Title :
Continuous wave ultrasonic tomography
Author :
Liang, Hai-Dong ; Halliwell, Michael ; Wells, Peter N T
Author_Institution :
Centre for Phys. & Eng. Res. in Med., Bristol Univ., UK
Abstract :
As an object rotates with respect to a stationary ultrasonic beam, the scattering centers within the object return echoes that are Doppler-shifted in frequency by amounts depending on the velocities of the individual scatterers. The scattering centers that lie on a line of constant cross-range all have the same effective velocity in the direction pointing toward the transducer; therefore, the backscattered echo amplitude at any particular frequency is the line integral of the scattered radiation at the cross-range corresponding to that frequency. The amplitudes of the returned signals at other frequencies give the line integrals for the scatterers at the corresponding cross-ranges. The amplitude as a function of frequency can be interpreted as a tomographic projection. A continuum of the projections at different positions is generated while the object is rotating. A tomographic reconstruction algorithm can produce an image of the distribution of scattering centers in the insonified object from these projections. A microscanner was developed to investigate the approach of using continuous wave (CW) ultrasound for cross-sectional imaging. The resolution is limited by the target size and the ultrasonic wavelength.
Keywords :
Doppler shift; acoustic tomography; biomedical ultrasonics; computerised tomography; image reconstruction; medical image processing; ultrasonic equipment; ultrasonic imaging; ultrasonic materials testing; ultrasonic scattering; CW Doppler ultrasound; CW ultrasonic tomography; Doppler-shifted echoes; backscattered echo amplitude; continuous wave US tomography; cross-sectional imaging; line integral; microscanner; resolution limitation; scattering centers; stationary ultrasonic beam; target size; tomographic projection; tomographic reconstruction algorithm; ultrasonic wavelength; Computed tomography; Councils; Frequency; Helium; Optical reflection; Reconstruction algorithms; Scattering; Structural beams; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic transducers; Algorithms; Anatomy, Cross-Sectional; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Phantoms, Imaging; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Transducers; Ultrasonography, Doppler;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on