Magnetic tracking systems are used in variety of applications, for example in image guided medical applications, radiation therapy (e.g. tumor tracking), other medical diagnostic and therapeutic devices, ergonomics and human motion research, animation (e.g. motion capture), and industrial measuring. The presence of conductive objects in the vicinity of the magnetic tracking system can degrade the performance of the system. The eddy currents induced within a conductive object can disturb the position indication of a sensor and result in inaccurate position and/or orientation information.
In one aspect of the invention, a distortion compensation method includes determining an undisturbed phase for at least one of a first position indication signal and a second position indication signal. The method includes determining an undisturbed ratio that relates the amplitude of the first position indication signal at a first frequency to the amplitude of the second position indication signal at a second frequency. The method also includes determining a disturbed amplitude of the position indication signal and adjusting a position indication based on the disturbed amplitude and phase, the undisturbed amplitude ratio, and the undisturbed phase. The method further comprises determining a relationship between the eddy current phase of the first position indication signal and the second position indication signal.
In another aspect of the invention, a method for detecting the presence of conductive objects includes determining a characteristic frequency function of a magnetic tracking system and measuring a disturbed frequency function. The method also includes calculating a chi-squared value based on the characteristic undisturbed frequency function and the disturbed frequency function and monitoring the chi-squared value to detect changes indicating the presence of a conductive object.
In a further aspect of the invention, a method includes measuring characteristics of a conductive object and determining an eddy current phase based on the characterization. The method also includes measuring a disturbed amplitude and calculating an undisturbed (i.e. corrected) amplitude based on the eddy current phase, an undisturbed sensor phase, and the disturbed amplitude.
Embodiments of the above aspects can include one or more of the following features.
A second undisturbed ratio can be determined that relates the amplitude of either of the first and the second position indication signals to the amplitude of a third position indication signal at a third frequency. A relationship between the eddy current phases of either the first or second position indication signal and the third position indication signal can be determined and the position indication can be adjusted.
The first frequency can be a superior harmonic of the second position indication signal and the second frequency can be a subordinate harmonic of the first position indication signal. For example, the superior harmonic can be the fundamental frequency and the subordinate harmonic can be the third harmonic. In some embodiments, the first frequency is less than the second frequency. The first frequency and the second frequency can be harmonically related. Multiple frequencies can be generated by a chirped waveform, for example. Other aspects of the invention can include receiving from a sensor the real and imaginary components of the first and second position indication signals.
The distortion compensation method can be repeated for a plurality of position indication signals. The method can be used for detecting the presence of eddy currents in a conductive object. Detecting the presence of an eddy current can include monitoring a ratio of the amplitude of the first position indication signal and the amplitude of the second position indication signal. In another example, detecting the presence of an eddy current can include detecting a change in the undisturbed phase. In another example, detecting the presence of an eddy current can include detecting changes in characteristics of undisturbed real and imaginary components of a position indication signal.
Determining the undisturbed phase can include measuring asymptotic phase values and using the asymptotic phase values to calculate the undisturbed phase. Determining the undisturbed phase can alternately or in addition include iteratively calculating phase values and adjusting an asymptotic phase value. Calculating the eddy current phase can include using a numerical method to solve a set of equations or using a closed form solution to solve a set of equations.
In some examples, the method can include monitoring the chi-squared value for a plurality of position indication signals. The method can also include setting thresholds for the chi-squared value to indicate different levels of distortion. Detecting a change in the chi-squared value of a position indication signal can indicate the presence of conductive objects. The detection of a change in a chi-squared value at a particular frequency range (e.g., a mid-frequency range, a low-frequency range, or a high-frequency range) can indicate the presence of a particular type of conductive object.
Among other advantages, the eddy current compensation provides a real-time determination of the eddy current phase and amplitude. The method provides compensation for a position indication to account for the eddy current generated by a conductive object.
Among other advantages, in some embodiments, the use of multiple field generator coils provides the advantage of increased sensitivity and redundancy. The presence of conductive objects can cause a signal disturbance due to coupling to one or more of the field generator and/or sensor coils.
Referring to
In order to accurately provide a position indication, the magnetic tracking system includes a field generator 12 that generates an input signal having two or more frequency components. The lowest of these frequency components is termed the fundamental frequency. For example, a typical fundamental frequency might be 1000 Hz. Additional frequency components could be harmonics of the fundamental frequency, or could be other non-harmonic frequencies. Examples of waveforms input by the signal input include a square wave, a triangular wave, a sawtooth wave (e.g. ramp), a sinusoidal wave, a chirped wave, a multiple frequency waveform of any kind, or any combination of these.
Properties of the eddy currents generated by the presence of conductive objects near the magnetic tracking system 14 depend on the excitation frequency and the coupling of the transmitted AC magnetic field. A computer system 18 or other computational unit analyzes the position indication signals generated at multiple frequencies. Based on the position indication signals, computer system 18 calculates the eddy current phase and amplitude and compensates the position indication to remove the measurement error induced by the eddy current.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
The real and imaginary components of the disturbed/total signal can be expressed as follows:
x=ReT=AU cos(φU)+AE cos(φU+φE) (1)
y=ImT=AU sin(φU)+AE sin(φU+φE) (2)
Using the real and imaginary components of the disturbed/total signal, a chi-squared (χ2) value can be calculated. To calculate a chi-squared value, equation (1) is solved for AE and substituted into equation (2). The chi-squared value is defined as follows:
In equation (3) and equation (4), the measurement uncertainties σj have been set to σ for simplicity and N is the total number of points collected. In order to determine the eddy current, the derivative of the chi-squared value is calculated and used to determine a minimizing condition as shown in equations (5-9).
Substituting the χ2 equation, taking the derivative, and solving for tan(φU+φE) results in the equation below:
Since magnetic tracking systems often include multiple (e.g., 4, 8, 10) field generator coils, it may be advantageous to calculate φE using data gathered simultaneously from the multiple coils. However, when data is gathered from multiple coils, a closed form solution as shown above may not exist. If a closed form solution does not exist (or is not readily known), the equations can be solved using a numerical method. For example, the equations could be solved using the Levenberg-Marquardt method.
As was the case in the above example, for simple objects the eddy current phase (φE) is a constant. However, for more complex objects the eddy current phase (φE) may not be constant. The eddy current phase (φE) for complex objects often varies depending on the position and the orientation of the distorter. In situations where the eddy current phase varies, the system utilizes a ratio of eddy current phases at different frequencies, as described below in equations (10-14).
The eddy current phase (φE) relative to the sensor phase can be written in terms of the inductance and resistance of the distorting object. The inductance and resistance of an object are material constants and do not generally depend on the frequency. The eddy current phase can be defined as follows:
where ω is the angular frequency (i.e., ω=2πf). The eddy current phase of a given harmonic frequency can be related to the eddy current phase of the fundamental frequency (or another harmonic) in terms of the harmonic index, where the harmonic index (i) equals 1, 2, 3, . . . , N. The eddy current phase as a function of the harmonic is as follows:
where the angular frequency of the harmonic is defined as the harmonic index multiplied by the fundamental harmonic value or
ωi=iω1. (12)
The eddy current phase of higher order harmonics can be related to the eddy current phase of the first harmonic using the following ratio:
This expression is confirmed experimentally as shown in
The ratio relating the eddy current phases of two signals can be further generalized to any pair of harmonic or non-harmonic frequencies. This continuous form of κ can be normalized to a particular frequency ωn and written as follows:
This generalization is confirmed experimentally as shown in
The value of κ(ω) is used when solving a set of equations for two disturbed phasors. In the example that follows, the compensation procedure uses the phasors for the first and third harmonic. However, the theory applies to any pair or set of frequencies. The real and imaginary components of the fundamental frequency (first harmonic) are as follows:
ReT1=AT1 cos(φT1)=AU1 cos(φU1)+AE1 cos(φU1+φE1) (15)
ImT1=AT1 sin(φT1)=AU1 sin(φU1)+AE1 sin(φU1+φE1) (16)
The real and imaginary components of the third harmonic are as follows:
ReT3=AT3 cos(φT3)=AU3 cos(φU3)+AE3 cos(φU3+φE3) (17)
ImT3=AT3 sin(φT3)=AU3 sin(φU3)+AE3 sin(φU3+φE3) (18)
The left hand side of each expression (equation (15-18)) is the total sensor signal at a given position and orientation.
From the above expressions, in order to perform compensation, the undisturbed phase of each sensor signal must be input. It is generally assumed in the literature that φUi is a constant throughout the measurement volume. The undisturbed phase, however, can be a function of sensor position and orientation (pose). For example, sensor poses for which the signal amplitude is small have different phase values than the “expected” large amplitude values (also referred to as asymptotic phase values). Therefore, the undisturbed phase is known to high precision if both the sensor pose is known and a model for the phase exists.
If the sensor pose is not known, an iterative process allows the compensation process to determine the actual undisturbed phase starting with asymptotic phase values, for large sensor signals. The solution for φUi at each iteration can be used as a phase input for the eddy current compensation algorithm. The asymptotic values of the undisturbed phases can be determined at the time of system characterization. In a first order compensation scheme only the asymptotic φUi values are used.
Referring to
Given that AT and φT are the total amplitude and phase of a sensor signal, and given that φU is a quantity that can be determined at the time of characterization of a system, the undisturbed amplitude (i.e. corrected) AU can be determined. The undisturbed phase may drift or vary during the lifetime of a system, and can be re-determined or refined real-time using an iterative process.
The value of an undisturbed ratio Fi=Aui/Au1, where i=1, 3, 5, . . . for the present discussion, is also needed to perform a compensation of the signal. For some waveforms such as a square wave or a triangular wave, the values of Fi can be determined using Fourier analysis. In general, however, sensor waveforms are complex and the Fi values must be determined at the time of system characterization. It is assumed that the Fi values do not depend on sensor position and/or orientation (this can be verified at the time of system characterization). In addition to the measured Fi value, the value of κi calculated using equation (13) (or κ(ω) using equation (14)), expresses the eddy current phase of higher order harmonics in terms of the eddy current phase of the first harmonic.
With the generalizations described above, a set of four equations (e.g., equations (15-18)) can be written in terms of four unknowns, namely: AU1, AE1, AE3, and φE1. A numerical method can be used to solve this system of equations. In one example, the data used as input to the model includes the real and imaginary components of the first and third harmonics of the total sensor signal.
In
In
An alternative method of solving the system of equations presented in equation (15) through equation (18) is to work explicitly with the real and imaginary components of the sensor signals
as follows:
A numerical method can be used to solve the above identified set of equations, however, a closed form solution does exist and may be used. For example, in the closed form solution, the amplitude of the fundamental harmonic AU1 can be represented as:
While in the above examples harmonic frequencies have been used to perform signal compensation, the process can be generalized to use any pair of frequencies (harmonic or non-harmonic frequencies).
In addition to providing compensation to a position indication signal for the presence of conductive objects near the magnetic tracking system as described above, the presence of conductive objects can also be detected by monitoring the ratio AT3/AT1 and noting deviations from F3.
Alternatively, to detect the presence of conductive objects one can monitor deviations from φUi for large amplitude signals and regard phase changes to be associated with the presence of conductive objects. In another method, the real and imaginary components at each frequency are monitored. Any number of mathematical techniques can then be used to differentiate between real and imaginary components in undisturbed and disturbed environments.
As described above, the κ can be generalized as shown in equation (14), reproduced to follow:
This can be rewritten as:
where the indices i=1, . . . , N and j=1, . . . , N label the frequencies for which sensor amplitudes have been measured, and N is the total number of frequencies for which measurements are performed. These indices can be any frequency and are not necessarily harmonic labels. The exact nature of the frequency spectrum depends on the hardware of the system and on the waveform driving the field generator coils. The jth frequency is used as a “normalization” frequency (labeled as 1 in equation (13) for example).
Equation (27) can also be generalized to any pair of frequencies as follows:
for all i. Although equation (30) is explicitly written for pairs of frequencies, any number of relevant mathematical formulations that are stated in terms of the real and imaginary values can be used for compensation. For example, for continuous frequency functions, a complex polynomial can be fit to a characteristic undisturbed sensor signal. Changes in the expected polynomial coefficients of subsequent measurements can be used to indicate the presence of conductive objects. Adjustments to these polynomial coefficients can then be made to compensate for any distortions of a disturbed frequency function. A proper propagation of errors for the real and imaginary values of equations (30) and (31) can also be performed to account for small amplitude signals and measurement uncertainties.
Given the above equations, the signal of the jth frequency can be corrected based on the real and imaginary values of the ith frequency. Each jth frequency therefore has N−1 corrected values, from which one can calculate a weighted average amplitude, Sj, (or real and imaginary components) and standard deviation ΔSj (e.g. uncertainty).
The next step in this compensation procedure is to calculate a χ2 value as follows:
where ‘a’ is the amplitude used in a position fit and
the desired amplitude ‘a’ can be determined as follows:
The χ2 value can also be used to detect the presence of conductive objects. This is done by calculating ‘a’ for a set of frequency amplitudes (or real and imaginary signal components) that have not been corrected. The resulting value of ‘a’ is then substituted into equation (32) and a χ2 value is computed.
Referring to
Referring to
Multiple field generator coils (e.g., 2, 4, 8, 12 . . . ) may be included in a detection scheme. Multiple coils provide the advantage of increased sensitivity and redundancy. The presence of conductive objects can cause a signal disturbance due to coupling to one or more of the field generator and/or sensor coils.
The χ2 value can also be used to aid in “tuning” the system to a particular frequency range such that sensitivity to different types of conductive objects is obtained. For example, stainless steel objects are often more easily detected in a mid-frequency range while aluminum objects are more easily detected in a low-frequency range. Other factors such as the geometry of the object can also affect the region of sensitivity. Once the region of sensitivity has been determined for a particular conductive object, equation (34) can be used in the less sensitive regions (e.g. low-frequency ranges) to obtain a value of ‘a’. The motivation for doing this comes from the realization that conductive objects can be modeled as low-pass R-L circuits (i.e. filters).
A number of embodiments of the invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
This application is a continuation application and claims priority under 35 USC §120 to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/824,846 filed on Apr. 15, 2004, (U.S. Pat. No. 7,783,441 to be issued on Aug. 24, 2010), which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/463,576 filed on Apr. 17, 2003, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110004430 A1 | Jan 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10824846 | Apr 2004 | US |
Child | 12861487 | US |