Abstract
We conduct a simulation-based study to investigate the impact of a dynamic temperature environment on the characteristics of microwave-induced thermoacoustic signals. We investigate thermoacoustic signals that are generated using an interstitial microwave ablation antenna powered by a microsecond pulsed microwave source. Two temperature regimes are examined: first, a spatially uniform temperature throughout the medium to experimentally validate the simulation model, and second, the realistic, spatially nonuniform temperature profiles that arise during microwave ablation. We employ a multi-physics model that considers electromagnetics, heat transfer, and acoustic physics to simulate the coupled processes of microwave absorption and heating of the medium and thermoacoustic signal generation and propagation. An interstitial coaxial antenna is used to generate microsecond microwave pulses that simultaneously induce microwave heating and excite thermoacoustic signals via microwave pulse absorption. We find that thermoacoustic signal characteristics are highly temperature-dependent and thus change significantly within an environment where temperature varies through space and time. Furthermore, the temperature-dependent properties within the active region of the antenna drive the evolution of thermoacoustic signal characteristics. Temperature-dependent thermoacoustic signal characteristics can be exploited to track the progress of microwave ablation. Consequently, microwave-induced thermoacoustic imaging is a promising method for monitoring microwave ablation in real-time.
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