Embodiments of the present invention relate generally to non-destructive testing and, more particularly, to ultrasound imaging.
Non-destructive testing devices can be used to inspect test objects to identify and analyse flaws and defects in the objects. An operator is able to move a probe at or near the surface of the test object in order to perform testing of both the object surface and its underlying structure. Non-destructive testing can be particularly useful in some industries such as aerospace, power generation, oil and gas recovery and refining where object testing must take place without removal of the object from surrounding structures and where hidden defects can be located that would otherwise not be identifiable through visual inspection.
One example of non-destructive testing is ultrasonic testing. When conducting ultrasonic testing, an ultrasonic pulse can be emitted from a probe and passed through a test object at the characteristic sound velocity of that particular material. The sound velocity of a given material depends mainly on the modulus of elasticity, temperature and density of the material. Application of an ultrasonic pulse to a test object causes an interaction between the ultrasonic pulse and the test object structure, with sound waves being reflected back to the probe. This corresponding evaluation of the signals received by the probe, namely the amplitude and time of flight of those signals can allow conclusions to be drawn as to the internal quality of the test object, such as cracks or corrosion without destroying it.
Generally, an ultrasonic testing system includes a probe for sending and receiving signals to and from a test object, a probe cable connecting the probe to an ultrasonic test unit and a screen or monitor for viewing test results. The ultrasonic test unit can include power supply components, signal generation, amplification and processing electronics and device controls used to operate the non-destructive testing device. Some ultrasonic test units can be connected to computers that control system operations as well as test results processing and display. Electric pulses can be generated by a transmitter and can be fed to the probe where they can be transformed into ultrasonic pulses by ultrasonic transducers.
Conventional ultrasound imaging systems have an array of ultrasonic transducer elements to scan a targeted object by transmitting a focused ultrasound beam towards the object. The reflected acoustic wave is received, beamformed and processed for display.
In conventional beamforming methods, the beam pattern profile is determined by the linear array structure. The elements interval was set less than half wavelength of the working frequency for the aim of avoiding the grating lobes. With less elements in an array structure, it suffers from the inherent drawback of having a wide main lobe and higher level side lobes at predictable angles. This produces lower quality imaging with low resolution caused by less focused response due to the wide main beam, and the low contrast between the true reflections and suffering from significant interference due to the high level unwanted side lobes. The level of the side lobes can be suppressed by using different shading windows, however, this widens the main lobe as the trade off price which, further decreases imaging resolution. Other methods have been considered for effectively reducing the effect of the side lobes, such as Minimum Variance method, but these generally involve a considerable level of calculation, resulting in increased costs and reduced speed.
Whilst the level of the side lobes can be reduced by using a larger array structure, this increases the cost, size and complexity of any such system.
It would be desirable to have a portable imaging system and corresponding method which produces a better quality output image with high contrast and acceptable good resolution without being excessively large, complex or expensive.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a method of operating an ultrasound imaging system having an array of transducer elements. The method comprises transmitting a plurality of ultrasound signals, each transmission using a different sub-aperture of the array, receiving a plurality of reflected ultrasound signals by a receive array corresponding to each sub-aperture transmission, calculating a coherency factor corresponding to the proportion of coherent energy in the received signals from each sub-aperture transmission and weighting the received output by the calculated coherency factor, and synthesizing all weighted outputs under all different sub-aperture transmissions.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, there is provided an ultrasound imaging system. The system comprises an array of transducer elements arranged to transmit a plurality of ultrasound signals using different sub-apertures of the array and to receive reflected ultrasound signals from a test piece for each of the sub-aperture transmissions, a controller arranged to calculate a coherency factor corresponding to the proportion of coherent energy in the received signal from each sub-aperture transmission and to weight the received signal by the calculated coherency factor, and an output for a providing an output signal to be provided to a display for displaying an image representing a structure of the test piece, wherein the controller is arranged to synthesize the coherency factor weighted received signals from each of the plurality of sub-aperture transmissions.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
a and 6b provide examples of imaging produced by a system with Synthetic Fixed Transmission Focusing with Dynamic Receive Focusing (STF-DRF) only, and adaptive synthetic STF-DRT imaging produced by an embodiment of the present invention;
a and 8b show further comparative examples of imaging by synthetic sub-aperture Synthetic Fixed Transmission Focusing with Dynamic Receive Focusing (STF-DTF) method and imaging by an embodiment of the present invention.
The coherency factor weighted received output from each sub-aperture transmission are then summed by synthesis unit 25 to provide a clearer final image such that any defects or flaws may be easily identified.
In practice, all of the delay 21, DAS beamforming 22, weighting 23, adaptive coherent factor determining 24 and synthesizing 25 are performed in a control processor such as a computer, microprocessor or by hard wired electronics.
The use of sub-apertures for firing pulses into the test object 3 while all elements (N elements 20) in the whole array 2″ are active for collecting the echoes increases one or more of the sensitivity, the penetration depth, and signal-to-noise ratio for each round-trip of data processing. For non-overlapping synthetic transmission, if M elements were contained by each defined single sub-array, then L number (L=N/M) of sub-arrays are used (where k=1:L) for the whole synthetic transmitting processing. The sub-arrays can also be defined by overlapping as well. By this means, the number of sub-arrays is increased and the apodization is introduced on the whole array by weighting the overlap elements.
In the stage of STF-DRF beamforming according to an embodiment of the presented invention, the kth group denoted as sub-aperture(k), is composed of multiple M transmitting elements. In each firing stage, M elements are active to incidence pulse into the test object 3 for each firing process and all elements (N elements) in the whole array are active for collecting the echoes stage. With L round-trips for the combined sub-array transmission using the whole array to receive, the data storage was decreased into L*N RF lines.
The array phase center may be predefined by the STF-DRF method, with the sub-array phase-centre defined at each related sub-array geometric center point. It was coordinated in lateral X and depth Z dimensions indicated as (XSub(k)
x
Sub(k)
TransFocus(α)
=R*sin(α)+xSub(k)
z
Sub(k)
TransFocus(α)
=R*cos(α)
where, R is the fixed transmission range, for kth sub-array, the pulse travels delay from ith transmission element to its focus point in the travel speed of sound Csound as:
while, for jth element receive element under kth sub-array firing, the echo time delay with dynamic focusing can be described as:
The Synthetic Transmit Focusing with dynamic receive Focusing (STF-DRF) beamform method presents the extracted echoes from steering α angle direction as:
The first summation (index by k) is for L sub-apertures synthetic virtual array transmission, the second summation (index by i) is for the summation of the transmitting beamforming, and the third summation (index by j) is for the receive beamforming.
An example of a method for determining the coherency factor according to an embodiment of the present invention will now be described.
For a transducer array 20 with a number of receiving transducer elements 20 given as NumRec and the number of sub-aperture beamforming transmitting sub-arrays being NumSub, the imaging intensity of each receiving pixel (x, z) in a beam steering scan area can be described as:
where Xsub j(t−τj(x, z)) is the timed received signal of the i-th receiving transducer element 20 in the receive phase array under Sub-th sub-aperture fixed focusing firing.
Each received echo signal collected through the receive array elements 20 would be timed and aligned at the focusing point (x,z) by applying, as shown by block 21 a corresponding time delay τj(x, z). All alignment signals are then summed as shown by block 22 and defined as the focusing intensity pixel (x,z) in the imaged image.
During the processing of the received echo signal as illustrated in
The coherency factor CFsub(x,z,t) for each sub-aperture transmission can be interpreted as a spatial coherency confidence ratio and is calculated as the proportion or percentage of coherent energy in the total non-coherent energy collected by the alignment focusing received signal from all transducer elements in the array 20′. In an embodiment, the value of the coherency factor is from 0 to 1 inclusive. The higher the value the higher the proportion of coherent energy is contained in the total collected signal energy, which indicates a higher confidence of good focusing quality or correctly aligned focused received signal. A lower value of the coherency factor indicates a poor focusing quality.
It has been found that applying the adaptive coherent measurement weighting strongly emphasises the in-phase signals, and increasing the adaptive coherent confidence ratio whilst significantly suppressing the out-of-phase signals provides enhanced contrast between the true reflections with significantly reduced interference, thus producing higher quality resultant images.
The resultant adaptive STF-DRF imaging intensity of a pixel (x,z) in a beam steering scan area when multiplied by the coherency factor for a received transducer elements 20 numbered as NumRec and with the number of sub-aperture transmitting arrays NumSub is defined as:
As explained above, this results in a higher quality resultant image with high contrast between the true reflections and suffering from much less interference.
The coherency factor weighted received signals 31 from each of the plurality of sub-aperture transmissions are then synthesized in synthesis unit 25 to provide the final image.
When using the testing system with test objects having different properties such as by being made of different materials, some parameters of the equations may be adjusted accordingly.
a shows resultant images produced by the stage of STF-DRF ultrasound imaging only and
a shows a comparison of an image of a test object with defects produced by an imaging method not using a coherency factor and
According to an embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a method of operating an ultrasound imaging system having an array of transducer elements. The method comprises transmitting a plurality of ultrasound signals each using a different sub-aperture of the array, receiving a reflected ultrasound signal corresponding to each sub-aperture transmission using the whole array or a sub-aperture of the array, calculating a coherency factor corresponding to the proportion of coherent energy in the received signals from each sub-aperture transmission and weighting the corresponding output signal by the calculated coherency factor, and synthesizing all the coherent factor weighted output signals under all different sub-aperture transmissions to produce the final imaging converted pixel intensity.
Transmitting a plurality of ultrasound signals using different sub-apertures of the array provides enhanced receiving sensitivity of the defects but without a large number of transmission channels. The use of the coherency factor enhances the suppression of the side lobes which enhances the beamforming performance to produce the imaging in enhanced qualities of clarity, contrast and resolution.
Each sub-aperture may use any splitting of transducer elements in the array. The sub-apertures may overlap or not overlap each other producing improved side lobe suppression and enhanced image contrast. In an embodiment, the whole array of transducer elements is used to receive the reflected ultrasound waves and produce each received focusing signal. In an embodiment, the coherency factor corresponds to the proportion of coherent energy in the total non-coherent energy of each received transducer signal.
The received signals may be focused such as by being beamformed.
In an embodiment, the coherency factor is in the range from 0 to 1 inclusive. A higher value is indicative of a higher proportion of coherent energy contained in the total collected signal energy and thus a higher confidence of good focusing quality.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, there is provided an ultrasound imaging system The system comprises an array of transducer elements arranged to transmit a plurality of ultrasound signals using different sub-apertures of the array and to receive reflected ultrasound signals from a test piece for each of the sub-aperture transmissions, a controller arranged to calculate a coherency factor corresponding to the proportion of coherent energy in the received signals from each sub-aperture transmission and to weight the received signal by the calculated coherency factor, synthetize all weighted outputs from the different sub-aperture transmissions, and an output for providing an output signal to be provided to a display for displaying an image representing a structure of the test piece.
Many variations may be made to the embodiments described above without departing from the scope of the present invention. For example, any number of sub-apertures of the array 20′ may be used and each of those sub-apertures may have any desired number of transducer elements 20. Embodiments of the present invention may be used to provide 3D beamforming imaging. Any type of array may be used such as a one dimensional or two dimensional array.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 11183566.6 | Sep 2011 | EP | regional |