DocumentCode :
1457452
Title :
A k-space method for large-scale models of wave propagation in tissue
Author :
Mast, T. Douglas ; Souriau, Laurent P. ; Liu, D. L Donald ; Tabei, Makoto ; Nachman, Adrian I. ; Waag, Robert C.
Author_Institution :
Appl. Res. Lab., Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, PA, USA
Volume :
48
Issue :
2
fYear :
2001
fDate :
3/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
341
Lastpage :
354
Abstract :
Large-scale simulation of ultrasonic pulse propagation in inhomogeneous tissue is important for the study of ultrasound-tissue interaction as well as for development of new imaging methods. Typical scales of interest span hundreds of wavelengths. This paper presents a simplified derivation of the k-space method for a medium of variable sound speed and density; the derivation clearly shows the relationship of this k-space method to both past k-space methods and pseudospectral methods. In the present method, the spatial differential equations are solved by a simple Fourier transform method, and temporal iteration is performed using a k-t space propagator. The temporal iteration procedure is shown to be exact for homogeneous media, unconditionally stable for "slow" (c(x)≤c 0) media, and highly accurate for general weakly scattering media. The applicability of the k-space method to large-scale soft tissue modeling is shown by simulating two-dimensional propagation of an incident plane wave through several tissue-mimicking cylinders as well as a model chest wall cross section. A three-dimensional implementation of the k-space method is also employed for the example problem of propagation through a tissue-mimicking sphere. Numerical results indicate that the k-space method is accurate for large-scale soft tissue computations with much greater efficiency than that of an analogous leapfrog pseudospectral method or a 2-4 finite difference time-domain method. However, numerical results also indicate that the k-space method is less accurate than the finite-difference method for a high contrast scatterer with bone-like properties, although qualitative results can still be obtained by the k-space method with high efficiency. Possible extensions to the method, including representation of absorption effects, absorbing boundary conditions, elastic-wave propagation, and acoustic nonlinearity, are discussed.
Keywords :
Fourier transforms; bioacoustics; biological tissues; biomedical ultrasonics; iterative methods; ultrasonic propagation; Fourier transform method; absorbing boundary conditions; absorption effects; acoustic nonlinearity; efficiency; elastic-wave propagation; general weakly scattering media; homogeneous media; imaging methods; inhomogeneous tissue; k-space method; k-t space propagator; large-scale models; model chest wall cross section; spatial differential equations; temporal iteration; three-dimensional implementation; tissue; tissue-mimicking cylinders; tissue-mimicking sphere; two-dimensional propagation; ultrasonic pulse propagation; ultrasound-tissue interaction; wave propagation; Absorption; Acoustic propagation; Acoustic scattering; Biological tissues; Differential equations; Finite difference methods; Fourier transforms; Large-scale systems; Time domain analysis; Ultrasonic imaging; Adipose Tissue; Algorithms; Biomedical Engineering; Humans; Models, Biological; Scattering, Radiation; Ultrasonography;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0885-3010
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/58.911717
Filename :
911717
Link To Document :
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