Title :
Statistically significant differences in the spatial coherence of backscatter for fundamental and harmonic portions of a clinical beam
Author :
Fedewa, Russell J. ; Wallace, Kirk D. ; Holland, Mark R. ; Jago, James R. ; Ng, Gary C. ; Rielly, Matthew R. ; Robinson, Brent S. ; Miller, James G.
Author_Institution :
Washington Univ., St. Louis, MO, USA
Abstract :
Correlation-based approaches to phase aberration correction rely on the spatial coherence of backscattered signals. The spatial coherence of backscatter was measured using a clinical linear array with a modified clinical imaging system (ATL HDI 5000). The spatial coherence results were verified using a 14 mm×14 mm pseudo-array scan in a transverse plane of the transmitted beam with a 0.6 mm hydrophone. An effective apodization was determined by backpropagating these values using a linear angular spectrum approach. The effective apodizations were compared with the spatial coherence measurements using the Van Cittert-Zernike theorem. The spatial coherence for the fundamental beam exhibited good agreement with the autocorrelation of the transmit apodization. The spatial coherence for the harmonic differed systematically and statistically from the autocorrelation of the transmit apodization. Additionally, our experimental results verify that the effective apodization of the nonlinearly-generated harmonic beam is more aggressive than the transmit apodization
Keywords :
backscatter; biomedical ultrasonics; coherence; ultrasonic imaging; 0.6 mm; 14 mm; ATL HDI 5000; Van Cittert-Zernike theorem; apodization; backscattered signals; beam fundamental portion; beam harmonic portion; clinical linear transducer array; harmonic imaging; hydrophone; linear angular spectrum approach; modified clinical imaging system; nonlinearly-generated harmonic beam; phase aberration; pseudo-array scan; second harmonic portion; spatial coherence; transmitted beam; transverse plane; Autocorrelation; Backscatter; Imaging phantoms; Kirk field collapse effect; Phased arrays; Pulse inverters; Signal generators; Spatial coherence; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic transducer arrays;
Conference_Titel :
Ultrasonics Symposium, 2001 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Atlanta, GA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7177-1
DOI :
10.1109/ULTSYM.2001.992000