학술논문

Aperture design analysis for vector flow imaging
Document Type
Conference
Source
2002 IEEE Ultrasonics Symposium, 2002. Proceedings. Ultrasonics symposium Ultrasonics Symposium, 2002. Proceedings. 2002 IEEE. 2:1511-1516 vol.2 2002
Subject
Signal Processing and Analysis
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Apertures
Image analysis
Scattering
Geometry
Spatial resolution
Frequency
Fluid flow measurement
Velocity measurement
Phase measurement
Phase modulation
Language
ISSN
1051-0117
Abstract
We present the results of a study exploring the upper velocity limit of vector flow estimation with Heterodyned Spatial Quadrature. Since this is highly dependent on apodization, we investigated a set of apodization windows designed to explore means of extending the practical velocity range. Heterodyned Spatial Quadrature (HSQ) is a recently described vector flow technique that has been shown to provide accurate flow estimates in both the axial and lateral directions. The complex PSF created by this technique induces a modulation in the received echo of a scatterer traversing the resolution volume at a frequency proportional to the scatterer lateral velocity. We measure the rate of phase change of this modulation to provide an estimate of the lateral flow velocity component. The technique is extendible to 3D vector flow estimation with a 2D array. We expect lateral tracking methods in general to be limited by a number of factors including the PSF beam width and the system amplitude sensitivity. Using a Siemens Elegra ultrasound scanner with a 7.5 MHz linear array, we simulated flow up to 405 /spl mu/m per step in a tissue-mimicking phantom, corresponding to velocities up to 4.05 m/sec for a PRF of 10 kHz, at Doppler angles of 60/spl deg/ and 90/spl deg/. We estimated lateral velocities to within 5% relative bias up to 315 cm/sec in an f/2 geometry at a 90/spl deg/ Doppler angle. The spatial quadrature receive aperture utilized a bi-lobed Blackman apodization with a width of 1/2D, where D is the full width of the array. Computer simulations of the system under similar conditions produced lateral velocity estimates up to 303 cm/sec. As expected, the maximum estimable velocity scales with focal depth. In simulations, the same aperture estimated flow velocities up to 672 cm/sec at a focal depth of 75 mm, representing an f/5 geometry.