Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology
Volume 33, Issue 2 , Pages 263-269, February 2007

Bubble-based acoustic radiation force using chirp insonation to reduce standing wave effects

Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

Received 23 February 2006; received in revised form 18 July 2006; accepted 27 July 2006. published online 16 December 2006.

Abstract 

Bubble-based acoustic radiation force can measure local viscoelastic properties of tissue. High intensity acoustic waves applied to laser-generated bubbles induce displacements inversely proportional to local Young’s modulus. In certain instances, long pulse durations are desirable but are susceptible to standing wave artifacts, which corrupt displacement measurements. Chirp pulse acoustic radiation force was investigated as a method to reduce standing wave artifacts. Chirp pulses with linear frequency sweep magnitudes of 100, 200 and 300 kHz centered around 1.5 MHz were applied to glass beads within gelatin phantoms and laser-generated bubbles within porcine lenses. The ultrasound transducer was translated axially to vary standing wave conditions, while comparing displacements using chirp pulses and 1.5 MHz tone burst pulses of the same duration and peak rarefactional pressure. Results demonstrated significant reduction in standing wave effects using chirp pulses, with displacement proportional to acoustic intensity and bubble size. (E-mail: terpeldi@umich.edu)

Key Words: Acoustic radiation force, Laser-induced optical breakdown, Microbubble, chirp, Standing waves

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PII: S0301-5629(06)01781-9

doi:10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2006.07.039

Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology
Volume 33, Issue 2 , Pages 263-269, February 2007