in highly miniaturized sensing systems.

It preserves nanostructure integrity under thermal and mechanical stress, where no post-production correction or calibration is possible.

Thin glass with low thermal expansion maintaining stable alignment and optical performance in miniaturized sensing systems
Related applications

Related sensing contexts

The principles behind mobile sensing apply across multiple domains where high-sensitivity perception matters under different constraints:

Automotive sensing system detecting surroundings through windshield with sensor-based perception overlays

Automotive sensing

Automotive sensing systems operate under constant environmental stress and safety-critical conditions. Performance must remain stable despite vibration, temperature cycling, and long-term use. Material stability defines whether sensing remains reliable over the vehicle lifetime.
Explore automotive sensing
Optical imaging sensor module capturing light for high-precision signal processing in integrated systems

Imaging and sensing systems

Imaging and sensing systems rely on precise optical signal transmission across integrated architectures. Even small variations impact image quality and signal-to-noise ratio. Material precision and homogeneity ensure reproducible system-level performance..
Explore imaging and sensing systems
Pressure sensor module with glass interface designed for stable measurement under mechanical load and harsh environments

Pressure sensors

Pressure sensing systems operate under continuous mechanical load and exposure to harsh media. Accuracy depends on dimensional stability under pressure, temperature, and chemical influence. Material properties define long-term reliability and measurement precision.
Explore pressure sensors

Define stable sensing performance at scale

Mobile sensing systems rely on precise and reproducible material behavior. Tell us about your application, and we will support you in selecting glass materials for consistent performance across high-volume production.

Martin Naß

Martin Naß

Product Manager Sensing Vision

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See the bigger picture of sensing performance

Material properties define how systems behave. Explore how signal quality, system architecture, and real-world conditions shape sensing performance across applications.