Developing and Testing Phased Array Ultrasonic Transducers
Developing and Testing Phased Array Ultrasonic Transducers
Developing and Testing Phased Array Ultrasonic Transducers
Pääkeilan kulman
puolikas
2 J1 k a sin
2
k a
p z p 0
2 z k a sin
How to design acoustic Arrays
• Aperture theory states that observed radiation
(or sensitivity) pattern is the square of the
Hankel transform of the convolution of the
source and aperture functions. This is nice but…
• Computers are powerfull for number crunching.
10^9 Floating point operations takes only few
seconds.
• Mr.Hygens lived 200 years before Mr.Hankel.
Hygens principle is very straitforward to apply
numerically.
Predicting of the Trancducer Array
Radiation pattern
• Brute force method was implemented
• Direct apply of Huygens principle by numerical
means
• No Far field approximation is necessary.
• Trancducer obey Reciprocal principle. The same
analysis is valid for Receiver sensivity pattern
Numerical calculation of the
trancducer radiation pattern
TX-Rx
(x,y)
R0 Piezo Array
y
Image
Plane
Rn
x
Area
i t R n x y
1
Intens ( x y ) e
Rn
Area
Elliptical Resonator. Cross section
of Y direction (Narrow)
3
1500
1.27510
1350
1200
1050
900
Amp ( x y ) 750
600
450
300
150
0 0
6 4.8 3.6 2.4 1.2 0 1.2 2.4 3.6 4.8 6
5 y 5
Elliptical Resonator. Crosscut of X
direction (wide)
3
1500
1.27510
1350
1200
1050
900
Amp ( x y ) 750
600
450
300
150
0 0
6 4.8 3.6 2.4 1.2 0 1.2 2.4 3.6 4.8 6
5 x 5
Analysis of a Commerial four element Piezo
pattern. Four elements. Y - crosscut
vaihe korkeus
i i
0
0 deg 25 mm 1
0 deg 15 mm
Amp
0 deg 5 mm 1 Sarake 0
0 deg 5 mm 1
0 deg 15 mm 1
0 deg 25 mm
0
Lineaarinen asteikko
1
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
Intens( y )
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
10 8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8 10
y
Improved version. Six radiator
elements
vaihe korkeus
i i
1
0 deg 25 mm 1
0 deg 15 mm
Amp
0 deg 5 mm 1 Sarake 1
0 deg 5 mm 1
0 deg 15 mm 1
0 deg 25 mm
1
Lineaarinen asteikko
1
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
Intens( y )
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
10 8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8 10
y
Final version. Side Lobes eliminated
vaihe korkeus
i i
1
0 deg 25 mm 2
0 deg 15 mm
Amp
0 deg 5 mm 3 Sarake 3
0 deg 5 mm 3
0 deg 15 mm 2
0 deg 25 mm
1
Lineaarinen asteikko
1
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
Intens( y )
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
10 8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8 10
y
dB Scaled intensity crosscut
dB-asteikko
0 0
6
12
18
24
20 log( Intens( y ) )
30
36
42
48
60 54
60
10 8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8 10
10 y 10
An early test setup. Two different type
material molded in Epoxy resin
Acusto-electrical coupling model of
Transmitter-Receiver equivalent circuit
Non-optimized TX-RX combination
15mV
10mV
5mV
0V
80KHz 90KHz 100KHz 110KHz 120KHz 130KHz 140KHz 150KHz
V(R3:2)
Frequency
Matched response, 8 dB
improvement of sensitivity
40mV
30mV
20mV
10mV
0V
80KHz 90KHz 100KHz 110KHz 120KHz 130KHz 140KHz 150KHz
V(R3:2)
Frequency
Time domain simulation of a burst
4.0V
2.0V
0V
-2.0V
-4.0V
0s 50us 100us 150us 200us 250us 300us
V(R3:2)
Time
Burst response after optimizing
8.0V
4.0V
0V
-4.0V
-8.0V
0s 50us 100us 150us 200us 250us 300us
V(R3:2)
Time
Modelling of acoustic Impedance matching
layers with transmission line analog circuits
Magnesium and Epoxy
R1 T1 T2 R2
32 1.48
V1 V
9.3V
Z0 = 10 Z0 = 3.1
TD = 2.13675u TD = 2.13675u
0 0 0 0 0 0
Epoxy
R3 T3 R4
32 1.48
V2 Ideal V
9.3V
Z0 = 3.1
TD = 2.13675u
0 0 0 0
Ideal
R30 T30 R50
32 1.48
V80 V
9.3V
Z0 = 6.881860214
TD = 2.13675u
0 0 0 0
Matching of Acoustic impedance
between piezo ceramics and water
Simulation results of Trancducer with two Quarter-
Lamda matching Layers