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Any device that coverts one form of energy into another |
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Process by which electrical energy from the system is converted into sound |
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Process by which the reflected sound pulse is converted into electricity |
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The property of certain materials to create a voltage when they are mechanically deformed or when pressure is applied |
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Reverse Piezoelectric Effect |
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Piezoelectric materials change shape when a voltage is applied to them |
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Materials that convert sound into electricity and vice versa
Natural: quartz, rochelle salts, tourmaline
Synthetic: barium titanate, lead metaniobate, lead titanate, lead zirconate titate (PZT) |
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Lead Zirconate Titanate (PZT) |
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A common ultrasound transducer
AKA ceramic AKA active element AKA crystal
Loses piezoelectricity if heated about Curie point of 360°C (680°F) - why we cannot sterilize transducers with heat
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Case
Electrical Shield
Acoustic Insulator
Wire
Matching Layer
Active Element
Damping Element/Backing Material
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Cylindrical tube that protects the internal components from damage
Insulates the patient from shock
Constructed of metal or plastic |
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Helps prevent electrical noise from entering the transducer |
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Prevents vibrations in the case from causing voltage in the PZT |
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Provides electrical connection between the crystal and system
Active element or crystal must have electrical contact |
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Increases the efficiency of sound energy transfer between the active element and the body
Positioned in front of the crystal; protects the active element
The portion of the probe in contact with the skin; evens out impedance between crystal and skin
1/4 wavelength thick
Impedance: PZT > matching layer > gel > skin
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The piezoelectric crystal shaped like a coin
1/2 wavelength thick
Characteristics of the sound beam are related to the characteristics of the crystal |
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Damping Element
AKA Backing Material |
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Definition
Bonded to active element to reduce the "ringing" of PZT by restricting the extent of deformation
Commonly made of epoxy resin impregnated with tungsten
Dampens the emitted sound pulse to shorten duration and length -> high sound absorption with acoustic impedance similar to PZT
Enhances axial resolution to increase image accuracy
Continuous wave transducers to do not require damping material
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The minimal distance two structures must be separated in order for the system to resolve them as separate structures and produce two distinct echoes on the u/s image displayed on the system monitor
Measure the system's ability to resolve two structures very close together that are parallel to the sound beam's main axis |
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Cons of Using Damping Material |
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Definition
Decreased sensitivity: reduces vibration during reception and is less responsive to minute reflectors (less able to convert low-level sound reflections into meaningful electrical signals)
Wide bandwidth: increases the range of frequencies in the pulse
Low quality factor |
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The range of frequencies in a pulse
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The main frequency emitted by the transducer
AKA center AKA primary AKA natural frequency |
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Unitless number representing the degree of damping; inversely related to bandwidth
Q = resonant frequency ÷ bandwidth (will be < 1)
Low = more damping
High = less damping |
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Key Things to Know About Imaging Transducers |
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Definition
Dampening limits ringing
Short pulse length and duration
Wide bandwidth aka broadband
Low Q
Low sensitivity
Improved axial resolution |
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Continuous Wave Transducers |
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Definition
Sound is always being produced
Electrical frequency = acoustic frequency
Does not produce image
No backing material = narrow bandwidth pulses
Therapeutic ultrasound or continuous wave Doppler |
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Definition
Creates short duration electrical spike that excites PZT
Capable of producing images
Produce wide bandwidth aka broadband pulses
Frequency determined by properties of the crystal:
- Propagation speed (directly related) -- 4-6 mm/μs
- Thickness (inversely related) -- 0.2-1 mm
Designed with varying thicknesses of crystal to have varying frequencies
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MHz = speed of crystal (mm/μs) ÷ 2*thickness (mm) |
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