Title :
Experimental evaluation of intrinsic and nonstationary ultrasonic Doppler spectral broadening in steady and pulsatile flow loop models
Author :
Cloutier, Guy ; Shung, K. Kirk ; Durand, Louis-Gilles
Author_Institution :
Lab. de Genie Biomed., Inst. de Recherches Cliniques de Montreal, Que., Canada
Abstract :
Intrinsic and nonstationary Doppler spectral broadening, and the skewness of the spectral representation, were evaluated experimentally using porcine red cell suspensions as ultrasonic scatterers. Theoretically, the relative Doppler bandwidth, defined as the intrinsic bandwidth divided by the mean Doppler frequency shift, should be velocity independent. The relative Doppler bandwidth invariance theorem was experimentally verified with an in vitro steady laminar blood flow model. It is shown that the relative bandwidth is both independent of the flow velocity and blood hematocrit. Using a pulsatile laminar flow model, the authors demonstrated that the relative Doppler bandwidth invariance theorem did not hold during flow acceleration and deceleration. In addition, a positive skewness of the Doppler spectra was observed during acceleration while a negative skewness was measured during the deceleration of blood. The effect of the window duration used in the Fourier spectral computation, on nonstationary broadening, is characterized.<>
Keywords :
Doppler effect; biomedical ultrasonics; haemodynamics; haemorheology; laminar flow; pulsatile flow; ultrasonic scattering; Doppler spectra; Fourier spectral computation; blood hematocrit; flow acceleration; flow deceleration; flow velocity; in vitro steady laminar blood flow model; intrinsic bandwidth; mean Doppler frequency shift; negative skewness; nonstationary ultrasonic Doppler spectral broadening; porcine red cell suspensions; positive skewness; pulsatile flow loop models; pulsatile laminar flow model; relative Doppler bandwidth invariance theorem; spectral representation skewness; ultrasonic scatterers; Acceleration; Bandwidth; Biomedical engineering; Biomedical measurements; Blood; Kirk field collapse effect; Scattering; Spectral analysis; Suspensions; Ultrasonic transducers;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on