Abstract

Top-orthogonal-to-bottom electrode (TOBE) arrays, also known as row-column arrays, have shown great promise as an alternative to fully wired 2-D arrays, owing to a considerable reduction in channels. Novel imaging schemes with bias-switchable TOBE arrays were previously shown to offer promise compared with previous nonbias-switchable row-column imaging schemes and compared with previously developed explososcan methods, however, they required significant coherent compounding. Here, we introduce ultrafast orthogonal row-column electronic scanning (uFORCES), an ultrafast coded synthetic aperture imaging method. Unlike its FORCES predecessor, uFORCES can achieve coherent compounding with only a few transmit events and may, thus, be more robust to tissue motion. We demonstrate through simulations that uFORCES can potentially offer improved resolution compared with the matrix probes having beamformers constrained by the paraxial approximation. Also, unlike current matrix probe technology incorporating microbeamforming, uFORCES with bias-switchable TOBE arrays can achieve ultrafast imaging at thousands of frames per second using only row and column addressing. We also demonstrate the experimental implementation of uFORCES using a fabricated 128 ×128 electrostrictive TOBE array on a crossed 25- [Formula: see text] gold wire phantom and a tissue-mimicking phantom. The potential for improved resolution and ultrafast imaging with uFORCES could enable new essential imaging capabilities for clinical and preclinical ultrasound.

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