| Literature DB >> 26627809 |
Jean-Luc Robert1, Ramon Erkamp1, Sanghamithra Korukonda1, François Vignon1, Emil Radulescu1.
Abstract
In ultrasound imaging, an array of elements is used to image a medium. If part of the array is blocked by an obstacle, or if the array is made from several sub-arrays separated by a gap, grating lobes appear and the image is degraded. The grating lobes are caused by missing spatial frequencies, corresponding to the blocked or non-existing elements. However, in an active imaging system, where elements are used both for transmitting and receiving, the round trip signal is redundant: different pairs of transmit and receive elements carry similar information. It is shown here that, if the gaps are smaller than the active sub-apertures, this redundancy can be used to compensate for the missing signals and recover full resolution. Three algorithms are proposed: one is based on a synthetic aperture method, a second one uses dual-apodization beamforming, and the third one is a radio frequency (RF) data based deconvolution. The algorithms are evaluated on simulated and experimental data sets. An application could be imaging through ribs with a large aperture.Year: 2015 PMID: 26627809 DOI: 10.1121/1.4934952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Acoust Soc Am ISSN: 0001-4966 Impact factor: 1.840