Title :
Different effects of microbubble destruction and translation in Doppler measurements
Author :
Tortoli, Piero ; Boni, Enrico ; Corsi, Massimo ; Arditi, Marcel ; Frinking, Peter
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. & Telecommun., Florence Univ., Firenze, Italy
fDate :
7/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In flow measurements in which microbubbles are involved, the amplitude and phase of the received echo signal are noticeably influenced by the transmitted ultrasound intensity. Previous studies have shown that, when such intensity is progressively increased, the Doppler spectrum is accordingly distorted, i.e., it is asymmetrically broadened toward the negative frequency side. Such deformation has been attributed to radiation force, which pushes the microbubbles into the sound propagation direction, thus yielding additional phase delays in the received echoes. However, the possible contribution of microbubble destruction to this spectral deformation has not been considered yet. In this paper, this issue is investigated by analyzing the experimental spectra produced by two different types of microbubbles suspended in a moving fluid and insonified in pulsed wave (PW) mode at programmable pulse repetition frequency (PRF) and pressure. Conditions are created in which either the radiation force or the destruction mechanism is expected to be dominant. Effects produced by the two phenomena on the Doppler spectrum are shown to be different. When the PRF is low (2 kHz), so that, according to theoretical simulations, the radiation force effect is negligible, a 26 dB noise floor increase is observed for a 13 dB pressure increment. For a higher PRF (16 kHz), the same pressure increase not only affects the noise floor, but also causes the bubbles to deviate from their original streamlines, yielding a Doppler bandwidth increase by a factor of 5. It is concluded that asymmetrical spectral broadening is mainly due to radiation force, and microbubble destruction mainly results in an increased noise floor without affecting the spectral shape.
Keywords :
Doppler broadening; acoustic noise; acoustic wave propagation; bubbles; two-phase flow; ultrasonic measurement; 16 kHz; 2 kHz; 26 dB; Doppler bandwidth; Doppler spectrum; asymmetrical spectral broadening; destruction mechanism; echo signal; flow measurements; fluid movement; insonification; microbubble destruction; negative frequency; noise floor; phase delays; pulse repetition frequency; pulsed wave mode; radiation force; sound propagation direction; spectral deformation; spectral shape; suspended bubbles; transmitted ultrasound intensity; Acoustic noise; Acoustic propagation; Distortion measurement; Doppler measurements; Fluid flow measurement; Frequency; Noise shaping; Phase measurement; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic variables measurement; Algorithms; Contrast Media; Echocardiography; Echocardiography, Doppler; Image Enhancement; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Phantoms, Imaging;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2005.1504005