Paper
23 February 2010 A high-speed photoacoustic tomography system based on a commercial ultrasound and a custom transducer array
Xueding Wang, Jonathan Cannata, Derek DeBusschere, Changhong Hu, J. Brian Fowlkes, Paul Carson
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Building photoacoustic imaging systems by using stand-alone ultrasound (US) units makes it convenient to take advantage of the state-of-the-art ultrasonic technologies. However, the sometimes limited receiving sensitivity and the comparatively narrow bandwidth of commercial US probes with elements driving long cables may not be sufficient for high quality photoacoustic imaging. In this work, a high-speed photoacoustic tomography (PAT) system has been developed using a commercial US unit and a custom built 128-element PVDF transducer array. Since the US unit supports simultaneous signal acquisition from 64 parallel receive channels, PAT data for synthetic image formation from a 64 or 128 element array aperture can be acquired after a single or dual laser firing, respectively. The PVDF array provides satisfactory receiving sensitivity and uniquely broad detection bandwidth, which enables good image quality for tomographic photoacoustic imaging. A specially designed 128-channel preamplifier board that connects the preamps directly to the PVDF elements not only enables impedance matching but also further elevates the signal-to-noise ratio in detecting weak photoacoustic signals. To examine the performance of this imaging system, experiments on phantoms were conducted and the results were compared with those acquired with commercial US probes.
© (2010) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Xueding Wang, Jonathan Cannata, Derek DeBusschere, Changhong Hu, J. Brian Fowlkes, and Paul Carson "A high-speed photoacoustic tomography system based on a commercial ultrasound and a custom transducer array", Proc. SPIE 7564, Photons Plus Ultrasound: Imaging and Sensing 2010, 756424 (23 February 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.842666
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Cited by 7 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Ferroelectric polymers

Acquisition tracking and pointing

Imaging systems

Transducers

Signal detection

Ultrasonography

Photoacoustic spectroscopy

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