DocumentCode :
33999
Title :
Improved measurement of acoustic output using complex deconvolution of hydrophone sensitivity
Author :
Wear, Keith ; Gammell, Paul ; Maruvada, Subha ; Liu, Yanbing ; Harris, Gerald
Author_Institution :
Center for Devices & Radiol. Health, U.S. Food & Drug Adm., Silver Spring, MD, USA
Volume :
61
Issue :
1
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Jan-14
Firstpage :
62
Lastpage :
75
Abstract :
The traditional method for calculating acoustic pressure amplitude is to divide a hydrophone output voltage measurement by the hydrophone sensitivity at the acoustic working frequency, but this approach neglects frequency dependence of hydrophone sensitivity. Another method is to perform a complex deconvolution between the hydrophone output waveform and the hydrophone impulse response (the inverse Fourier transform of the sensitivity). In this paper, the effects of deconvolution on measurements of peak compressional pressure (p+), peak rarefactional pressure (p-), and pulse intensity integral (PII) are studied. Time-delay spectrometry (TDS) was used to measure complex sensitivities from 1 to 40 MHz for 8 hydrophones used in medical ultrasound exposimetry. These included polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) spot-poled membrane, needle, capsule, and fiber-optic designs. Subsequently, the 8 hydrophones were used to measure a 4-cycle, 3 MHz pressure waveform mimicking a pulsed Doppler waveform. Acoustic parameters were measured for the 8 hydrophones using the traditional approach and deconvolution. Average measurements (across all 8 hydrophones) of acoustic parameters from deconvolved waveforms were 4.8 MPa (p+), 2.4 MPa (p-), and 0.21 mJ/cm2 (PII). Compared with the traditional method, deconvolution reduced the coefficient of variation (ratio of standard deviation to mean across all 8 hydrophones) from 29% to 8% (p+), 39% to 13% (p-), and 58% to 10% (PII).
Keywords :
acoustic intensity measurement; biomedical ultrasonics; deconvolution; hydrophones; medical signal processing; acoustic output measurement; acoustic pressure amplitude; acoustic working frequency; capsule; complex deconvolution; fiber optic design; frequency 1 MHz to 40 MHz; hydrophone output voltage; hydrophone sensitivity; inverse Fourier transform; medical ultrasound exposimetry; needle; peak compressional pressure; peak rarefactional pressure; polyvinylidene fluoride; pulse intensity integral; pulsed Doppler waveform; spot poled membrane; time-delay spectrometry; Acoustic measurements; Acoustics; Deconvolution; Frequency measurement; Phase measurement; Sensitivity; Sonar equipment;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0885-3010
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2014.6689776
Filename :
6689776
Link To Document :
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