1 / 45

Opto-Acoustic Imaging

Opto-Acoustic Imaging. 台大電機系李百祺. Conventional Ultrasonic Imaging. Spatial resolution is mainly determined by frequency. Fabrication of high frequency array transducers is complicated: - l /2 pitch between adjacent channels. - l /2 thickness of the piezoelectrical material.

Télécharger la présentation

Opto-Acoustic Imaging

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Opto-Acoustic Imaging 台大電機系李百祺

  2. Conventional Ultrasonic Imaging • Spatial resolution is mainly determined by frequency. Fabrication of high frequency array transducers is complicated: - l/2 pitch between adjacent channels. - l/2 thickness of the piezoelectrical material. • Both are at the order of 10mm. • Other complications include bandwidth, matching, acoustic and electrical isolation, and electrical contact.

  3. Conventional Ultrasonic Imaging • Contrast resolution is inherently limited by differences in acoustic backscattered properties. • Low contrast detectability is further limited by speckle noise. • A new contrast mechanism is desired. One such example is the elastic property.

  4. Opto-Acoustical Imaging • Acoustic waves can be generated and detected using optical methods. • Size limitations of conventional piezoelectrical materials can be overcome using laser techniques. • Sensitivity and efficiency are critical issues.

  5. Optical Generation of Acoustic Waves (I) • Absorption of optical energy produces thermoelastic waves. • A membrane with proper thermoelastic properties can be used to transmit acoustic waves.

  6. Optical Generation of Acoustic Waves (II) • Optical absorption can be viewed as a contrast mechanism (i.e., different tissues have different absorption coefficient, therefore produce acoustic waves of different amplitudes). • Detection of such signals is still determined by inherent acoustic properties.

  7. Optical Detection of Acoustic Waves • Movement of a surface due to acoustic waves can be measured by using optical interference methods. • Size of such detectors is determined by the laser spot size. • Laser spot size can be a few microns, thus acoustic imaging up to 100MHz is possible. • Remote detection.

  8. High Frequency Opto-Acoustic Imaging • Opto-acoustic phased array at very high frequency (>=100MHz). • Resolution at a few microns. • Rapid scanning. • Synthetic aperture imaging. • Compact.

  9. Opto-Acoustical Imaging of Absorption Coefficient • Rapid growing cancer cells often need extra blood supply. • High blood content is related to high optical absorption coefficient. • High optical contrast can be combined with low acoustic scattering and attenuation.

  10. Basics of Laser Operations • Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation: a method to generate high power, (almost) single frequency radiation with wavelength ranging from 200nm to 10mm. • Visible light is from 400 to 700 nm.

  11. Output beam Lasing medium Fully reflecting mirror Partially transmitting mirror Basics of Laser Operations • Two basic components: a resonator (cavity) and a gain medium (pump). • Resonator: cavity length is half wavelength.

  12. E2 Lasing transition Pump E1 E0 Basics of Laser Operations • Two basic components: a resonator (cavity) and a gain medium (pump). • The gain medium can be gas, liquid or solid. It provides stimulated emission.

  13. Characteristics of Laser • Monochromaticity. • Coherence. • Directionality. • High intensity.

  14. High Frequency Ultrasound Imaging Using Optical Arrays

  15. Ultrasonic Array Imaging • Benefits: • Dynamic steering and focusing. • Adaptive image formation. • Requirements: • Element spacing at l/2. • Large numerical aperture. • Wide bandwidth.

  16. High Frequency Ultrasonic Array Imaging (100MHz or greater) • Complications: • Element spacing is 7.5mm at 100MHz. • Acoustic matching. • Electrical contact. • Acoustic and electrical isolation. • Interconnection.

  17. High Frequency Ultrasonic Imaging Using Optical Arrays • Generation: instantaneous absorption ↑ temperature change ↑ stress ↑ acoustic wave. • Detection: • Confocal Fabry-Perot interferometer. • Ultrasonic motion ↑ phase modulation ↑ Doppler shift.

  18. High Frequency Ultrasonic Imaging Using Optical Arrays • Precise control of position and size. • Synthetic aperture with rapid scanning. • Element size and spacing at the order of a few mm’s.

  19. High Frequency Ultrasonic Imaging Using Optical Arrays • Large bandwidth (both transmit and receive). • Transmission using fibers (low loss and high isolation). • Non-contact and remote inspection.

  20. Detection System Set-up

  21. Image Formation • Synthetic Aperture. • 1D or 2D aperture. • Image plane is defined by scanning of the laser beam. • Side-scattering vs. back-scattering.

  22. Wire Images Using a 1D Array

  23. Wire Images Using a 1D Array

  24. Cyst Images Using a 2D Array

  25. Cyst Images Using a 2D Array

  26. Optical Biopsy Probe

  27. Discussion • Optical generation of acoustic waves. • Improved receive sensitivity by active optic detection (displacement changes the laser cavity length). • Higher frequencies.

  28. Sensitivity of Laser Opto-Acoustic Imaging in Detection of Small Deeply Embedded Tumors

  29. Motivation • Develop an imaging technique for low contrast, small tumors. • Optical contrast mechanism (between normal tissue and tumor): • Absorption: blood content, porphyrins. • Scattering: micro-structures.

  30. Advantages • High optical contrast in the NIR range. • Low acoustic scattering and attenuation. • Fig. 1.

  31. Thermo-elastic pressure waves • Absorption -> Temperature rise -> Pressure rise. • Under the condition of temporal stress confinement, i.e., insignificant stress relaxation during laser pulse. • t<d/cs. • Half-wavelength resonator.

  32. Materials and Methods • Fig. 2. • Q-switched Nd:YAG laser: • l=1064 nm. • 1/e level 14 ns. • 0.2 J/cm2 (ANSI 0.1-0.2). • PVDF 5MHz bandwidth transducer, lithium-niobate 100MHz transducer (?).

  33. Materials and Methods • Breast phantom 1: • Normal tissue: gelatin+polystyrene spheres (900nm) or milk for scattering. • Tumors: bovine hemoglobin, 2-6mm. • Breast phantom2: • Bovine liver (3mmX2mmX0.6mm). • Placed between chicken breast.

  34. Results • Fig 4. To Fig. 6. • Fig. 7 to Fig. 8: Simulations based on existing measurements (2mm sphere at 60mm depth). • Wavelet transform for noise reduction.

  35. Complications • Acoustic attenuation not present in gelatin phantoms: • Typically 0.5dB/cm/MHz. • The smaller the tumor, the higher the attenuation. • Tissue inhomogeneities exist in breast tissue. • Receiver center frequency and bandwidth. • Lateral resolution vs. axial resolution.

  36. Depth Profiling of Absorbing Soft Materials Using Photoacoustic Methods

  37. Motivation • Characterize absorbing properties and detect boundaries of layered absorbing materials, such as skin. • Acoustic waves are generated by rapid deposition of laser energy into optically absorbing materials – thermoelastic effects. • Pressure(R) -> Absorption Coefficient(R).

  38. Materials Under Investigation • India Ink (photo-stable absorber) in water solutions and acrylamide gels. • India-ink stained biomaterials. • Layered absorbing media using acrylamide gel.

  39. Theory • Thermoelastic process: stress confinement. (eq.1) • Highly attenuating materials: Beer’s law. Optical scattering, acoustic attenuation are ignored. (eq.2) • Near field condition for plane wave assumption. (eq.3) • Fig.1 and Fig. 2.

  40. Materials and Methods • Fig. 3. • Laser spot size: 3-5mm. • Laser radiant exposure: 0.2-1.2 J/cm2. • Lithium niobate transducer protected by a quartz window (800ns delay).

  41. Materials and Methods • Calibration using known concentration of India ink in solution (calibration factor mV/bar). • India ink with absorption coefficient 2650cm-1 was used to make absorbing solutions in the range from 15 to 188cm-1.

  42. Materials and Methods • Acrylamide gels were used to create layers of absorbers as thin as 90mm. • Porcine aorta was processed such that only the elastin layer was used. • The intimal surface was stained by India ink. The opposite surface was in contact with the piezoelectric transducer.

  43. Materials and Methods • Fig. 4. • Determination of absorption coefficient based on Beer’s law. Eqs. 7-11.

  44. Results • Fig. 5 – Fig. 11.

  45. Discussion • Gel layer resolution is affected by acoustic attenuation and transducer bandwidth. • Stain diffusion of elastin biomaterial. Eq. 13. • The scattering coefficient may not be ignored in practice. • Potential application: laser-tissue welding (measuring the chromophore deposition and temperature profile).

More Related