Abstract

Ultrasound has become an effective and practical tool for obtaining medical information from within the human body without exposing the patient to X-rays. The emphasis of this paper is on the design of low-loss (high transmitting power) and wide-band transducers used for ultrasonic diagnostic. The approach we have used consists of impedance matching the front face of the transducer to the propagating medium and air-backing the rear face. By tuning the thickness and acoustical impedance of the matching layer, transducers with wide-band and high-transmitting-power can be obtained. PSPICE code of the KLM model is implemented to predict precisely the performance of the matched transducers. Since the transducer's characteristics of wide-band width and high-transmitting-power are somewhat in conflict in the design criteria, a matching-layer thickness that is a little bit shorter or longer than one quarter wavelength is proposed as a good trade-off between the two criteria. Good agreement between the simulation results and experimental results has been achieved.

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