Abstract
Radiation force is known to produce microbubble axial displacements by an amount that depends on the transmit burst frequency, amplitude, and length, as well as the pulse repetition frequency (PRF). In the standard focused-imaging mode, the actual PRF experienced by each microbubble is low, because it is of the order of the frame rate (i.e., usually tens of Hertz). In the plane-wave imaging mode, however, the actual PRF is considerably higher, as it is equivalent to the transmit PRF (kiloHertz range). Furthermore, the radiation pressure is expected to be almost uniform over the field of view, and typically lower than the peak pressure experienced in the focused transmit (TX) mode. We have experimentally investigated the possible effects of radiation force in the plane-wave mode. Here, we report on preliminary findings that show that the acoustic radiation force is negligible only at lower TX levels. At higher TX amplitudes, the bubble displacements due to radiation force are comparable to those obtained for focused waves at the same PRF. In addition, the radiation force is nearly uniform over the field of view and increases as the TX burst central frequency approaches the resonance frequency of size-isolated microbubbles.
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More From: IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control
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