Title :
A Ring Transducer System for Medical
Author :
Waag, Robert C. ; Fedewa, Russell J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Rochester Univ., NY
fDate :
10/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
An ultrasonic ring transducer system has been developed for experimental studies of scattering and imaging. The transducer consists of 2048 rectangular elements with a 2.5-MHz center frequency, a 67% -6 dB bandwidth, and a 0.23-mm pitch arranged in a 150-mm-diameter ring with a 25-mm elevation. At the center frequency, the element size is 0.30lambda times 42lambda and the pitch is 0.38lambda. The system has 128 parallel transmit channels, 16 parallel receive channels, a 2048:328 transmit multiplexer, a 2048:16 receive multiplexer, independently programmable transmit waveforms with 8-bit resolution, and receive amplifiers with time variable gain independently programmable over a 40-dB range. Receive signals are sampled at 20 MHz with 12-bit resolution. Arbitrary transmit and receive apertures can be synthesized. Calibration software minimizes system nonidealities caused by noncircularity of the ring and element-to-element response differences. Application software enables the system to be used by specification of high-level parameters in control files from which low-level hardware-dependent parameters are derived by specialized code. Use of the system is illustrated by producing focused and steered beams, synthesizing a spatially limited plane wave, measuring angular scattering, and forming b-scan images
Keywords :
biomedical ultrasonics; calibration; ultrasonic transducers; 150 mm; 2.5 MHz; 20 MHz; 25 mm; angular scattering; application software; b-scan images; calibration software; element-to-element response differences; focused beams; independently programmable transmit waveforms; low-level hardware-dependent parameters; medical ultrasound research; noncircularity; receive amplifiers; receive channels; receive multiplexer; spatially limited plane wave; steered beams; system nonidealities; transmit channels; transmit multiplexer; ultrasonic ring transducer system; Bandwidth; Biomedical imaging; Biomedical transducers; Control system synthesis; Frequency; Multiplexing; Scattering; Signal resolution; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic transducers;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2006.104