Title :
Effect of element directivity on adaptive beamforming applied to high-frame-rate ultrasound
Author :
Hasegawa, Hideyuki ; Kanai, Hiroshi
Author_Institution :
Grad. Sch. of Biomed. Eng., Tohoku Univ., Sendai, Japan
Abstract :
High-frame-rate ultrasound is a promising technique for measurement and imaging of cardiovascular dynamics. In high-frame-rate ultrasonic imaging, unfocused ultrasonic beams are used in transmit and multiple focused receiving beams are created by parallel beamforming using the delay and sum (DAS) method. However, the spatial resolution and contrast are degraded compared with conventional beamforming using focused transmit beams. In the present study, the minimum variance beamformer was examined for improvement of the spatial resolution in high-frame-rate ultrasound. In conventional minimum variance beamforming, the spatial covariance matrix of ultrasonic echo signals received by individual transducer elements is obtained without considering the directivity of the transducer element. By omitting the element directivity, the error in estimation of the desired signal (i.e., the echo from the focal point) increases, and as a result, the improvement of the spatial resolution is degraded. In the present study, the element directivity was taken into account in estimation of the spatial covariance matrix used in minimum variance beamforming. The effect of the element directivity on adaptive beamforming was evaluated by computer simulation and basic experiments using a phantom. In parallel beamforming with the conventional DAS beamformer, the lateral spatial resolution, which was evaluated from the lateral full width at half maximum of the echo amplitude profile in the basic experiment, was 0.50 mm. Using conventional amplitude and phase estimation (APES) beamforming, the lateral spatial resolution was improved to 0.37 mm. The lateral spatial resolution was further improved to 0.30 mm using the modified APES beamforming by considering the element directivity. Image contrast and contrast-to-noise ratios, respectively, were -12.3 and 6.5 dB (DAS), -32.8 and -11.3 dB (APES), and -7.0 and 3.1 dB (modified APES).
Keywords :
array signal processing; biomedical ultrasonics; blood vessels; cardiovascular system; covariance matrices; haemodynamics; phantoms; ultrasonic transducers; DAS beamformer-based parallel beamforming; DAS method; adaptive beamforming application; amplitude and phase estimation beamforming; cardiovascular dynamics imaging; cardiovascular dynamics measurement; conventional minimum variance beamforming; delay and sum method; desired signal estimation error; echo amplitude profile; element directivity effect evaluation; element directivity omission; focal point echo; focused transmit beam-based beamforming; high-frame-rate ultrasonic imaging; high-frame-rate ultrasound spatial resolution; high-frame-rate ultrasound technique; image contrast degradation; image contrast-to-noise ratios; individual transducer elements; lateral full width; lateral spatial resolution improvement; minimum variance beamformer examination; modified APES beamforming; multiple focused receiving beams; phantom-based computer simulation; spatial covariance matrix estimation; spatial resolution degradation; transducer element directivity; transducer element-received ultrasonic echo signals; transmit-receiving beams; ultrasonic echo signal spatial covariance matrix; unfocused ultrasonic beams; Acoustics; Array signal processing; Covariance matrices; Finite element analysis; Spatial resolution; Transducers; Ultrasonic imaging;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2015.006973