Title: Ultrasound Physics
1Ultrasound Physics
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2Resonant Frequency
- Frequency of Highest Sustained Intensity
- Transducers preferred or resonant frequency
- Examples
- Guitar String
- Bell
3Pulse Mode Ultrasound
- transducer driven by short voltage pulses
- short sound pulses produced
- Like plucking guitar string
- Pulse repetition frequency same as frequency of
applied voltage pulses - determined by the instrument (scanner)
4Pulse Duration Review
Pulse Duration Period X Cycles / Pulse
- typically 2-3 cycles per pulse
- Transducer tends to continue ringing
- minimized by dampening transducer element
5Damping Material
- Goal
- reduce cycles / pulse
- Method
- dampen out vibrations after voltage pulse
- Construction
- mixture of powder plastic or epoxy
- attached to near face of piezoelectric element
(away from patient)
Damping Material
Piezoelectric Element
6Disadvantages of Damping
- reduces beam intensity
- produces less pure frequency (tone)
7Bandwidth
- Damping shortens pulses
- the shorter the pulse, the higher the range of
frequencies - Range of frequencies produced called bandwidth
8Bandwidth
- range of frequencies present in an ultrasound
pulse
Ideal
OperatingFrequency
Intensity
Frequency
9Quality Factor (Q)
- operating
frequencyQuality Factor -----------------------
------ bandwidth
- Unitless
- Quantitative Measure of Spectral Purity
Bandwidth
10Which has a Higher Quality Factor?
- operating
frequencyQuality Factor -----------------------
------ bandwidth
A
B
Intensity
Intensity
Frequency
Frequency
Same Operating Frequency!
11Damping
- More damping results in
- shorter pulses
- more frequencies
- higher bandwidth
- lower quality factor
- lower intensity
- Rule of thumb
- for short pulses (2 - 3 cycles)
- quality factor number of cycles per pulse
12An Aside about Reflections
- Echoes occur at interfaces between 2 media of
different acoustic impedances - speed of sound X density
Medium 1
Medium 2
13Intensity Reflection Coefficient
(IRC)Intensity Transmission Coefficient (ITC)
- IRC
- Fraction of sound intensity reflected at
interface - lt1
- ITC
- Fraction of sound intensity transmitted through
interface - lt1
Medium 1
IRC ITC 1
Medium 2
14IRC Equation
For perpendicular incidence
reflected intensity z2 - z1 IRC
------------------------ ----------
incident intensity z2 z1
- Z1 is acoustic impedance of medium 1
- Z2 is acoustic impedance of medium 2
Medium 1
Medium 2
15Reflections
- Impedances equal
- no reflection
- Impedances similar
- little reflected
- Impedances very different
- virtually all reflected
16Why Use Gel?
reflected
intensity z2 - z1
IRC ------------------------ ----------
incident intensity
z2 z1
Acoustic Impedance (rayls)
Air 400
Soft Tissue 1,630,000
Fraction Reflected 0.9995
- Acoustic Impedance of air soft tissue very
different - Without gel virtually no sound penetrates skin
17Transducer Matching Layer
- Transducer element has different acoustic
impedance than skin - Matching layer reduces reflections at surface of
piezoelectric element - Increases sound energy transmitted into body
18Transducer Matching Layer
- placed on face of transducer
- impedance between that of transducer tissue
- reduces reflections at surface of piezoelectric
element - Creates several small transitions in acoustic
impedance rather than one large one
Matching Layer
19Transducer Arrays
- Virtually all commercial transducers are arrays
- Multiple small elements in single housing
- Allows sound beam to be electronically
- Focused
- Steered
- Shaped
20Electronic Scanning
- Transducer Arrays
- Multiple small transducers
- Activated in groups
21Electrical Scanning
- Performed with transducer arrays
- multiple elements inside transducer assembly
arranged in either - a line (linear array)
- concentric circles (annular array)
22Linear Array Scanning
- Two techniques for activating groups of linear
transducers - Switched Arrays
- activate all elements in group at same time
- Phased Arrays
- Activate group elements at slightly different
times - impose timing delays between activations of
elements in group
23Linear Switched Arrays
- Elements energized as groups
- group acts like one large transducer
- Groups moved up down through elements
- same effect as manually translating
- very fast scanning possible (several times per
second) - results in real time image
24Linear Switched Arrays
25Linear Phased Array
- Groups of elements energized
- same as with switched arrays
- voltage pulse applied to all elements of a
groupBUT - elements not all pulsed at same time
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26Linear Phased Array
- timing variations allow beam to be
- shaped
- steered
- focused
Above arrows indicate timing variations. By
activating bottom element first top last, beam
directed upward
Beam steered upward
27Linear Phased Array
Above arrows indicate timing variations. By
activating top element first bottom last, beam
directed downward
Beam steered downward
By changing timing variations between pulses,
beam can be scanned from top to bottom
28Linear Phased Array
Focus
Above arrows indicate timing variations. By
activating top bottom elements earlier than
center ones, beam is focused
Beam is focused
29Linear Phased Array
Focus
Focal point can be moved toward or away from
transducer by altering timing variations between
outer elements center
30Linear Phased Array
Focus
- Multiple focal zones accomplished by changing
timing variations between pulses - Multiple pulses required
- slows frame rate
31Listening Mode
- Listening direction can be steered focused
similarly to beam generation - appropriate timing variations applied to echoes
received by various elements of a group - Dynamic Focusing
- listening focus depth can be changed
electronically between pulses by applying timing
variations as above
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