1. Microbubble Destruction by Dual-High-Frequency Ultrasound Excitation.
- Author
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Chih-Kuang Yeh, Shin-Yuan Su, and Che-Chou Shen
- Subjects
- *
TRANSMISSION of sound , *MICROBUBBLES , *ELECTRONIC excitation , *FREQUENCIES of oscillating systems , *HIGH pressure (Technology) , *EQUIPMENT & supplies - Abstract
The efficiency of high-frequency destruction of microbubble-based contrast agent is limited by the high pressure threshold, while the difficulty of spatially confining destruction induced by low-frequency excitation to a small sample volume potentially increases the risk of adverse bioeffects. The dual-frequency excitation method involves the simultaneous transmission of 2 high-frequency sinusoids to produce an envelope signal at the difference frequency. The envelope signal provides the low-frequency driving force for oscillating the contrast-agent microbubbles to improve destruction efficiency, while the destruction sample volume remains small due to the high frequency of the carrier signal. Experimental results indicate that dual-frequency excitation consistently results in destruction of contrast-agent microbubbles that is superior to using a tone burst at the carrier frequency. With 1 μs pulse length, the acoustic pressure threshold for 95% microbubble destruction markedly reduces from 2.6 MPa to 0.9 MPa when the dual-frequency pulse having envelope frequency of 3 MHz is utilized instead Of the 10-MHz sinusoidal pulse. In addition, the dual-frequency pulse having lower envelope frequency generally provides more efficient microbubble destruction, especially when the excitation waveform is long enough to guarantee sufficient envelope component. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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