DocumentCode
1546055
Title
Phase aberration correction using near-field signal redundancy. I. Principles [Ultrasound medical imaging]
Author
Li, Yue
Author_Institution
Div. of Radiophys., CSIRO, Epping, NSW, Australia
Volume
44
Issue
2
fYear
1997
fDate
3/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
355
Lastpage
371
Abstract
The signal redundancy principle in the near field is analyzed quantitatively. It is found that common midpoint signals are not identical (or redundant) for echoes coming from arbitrary target distributions in the near field. A dynamic near-field correction is proposed to reduce the difference between common midpoint signals for echoes coming from the region of interest. When phase aberrations are present, it is shown that the dynamic correction can generally be done assuming no phase aberration, and the relative time-shift between common midpoint signals can be used to measure phase-aberration profiles. A phase-aberration correction algorithm based on that principle is proposed. In this algorithm, after common midpoint signals are collected they are dynamically corrected for near-field effects and cross-correlated with one another. In a related way, the phase errors are measured from peak positions of these cross-correlation functions. The phase-aberration profile across the array is derived from these measurements. The relationship between the errors in the derived phase aberration profile and the errors in the measured relative time-shift between common midpoint signals is derived. A method for treating the situation of different transmission and reception phase-aberration profiles is also proposed. This algorithm works for general target distributions, iteration is not required, and it can be used in other near-field, pulse-echo, imaging systems.
Keywords
aberrations; acoustic correlation; biomedical ultrasonics; echo; error analysis; image resolution; medical image processing; redundancy; ultrasonic focusing; ultrasonic transducer arrays; array; common midpoint signals; cross-correlation; dynamic near-field correction; echoes; general target distributions; medical imaging; near field; near-field pulse-echo imaging systems; near-field signal redundancy; peak positions; phase aberration correction; phase-aberration correction algorithm; reception phase-aberration profiles; relative time-shift; transmission phase-aberration profiles; ultrasound pulse-echo technique; Apertures; Atmospheric measurements; Frequency; Image analysis; Microwave imaging; Phase measurement; Redundancy; Signal analysis; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic variables measurement;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-3010
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/58.585120
Filename
585120
Link To Document