Abstract

This paper investigates the properties of highly thinned ultrawideband (UWB) arrays. The design aim is high resolution and very low side radiation levels (SL). One- and two-dimensional ultrasparse UWB arrays can be designed to achieve both. The minimum available pulse-echo SL is shown to approach N(-4) where N is the number of elements in the transmit and receive arrays. Periodic thinning is shown to be superior to random thinning, and amplitude taper is shown to raise the SL. Two-dimensional curvilinear deployment of elements are shown to outperform rectilinear designs, and different transmit and receive arrays in pulse-echo systems are shown to outperform systems that use the same array for transmit and receive. Very low SL is achievable in an ultrasparse UWB system with so few elements that echo signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) rather than SL becomes the constraint on the minimum number of elements required by the system for the array to be useful for imaging. For example, in ultrasonic pulse-echo breast imaging, SL approximately -70 dB is desired to distinguish small cysts from tumors. A 2-D randomly thinned array requires about 10,000 elements. A 2-D ultrasparse UWB periodic array requires less than 100 to satisfy SL, a reduction of 100:1, but provides insufficient SNR. A 500-element, 7.5 MHz array operating with 4 cm penetration depth satisfies both. Experimental results demonstrate the theory.

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