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Automotive sensing system detecting road environment and obstacles in real time under dynamic driving conditions

Automotive sensing systems

Automotive sensing systems operate under extreme mechanical, thermal and environmental stress. Signal integrity must remain stable over years of operation, without recalibration or compensation. SCHOTT glass materials are engineered to maintain optical and mechanical stability, enabling reliable sensing performance in safety-critical automotive systems.
Overview

Where signal integrity meets material stability

Automotive sensing systems demand zero tolerance for signal degradation or drift. Every signal must be captured and maintained with unwavering integrity, despite relentless vibration, extreme temperature swings, and years of mechanical stress. As vehicles evolve toward sleeker, more integrated designs, sensing performance is no longer just about detection. It is about the material behavior that shapes optical and mechanical stability before signals even reach the electronics. Refractive index stability, high transmission in visible and near-infrared ranges, and controlled thermal expansion aren’t just features – they are the foundation of latency, accuracy, and reliability in safety-critical automotive functions.

Requirements

The non-negotiable standards of automotive sensing

Safety-critical systems cannot tolerate compromise

Driver monitoring and ADAS functions demand immediate, unfiltered perception within safety-critical control loops. Any buffering, recalibration, or compensation is not just unnecessary but also poses a direct threat to performance and safety.

Longevity without degradation

A sensing system is not just reliable on day one. It must stay that way for the life of the vehicle. Drift behavior must be predictable, not just survivable.

Thermal and mechanical stress: The brutal reality of automotive environments

From scorching heat to subzero cold, from potholed roads to high-speed vibrations, automotive sensing systems are pushed to their limits. These harsh conditions directly impact optical alignment, mechanical stability, and signal consistency over time.

High-volume reproducibility: Consistency across millions

Performance cannot vary between prototypes and production. In automotive sensing, consistency is not optional – it is the standard. Every vehicle must perform identically, year after year.

Automotive sensing without a correction loop

Automotive sensing systems operate in closed, safety-critical loops where continuous recalibration or compensation are simply not an option. Once deployed, optical alignment, mechanical stability, and timing behavior must remain rock-solid under real-world stress. Any attempt to correct instability downstream increases system complexity and reduces robustness.

Automotive sensing architecture showing multiple sensor systems such as cameras, LiDAR and radar integrated in a vehicle
System types

The core modalities of automotive sensing

Automotive sensing spans the fundamental principles of optics and pressure. Both share one uncompromising rule: stability and reproducibility under real-world conditions.

Imaging and sensing systems (interior and exterior)

The eyes of the vehicle.

 

Used for:

  • In-cabin sensing and driver monitoring (DMS)
  • Face authentication and occupant monitoring
  • Environmental perception and ADAS
  • LiDAR

Technologies like Time-of-Flight, structured light, and camera-based imaging impose strict demands for optical stability, timing accuracy, and material behavior under automotive stress.

 

The challenges that define success or failure:

  • Optical alignment stability under vibration
  • Tight thickness tolerances and low total thickness variation (TTV)
  • Stable optical transmission in VIS and NIR ranges
  • Resistance to thermal drift over the lifetime

In automotive imaging, optical performance is locked in at the material level. Refractive indices must be uniform, transmission must be stable in  VIS/NIR ranges, and thermal expansion must be perfectly matched. Even the smallest deviation can mean the difference between crisp, immediate data and degraded, delayed responses.

Interior driver monitoring system with IR camera and optical components illustrating controlled light propagation in automotive sensing

Interior DMS setup (IR camera + illumination)

Automotive ADAS camera and LiDAR module with optical elements illustrating precise light control in external sensing systems

Exterior ADAS camera / LiDAR module

Automotive pressure sensors

The silent guardians of safety and control

Pressure sensors are the unsung heroes of automotive systems, providing drift-free signals under thermal stress, vibration, and long-term operation. The challenges that separate reliable from unreliable:

  • Mechanical and thermal stability at the sensor interface
  • Material compatibility under automotive stress
  • Long-term signal stability and compliance

Material choice and system integration define whether pressure sensors can be trusted for years.

Failure mechanisms

Why most automotive sensing systems fail

Most failures are not algorithmic. They are material.

The silent killers of automotive sensing

  • Thermal expansion destabilizing alignment
  • Thickness variation causing focus errors
  • Mechanical stress inducing signal drift
  • Material mismatch at integration points

In Time-of-Flight and structured light systems, these effects directly translate into depth errors, delayed system response, and reduced functional safety. These failures share one root cause: they originate at the material and system integration level. Fixing them requires materials that do not just perform – they endure.

Car interior with digital dashboard and heads-up display.
Material solutions

Material stability: The invisible foundation of automotive sensing

In automotive sensing systems, performance is not defined by software alone. It is defined by the physical behavior of materials under real-world stress. Once optical or mechanical stability is compromised at material level, no amount of downstream processing can restore true system reliability.

How the SCHOTT sensing vision portfolio powers automotive sensing

Glass is not a passive component in these systems. It is the backbone of optical performance, mechanical stability, and long-term reliability. SCHOTT delivers a portfolio of specialty thin glasses designed to meet the extreme demands of automotive imaging, perception, and pressure sensing. These materials are engineered to thrive under real-world conditions – not just in the lab.

Manufacturing expertise that delivers reliability

SCHOTT produces these thin glasses are using its down-drawn and microfloattechnologies, ensuring: high optical quality, tight thickness control, and reproducible material behavior at automotive production volumes.

Components that enable automotive sensing

SCHOTT sensing vision is integral to critical components in automotive imaging and sensing, including:

  • Image sensor cover glass
  • Wafer-level optics and integration
  • Microlens array substrates
  • IR-cut and narrow-band filter substrates
  • Diffractive optical elements (DOE) and diffuser substratesv
  • Spacers and protective windows for optical and LiDAR sensors

Each component imposes unique optical, mechanical and thermal requirements, all met by SCHOTT’s tailored material solutions.

The glass materials that define automotive sensing

SCHOTT provides a range of proven glass materials. Choose the right material for the job:

AF 32® eco

Ultra-thin glass for high-precision optical and electronic applications.
Ultra-thin glass enabling precise optical alignment and thickness stability in automotive sensing systems

D 263®

High-quality thin glass for optical components, wafer-level optics (WLO), and sensor integration.
Thin precision glass substrates with defined geometry for optical components in automotive sensing

BOROFLOAT® 33

Borosilicate glass with unmatched thermal and chemical stability.
Borosilicate glass providing thermal and chemical stability in demanding automotive sensing environments

How SCHOTT drives automotive sensing from prototype to production

SCHOTT supports automotive sensing projects with:

  • Application-driven material consultation
  • Deep expertise in automotive qualification and compliance
  • Reproducible, high-volume manufacturing
  • Long-term supply stability

This is more than support. It is a guarantee of performance.

Applications

Automotive sensing in context: Beyond the vehicle

Optical sensing system with glass components enabling stable signal transmission and precise imaging performance

Imaging and sensing systems

Where optical stability dictates image quality and response time.
Explore imaging and sensing systems
Pressure sensor module with glass components ensuring stability and long-term reliability under mechanical load

Pressure sensors

Where stability, packaging, and longevity determine reliability.
Explore pressure sensors

Define your automotive sensing performance at the material level

Automotive sensing systems leave no room for drift or instability. Share your requirements, and we will help you identify glass properties that ensure stable, reliable performance over the full vehicle lifetime.

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.