DocumentCode :
2978878
Title :
Causal transient propagation in media with classical or power-law loss [US transmission in tissue]
Author :
Cobbold, Richard S C ; Sushilov, Nikolai V. ; Weathermon, Adam C.
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Biomaterials & Biomed. Eng., Toronto Univ., Ont., Canada
Volume :
3
fYear :
2004
fDate :
23-27 Aug. 2004
Firstpage :
2069
Abstract :
The manner in which transient waves propagate in a medium with classical viscous losses is generally addressed is by determining solutions to the wave equation originally derived by Stokes. Exact solutions are difficult to obtain even for plane waves and simple transient forms and consequently, approximations are generally made. A related problem, of particular interest in relation to ultrasound transmission in soft tissue, is propagation in a medium, whose absorption coefficient obeys power-law frequency dependence, i.e., α ∝ ω". By using a recently obtained solution to a causal convolution wave equation, expressions are obtained for one-dimensional transient propagation for n=2 and n=1. Analytical expressions are obtained for a sinusoidal step function source when the effects of dispersion are ignored. When the effects of dispersion are accounted for, it is shown that the propagation can be expressed in terms of Fourier transforms. Examples are used to illustrate the results for both dispersive and non-dispersive media.
Keywords :
Fourier analysis; Fourier transforms; biological tissues; biomedical engineering; biomedical ultrasonics; losses; transient analysis; ultrasonic measurement; ultrasonic propagation; viscosity; wave equations; 1D transient propagation; Fourier transforms; Stokes wave equation; US transmission; absorption coefficient; causal convolution wave equation; causal transient propagation; dispersion effects; dispersive media; media classical loss; media power-law loss; nondispersive media; plane waves; power-law frequency dependence; sinusoidal step function; soft tissue; transient forms; transient wave propagation; ultrasound transmission; viscous losses; Absorption; Biological tissues; Biomedical engineering; Dispersion; Frequency; Laplace equations; Partial differential equations; Propagation losses; Ultrasonic imaging; Virtual colonoscopy;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Ultrasonics Symposium, 2004 IEEE
ISSN :
1051-0117
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8412-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ULTSYM.2004.1418243
Filename :
1418243
Link To Document :
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