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Title:
ULTRASONIC TRANSDUCERS AND APPLICATIONS THEREOF
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/1983/003000
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
Transducer structures for use in volume flow measurements which generate a first uniform beam and a second focused beam within the uniform beam. The transducer may include concentric elements (22, 24, Fig. 3), a linear array (Fig. 8) or combinations thereof (Figs. 10a-10c). In a two element concentric array (Fig. 3), a central disc (22) generates a uniform beam and a peripheral annular element (24) having a lens (28) thereon defines a second focused beam within the first beam. In a linear array (Fig. 8) a plurality of juxtaposed linear elements (50) define a scan surface and a segmented element (52) within the linear element array defines a focused reference sample volume within the scanned surface. A concentric array (Fig. 5) having a plurality of annular elements is driven with amplitude weighting of each element in accordance with a Fourier-Bessel aprroximation to the desired beam pattern thereby electronically achieving ultrasonic beam width control.

Inventors:
FU CHONG-CHENG (US)
GERZBERG LEVY (US)
Application Number:
PCT/US1983/000205
Publication Date:
September 01, 1983
Filing Date:
February 16, 1983
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
UNIV LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR (US)
International Classes:
A61B5/026; G01F1/66; G01P5/24; G10K11/26; G10K11/34; (IPC1-7): G01F1/66; G01N29/04
Foreign References:
US4062237A1977-12-13
US4228687A1980-10-21
US3327286A1967-06-20
US4051455A1977-09-27
Other References:
1977 Ultrasonics Symposium Proceedings, IEEE, issued 26 October 1977, PH. DEFRANOULD et al., Design of a Two Dimensional Array for B and C Ultrasonic Imaging System. see page 259.
See also references of EP 0101509A4
Download PDF:
Claims:
WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A transducer structure for use in ultrasonic flow measure¬ ments comprising a first planar discshaped transducer element for generating and receiving a first uniform ultrasonic beam, a second annular transducer element about said first trans ducer element, and lens means on one surface of said second transducer element for receiving a second ultrasonic beam which is focused within said first beam.
2. The transducer structure as defined by Claim 1 and further including insulation between said first and second transducer elements.
3. The transducer structure as defined by Claim 1 or 2 wherein the thickness of said first transducer element is on the order of onehalf an ultrasonic operating frequency wavelength.
4. A linear phased array transducer structure for use in ultrasonic flow measurements comprising a first plurality of juxtaposed transducer elements for selectively scanning a sur¬ face, a second transducer element centrally disposed in said first plurality of transducer elements, said second transducer element including a plurality of segments whereby said segments can be steered in a direction perpendicular to the scan direction of said first plurality of transducer elements and thereby define a reference volume within a scan surface of said first plurality of transducer elements.
5. A transducer structure for use in ultrasonic flow measure ments comprising a plurality of concentric transducer elements, a central element of said plurality of transducer elements being a disc, and a linear array of elements centrally disposed through said plurality of transducer elements, said plurality of concentric elements generating a first uniform beam and a second narrow beam and said linear array generating a scan beam for imaging.
6. The transducer structure as defined by Claim 5 wherein an outer element of said plurality of transducer elements includes a lens for defining said second focused beam.
7. The transducer structure as defined by Claim 5 wherein said plurality of transducer elements can be selectively energized to define a focused beam.
8. The transducer structure as defined by Claim 5, 6, or 7 wherein each concentric transducer element is amplitude weighted in accordance with the equation where a,, a, ... , a is the amplitude of the driving signals r., r2 ..., rN are the radii of the elements from the center outward N is.the number of elements m r I»Λ(2'" ,'^( are Pos^tive zeroes of the Bessel function J, (x) Jo fc go(t)Jlnt)dt' where t is integration variable g0(«) is defined by gQ(v) = v * f Q f (u) is the desired beam pattern where u is (2τr/λ)sinθ, and θ is the field direction .
9. In a transducer structure comprising a plurality of con¬ centric annular transducer elements, a method of energizing said transducer elements for use in volume flow measurements with independent amplitude and timing to achieve a Fourier Bessel approximation, said method comprising the step of OMPI amplitude weighting each transducer element in accordance with the equation where a^, a2, ..., aβ is the amplitude of the driving signal r^, r2 ..., rN are the radii of the elements from the center outward N is the number of elements θ{ l'c .2' * *" '^N are Positive zeroes of the Bessel function J, (x) J22( «un7 J"n0 go{t)Jlnt)dt' where t is integration variable gQ( '.) is defined by gQ(v) = v * f Q gΛ fQ(u) is the desired beam pattern where u is (2π/λ)sin θ, and θ is the field direction .
10. The method as defined by Claim 9 and further including the steps of transmitting and receiving a first beam having a first width, receiving said first beam, and receiving a secon beam having a second width narrower than said first width, said second beam lying within said first beam,.
11. In a transducer structure comprising a plurality of concentric annular transducer elements, a method of suppressi sidelobes of a transmitreceive pattern comprising the stepε of transmitting a first beam having a first width, receiving second coaxial beam having a second width, receiving a third coaxial beam having a third width which is narrower than said first and second widths, and amplitude weighting said second and third beams with respect to said first beam whereby sidelobes are suppressed .
Description:
ULTRASONIC TRANSDUCERS AND APPLICATIONS THEREOF

This invention relates generally to ultrasonic transducers, and more particularly the invention relates to such trans¬ ducers for use in measuring blood volume flow and like measurements and for imaging applications.

Doppler ultrasound has been recognized as a potential approach to the non-invasive measurement of blood flow. However, this method has not become a quantitative clinical tool because existing Doppler instruments estimate volume flow as a product of the velocity of blood and vessel cross sectional area. This requires accurate measurement of the three- dimensional velocity-vector orientation with respect to the ultrasonic beam plus an independent measurement of lumen cross sectional area. Difficulties associated with the accurate determination of these variables have heretofore restricted all non-invasive applications of Doppler flow- meters to qualitative measurements.

A novel concept for quantitative non-invasive Doppler blood flow measurement is disclosed by Hottinger and Meindl in "Blood Flow Measurement Using the Attenuation-Compensated Volume Flow Meter" Ultrasonic Imaging, Vol. 1, No. 1, 1979. See U. S..Patent No. 3,888,238 for "Blood Flow Measuring Apparatus". This concept is based on a direct flow-rate estimation rather than on separate velocity and cross sectional area measurements and does not rely on precise knowledge of

OM?J "

these parameters. The method does require a uniform ultrasonic illumination of the vascular lumen cross section and the positioning of a second small sampling beam- inside the vessel. Thus, ultrasonic transducers are required for uniform illumina- tion of the entire vessel cross section area and simultaneous focused illumination with range and beam width control.

Heretofore ultrasonic transducers for realizing the requisite ultrasonic beam patterns have included a far-field approach in which a uniform field is provided by a diverging beam in the far field of a small transducer. A near-field approach utilizes a transducer composed of two co-planar elements including a small central element and a large circumferential element. The two elements are driven simultaneously and equally to simulate a single transducer and thus provide a uniform insonification. In the receive mode, the small element receives a signal from the reference sample volume while the signals received by both elements are summed to collect the signal returning from the whole vessel cross section. In a lens approach a diverging lens is positioned over a small central transducer element to generate a diverging beam that is uniform over a specified solid angle, and a converging lens is placed over an annular element to produce a slightly converging beam.

These known approaches are all limited in their applications to blood flow measurement primarily because their beam patterns are fixed by the geometric configurations of the transducers. In addition, each approach has its own difficulties or limita¬ tions. For example, in the far-field approach the uniform beam patterns are difficult to obtain. For a circular shaped trans¬ ducer as an example, continuous-wave diffraction theory requires that the driving function be a continuous spatial distribution which has been difficult to achieve by any practical means. In the lens approach, diffraction usually makes generation of a uniform beam profile very difficult. Additionally, high pre¬ cision is required in the lens construction. The near-field approach is simpler and more practical, but the summation of signals of two elements still requires very close inter-element

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matching in transducer characteristics and in the associated control circuitry.

Accordingly, an ohject of the present invention is improved s transducers for use in ultrasonic flow measurement.

-. 5 Another object of the invention is an improved transducer for use in near and far field applications.

A further object of the invention is an improved method of ultrasonic wave transmission using a circular transducer array with adjustable beam widths.

10 Yet another object of the invention is a phased array trans¬ ducer having electronically adjustable beam width and uniform cross section and which can selectively receive a small reference ' area from within the beam cross section.

Still another object of the invention is a combination of 15 scanning transducer and flow-measuring transducer.

The invention and objects and features thereof will be more readily apparent from the following detailed description and appended claims when taken with the drawing, in which:

Figure 1 is a functional block diagram of a quantitative 20 Doppler flow meter which employs transducers in accordance with the present invention.

Figure 2 illustrates requisite ultrasonic beams of transducers in accordance with the present invention.

Figure 3 is a top view of a two element transducer in accord- " 25 ance with the present invention.

Figure 4 is a section view of the two element transducer of Figure 3 taken along the line 4-4.

Figure 5 is a functional block diagram illustrating the

operation of a concentric transducer array in accor ance with the invention.

Figure 6 is a plot of signal patterns generated by an annular array.

Figures 7a and 7b illustrate a method of sidelobe suppression using an annular array in accordance with the invention.

Figure 8 is a perspective view of a linear transducer array in accordance with the invention illustrating the establishment of a reference sample volume.

Figure 9 illustrates the application of the transducer array of Figure 8 in an attenuation-compensated flow meter.

Figures lOa-lOc illustrate combinations of transducers for both imaging and flow measurements in accordance with the invention.

Referring now to the drawings, Figure 1 is a functional block diagram of the attenuation-compensated volume flow meter as described by Hottinger and Meindl, supra. The flow meter employs a double beam pulsed Doppler transducer which uniformly illuminates a vessel. The array generates repeated short bursts of ultrasound, and the signals returning to the transducer are simultaneously range gated and processed to create two thin sample volumes, as illustrated in the drawing of Figure 2 which illustrates the waves intersecting a vessel. As shown in Figure 2, volume 1 constitutes a large uniformly illuminated sample plane covering the entire lumen cross section of the vessel. The second volume is a small disc which is a part of the larger plane and lies totally within the lumen.

As described by Hottinger and Meindl, the two Doppler audio signals are produced by the Transmitter/Receiver circuitry of Figure 1. The received signals are transmitted through filters to a first-moment detector and a power detector. The

filters compensate for sampling effects arising from the pulse nature of the waveforms, and the outputs of the cir¬ cuitry are the Doppler spectra of beams one and two. A range dependent scale factor (K) is introduced at the output. The flow rate φ at the output is expressed in terms of the measurable parameters and is defined by the first moment of the Doppler power spectrum received in beam one and normal¬ ized by the power received in beam 2.

Figure 3 is a plan view of a two element transducer in accordance with the present invention useful in the system of Figure 1, and Figure 4 is a section view of the transducer of Figure 3 taken along the line 4-4. The transducer includes a first central disc shaped element 22 and an annular trans¬ ducer element 24 which surrounds the disc shaped element. The two elements are insulated from each other by insulation 26 such as delrin. As shown in Figure 4, a concave surface lens 28 is bonded to the annular transducer element 24. In operation, an ultrasonic wave is generated solely by the disc transducer 22, and the annular transducer 24 is used only in the receive mode to obtain a signal from the sample volume located on the transducer axis. The lens is capable of sufficient on-axis focusing over a finite range around the specified focal point, and by using a range gate the depth of the sample volume can be varied.

The transducers are made of suitable piezoelectric ceramics and have a thickness on the order of one-half the operating frequency wavelength. For example, for a six megahertz ultrasonic wavelength, the thickness is on the order of 0.37 millimeters. The lens is made of a material such as lucite or nylon which has suitable acoustic refractive indices.

The lens geometry is determined based on the criterion that acoustic waves originating from a specified on-axis focal point should arrive simultaneously at all points on the annular transducer surface. Referring to Figure 4 and assuming that refraction at the lens surface can be neglected, this criterion requires that

Kx) . r (x) Kx)_ for 0 < c x <. w,

where r (x) = - * + +• < ( a l, + x) is the distance between the focal

£ point F at the focal distance z f and a point x on the annular transducer, x =■ 0 being set at the inner edge of the transduce l(x) is the path length in the lens, T is the constant total propagation time, and c, and c- are acoustic velocities in bod tissues and the lens material, respectively. In this design, we take c, = 15Q0 m/sec and c, = 2650 /sec, and hence the refractiye index of the lens n = c,/c2 s*0.• 56.

l xl can be obtained from Eq. (1 as r(x)

K-x) = n

Let 1 Q = 1 0), it follows that

and hence

Kx) - ι 0 +

For simplicity of system implementation it is desirable that T be equal to the propagation time to the disk element from the same range, that is

T =

(5)

Combining equations

which, in conjunction with. Eq. (.21, determines the lens geometry given the value of n. For a narrow annular trans¬ ducer element, the assumption of negligible refraction is usually acceptable. For example, in the case that z_ = 3 cm, a, = 7 mm and w = 2 mm, the incident angle at the lens surface determined as above can be shown to be no greater than 15°.

Figure 5 is a functional block diagram of an attenuation- compensated volume flow meter which employs a concentric trans- -" ducer array consisting of a center disc element and a plurality of concentric annular elements. Such a transducer array is disclosed by Dietz et al in "Expanded- perture Annular Array", Ultrasonic Imaging, One, 1979, pgs. 56-75. In accordance with the invention, the annular transducer array generates a uniform sector pattern by operating the individual annular elements with independent amplitude and timing controls. More particu¬ larly, the beam pattern synthesis using the array is based on a Fourier-Bessel approximation to the desired beam pattern.

Let r, , r 2 ..., r N , where N is the total number of. elements, be the outer radii of the elements (Pig. 3). and a.^, a 2 a N ^ e amplitudes of the driving signals. Then the far-field diffractio pattern of this array can be expressed as

J l t r l u) ( J l (r 2 u) J l (r l u) I . . . . f Cu) = a l r l u + a 2 r 2 u r l — j +

with a N = 0 and u = (2τr/λ) sin θ, where θ is the field directio with respect to the array axis, and λ is the sig na l wavelength.

Suppose the radii are proportional to the positive zeroes ^, α 2 , α of J,(x), and let r n = bα n , then Eq. C7). can be rewritten as

u f ( ta n- " a n+l ) bα n J l Cbα n u) '

or b (a n " a n-KL n J l (ct n v) ' (

with v = bu.

'"Fourier-Bessel series expansion theorem states that an arbitrary function g(x) can be expanded in the interval (0,1) as

CO g (χ) = ∑ s n J ι n x) ( n=l and the coefficients Js„* are given by

s n = // ttgg(tt))JJ,, ((αα„ttllddtt.. (.

Based on the similarity in form between equations C81 and (91,

the beam pattern synthesis scheme can be designed according to the following procedure:

(1) Given a desired circularly symmetrical beam pattern f (u) introduce a new function g (v) such that

and 0 <_ bu 1 over the C ÷extent of f (uj .

(2) Ca

(3) Ca relation

2 n n n α n+1 and a N+l = ° *

Thus, a set of amplitude weightings is obtained which upon application to the annular array will generate an approximati to the desired beam pattern. As the number of elements N increases, the approximation becomes closer.

.When this technique is used to form the uniform beam pattern, patterns of various beam widths can be obtained with given array configuration. Analysis shows that N different pattern each approximating a uniform sector pattern, can be generated with an N-element annular array. A narrow focused beam and a rather wide and uniform field can be obtained in the far fiel of a multiannulus array by correctly designing the signal- amplitude weightings on the array elements. Combined with th dynamic focusing capability of the ultrasonic transducer arra these features can also be extended to the near field. The beam patterns generated by this method with a four-element array are shown in Figure 6.

In an implementation of the annular array, in accordance with the invention, the blood vessel can be interrogated alternatel by the wide beam and narrow beam from the same array, thereby producing the signals for the two different channels. When a higher pulse repetition rate is necessary to avoid velocity ambiquity at a given range, one can transmit one narrow beam after every several uniform beams because the information con¬ tained in the small sample volume presumably does not need to be sampled as fast as in the other channel. One can also in- sonify the vessel cross section with the wide beam while re¬ ceiving signals at both channels simultaneously by two inde- pendent weighted coherent summations which can double the effective sampling rate.

The major advantages of this approach are twofold in that the beamwidth can be varied to match the size of the blood vessel,

because it is easy to control the operating range, this method is applicable to both superficial and deep-lying vessels.

Another important feature of this embodiment of the invention is suppression of the sidelobe level outside the region of the uniform field, which may insonify undesirable regions outside the blood vessel being investigated (for example, another vessel nearby) . As illustrated in Figures 7a and 7b this pro¬ blem can be solved by using a first beam having a first beam width for transmit mode and two different width beams for receive mode. The two received beams are amplitude weighted with respect to the transmitted beam whereby sidelobe suppressio is achieved as illustrated in Figure 7b for Beam 1 (transmit) and Beam 2 (receive) . This process can be accomplished in the circuitry of Figure 5 for example where each annular element is individually weighted. The second and third beams are obtained by summing two sets, respectively, of individually weighted sig¬ nal components from each of the annular elements so that their sidelobes do not overlap with the sidelobes of Beam 1, thereby minimizing the sidelobe effect.

Figure 8 is a perspective view of a linear phased array transducer in accordance with another embodiment of the invention. The array comprises a plurality of long and narrow elements 50 in planar juxtaposition and a centrally disposed element 52 which comprises a plurality of individual segments 53. Each of the elements and segments have electrical connections for energizing the elements and receiving signals from the segments. As illustrated in Figure 8 the linear elements 50 can be electronically steered across a scan surface, and the segments 53 of the element 52 can be steered to focus on the reference sample volume as indicated. Thus, the linear phased array has the unique capability of electronica steering the beam in one lateral dimension in addition to dynamical focusing. The extent of beam steering can be controlled by the operator, making it possible to synthesize a variable sized surface and adjust the size as required for each specific application. The coverage " of the other lateral dimension, however, is fixed by the array dimension and y^

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cannot be controlled by a simple one dimensional linear array; the array must have sufficient width so that the resultant two dimensional surface can cover the entire vessel cross section.

* Figure 9 illustrates one implementation wherein the beam is focused in the X dimension and is sufficiently wide in the Y dimension to cover the vessel cross section. In the transmit mode a wide illumination is created by exciting either the -' whole rectangular array or only a few elements in the center. In the receive mode, signals from all directions of interest a extracted at the same time by a suitable set of delay lines. The segments 53 in element 52 provide the additional focusing the Y dimension as required in the central region of the scan surface to generate the reference sample volume which is the overlap of the two focus beams.

Alternative embodiments of transducers in accordance with the invention may comprise combinations of scanning transducers and flow measuring transducers as described above. For example. Figure 10a employs a split disc 50 for the uniform beam and a focused annulus 52 and the imaging linear array 54. Alternatively, as shown in Figures 10B and 10C, an annular array shown generally at 56 can be used to provide the beam width control capability in combination with the imaging linea array 58.

A plurality of transducer embodiments have been described which allow uniform illumination of a vessel and signal recept from a small reference volume completely within the illuminate vessel. While the invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments, the description is illustrative of the invention and is not to be construed as 'limiting the invention. Various modifications and applications may occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the true spirit -and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.