• DocumentCode
    2470056
  • Title

    3C-2 Full-Wave Simulation of Finite-Amplitude Ultrasound in Heterogeneous Media

  • Author

    Pinton, Gianmarco ; Trahey, Gregg

  • Author_Institution
    Duke Univ., Durham
  • fYear
    2007
  • fDate
    28-31 Oct. 2007
  • Firstpage
    130
  • Lastpage
    133
  • Abstract
    A full-wave equation that describes nonlinear propagation in a heterogeneous attenuating medium is solved numerically with finite differences in the time domain (FDTD). Three dimensional solutions of the equation are verified with water tank measurements of a commercial diagnostic ultrasound transducer and are shown to be in excellent agreement in terms of the fundamental and harmonic acoustic fields, and the power spectrum at the focus. The linear and nonlinear components of the algorithm are also verified independently. In the solutions match results from field II, a well established software package used in transducer modelling, to within 0.3 dB. Nonlinear plane wave propagation is shown to closely match results from the Galerkin method up to four times the fundamental frequency. In addition to thermoviscous attenuation we present a numerical solution of the relaxation attenuation laws that allows modelling of arbitrary frequency dependent attenuation, such as that observed in tissue. A perfectly matched layer (PML) is implemented at the boundaries with a novel numerical implemenation that allows the PML to be used with high order discretizations. A -78 dB reduction in the reflected amplitude is demonstrated. The numerical algorithm is used to simulate a diagnostic ultrasound pulse propagating through a histologically measured representation of human abdominal wall with spatial variation in the speed of sound, attenuation, nonlinearity, and density. An ultrasound image is created in silico using the same physical and algorithmic process used in an ultrasound scanner: a series of pulses are transmitted through heterogeneous scattering tissue and the received echoes are used in a delay-and-sum beamforming algorithm to generate a images. The resulting harmonic image exhibits characteristic improvement in lesion boundary definition and contrast when compared to the fundamental image. We demonstrate a mechanism of harmonic image quality improvement by showing that the- harmonic point spread function is less sensitive to reverberation clutter.
  • Keywords
    Galerkin method; acoustic field; bioacoustics; biomedical ultrasonics; finite difference time-domain analysis; image scanners; medical image processing; nonlinear acoustics; nonlinear equations; spectral analysis; ultrasonic absorption; ultrasonic propagation; ultrasonic transducers; Galerkin method; biological tissues; commercial diagnostic ultrasound transducer; delay-and-sum beamforming algorithm; diagnostic ultrasound pulse propagation; finite difference time domain analysis; finite-amplitude ultrasound; frequency dependent attenuation; full-wave simulation equation; harmonic acoustic fields; harmonic image quality; harmonic point spread function; heterogeneous attenuating medium; heterogeneous scattering tissue; histologically measured representation; human abdominal wall; lesion boundary definition; linear nonattenuating regime; nonlinear plane wave propagation; novel numerical implemenation; numerical algorithm simulation; perfectly matched layer implementation; power spectrum analysis; reverberation clutter; software package; thermoviscous attenuation; transducer modelling; ultrasound image scanner; Acoustic propagation; Acoustic transducers; Attenuation; Difference equations; Finite difference methods; Nonhomogeneous media; Nonlinear equations; Pulse measurements; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic variables measurement;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Ultrasonics Symposium, 2007. IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    New York, NY
  • ISSN
    1051-0117
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-1384-3
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1051-0117
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ULTSYM.2007.44
  • Filename
    4409617