DocumentCode :
25620
Title :
Superharmonic imaging with chirp coded excitation: filtering spectrally overlapped harmonics
Author :
Harput, Sevan ; McLaughlan, James ; Cowell, David M. J. ; Freear, Steven
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electron. & Electr. Eng., Univ. of Leeds, Leeds, UK
Volume :
61
Issue :
11
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Nov-14
Firstpage :
1802
Lastpage :
1814
Abstract :
Superharmonic imaging improves the spatial resolution by using the higher order harmonics generated in tissue. The superharmonic component is formed by combining the third, fourth, and fifth harmonics, which have low energy content and therefore poor SNR. This study uses coded excitation to increase the excitation energy. The SNR improvement is achieved on the receiver side by performing pulse compression with harmonic matched filters. The use of coded signals also introduces new filtering capabilities that are not possible with pulsed excitation. This is especially important when using wideband signals. For narrowband signals, the spectral boundaries of the harmonics are clearly separated and thus easy to filter; however, the available imaging bandwidth is underused. Wideband excitation is preferable for harmonic imaging applications to preserve axial resolution, but it generates spectrally overlapping harmonics that are not possible to filter in time and frequency domains. After pulse compression, this overlap increases the range side lobes, which appear as imaging artifacts and reduce the Bmode image quality. In this study, the isolation of higher order harmonics was achieved in another domain by using the fan chirp transform (FChT). To show the effect of excitation bandwidth in superharmonic imaging, measurements were performed by using linear frequency modulated chirp excitation with varying bandwidths of 10% to 50%. Superharmonic imaging was performed on a wire phantom using a wideband chirp excitation. Results were presented with and without applying the FChT filtering technique by comparing the spatial resolution and side lobe levels. Wideband excitation signals achieved a better resolution as expected, however range side lobes as high as -23 dB were observed for the superharmonic component of chirp excitation with 50% fractional bandwidth. The proposed filtering technique achieved >50 dB range side lobe suppression and improved the image quality withou- affecting the axial resolution.
Keywords :
biological tissues; biomedical ultrasonics; phantoms; B-mode image quality; axial resolution; chirp coded excitation; coded signals; energy content; excitation bandwidth effect; excitation energy; fan chirp transform filtering technique; fractional bandwidth; frequency domain; harmonic matched filters; higher order harmonics isolation; imaging bandwidth; linear frequency modulated chirp excitation; narrowband signals; pulse compression; pulsed excitation; side lobe levels; side lobe suppression; spatial resolution; spectral boundaries; spectrally overlapped harmonics; superharmonic imaging; time domain; tissue; wideband chirp excitation; wideband excitation signals; wire phantom; Bandwidth; Chirp; Harmonic analysis; Imaging; Power harmonic filters; Time-frequency analysis; Transforms;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0885-3010
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2014.006424
Filename :
6945630
Link To Document :
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