The present invention relates to an ultrasound probe and an ultrasound diagnostic device including the same.
In the medical field, ultrasound diagnostic devices are widely used. The ultrasound diagnostic device transmits an ultrasound wave into the organism and receives the ultrasound wave reflected in the organism. Then, based on the received ultrasound wave, image data indicating a tissue in the organism is generated and displayed on a display.
Examples of the image display mode of the ultrasound diagnostic device include a mode for displaying a two-dimensional image (tomographic image), and a mode for displaying a three-dimensional image. The former tomographic image is formed on the basis of frame data (two-dimensional ultrasound data) acquired by one-dimensional scanning of an ultrasound beam, and the latter three-dimensional image is formed based on volume data acquired by two-dimensional scanning of an ultrasound beam.
The ultrasound diagnostic device includes an ultrasound probe which transmits an ultrasound wave according to a given electric signal and outputs an electric signal corresponding to the received ultrasound wave. Examples of the ultrasound probe include an array type ultrasound probe allowing electrical scanning of an ultrasound beam. A plurality of vibration elements are arranged on the array type ultrasound probe. The transmission direction of the ultrasound wave is directed in a specific direction by adjusting the delay times of signals applied to respective vibration elements. By combining signals output from respective vibration elements in accordance with the received ultrasound wave while adjusting the delay times for respective signals, a received signal for the ultrasound wave arriving from the specific direction can be obtained. Accordingly, scanning of the ultrasound beam can be performed by changing the signal delay times for respective vibration elements.
In the case of a 1D array type ultrasound probe performing one-dimensional scanning, an ultrasound beam can be scanned within a scanning plane defined by the direction of vibration elements arranged in a line . Further, in the case of a 2D array type ultrasound probe performing two-dimensional scanning, vibration elements are arranged in a longitudinal direction and a lateral direction, and an ultrasound beam can be scanned in an oblique direction in addition to the longitudinal direction and the lateral direction.
Furthermore, in the case of a 1.5D array type ultrasound probe, vibration elements are arranged in a vertical direction and a horizontal direction as with the 2D array type ultrasound probe. Then, for each set of vibration elements arranged in the vertical direction, predetermined signal delay times are assigned to respective vibration elements arranged in the vertical direction, and an ultrasound beam can be scanned in the scanning plane defined thereby.
Incidentally, the following PTLs 1 and 2 describe an ultrasound probe in which a plurality of piezoelectric elements are arranged. An acoustic matching layer is laminated on a layer in which the piezoelectric elements are arranged.
PTL 1: Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2014-107853
PTL 2: Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 60-2242
An acoustic matching layer 2 usually includes two layers or three or more layers.
The bonding of respective layers requires strength for withstanding impact during separation processing. Weak bonding strength causes a decrease in the manufacturing yield of the ultrasound probe.
In the above-mentioned PTLs 1 and 2, sufficient consideration has not been made in order to achieve both acoustic impedance matching between the organism and the piezoelectric element layer and bonding strength between the layers configuring the ultrasound probe.
In light of the above-mentioned circumstances, an object of the present invention is to provide an ultrasound probe which maintains sufficient adhesion strength of layers configuring the ultrasound probe and matches the acoustic impedance of the organism to that of a piezoelectric element, and an ultrasound diagnostic device including the same.
In order to achieve the above object, the present invention provides an ultrasound probe including: a backing layer; a piezoelectric element layer; an acoustic matching layer; and an acoustic lens, the backing layer, the piezoelectric element layer, the acoustic matching layer, and the acoustic lens laminated in that order, wherein an adhesion layer containing vanadium glass is provided between the piezoelectric element layer and the acoustic matching layer.
In order to achieve the above object, the present invention provides an ultrasound diagnostic device including: a transmission beamformer for causing an ultrasound probe to generate a transmission signal at a timing required for forming a focus; a receiving beamformer for converting an ultrasound wave received by the ultrasound probe into an electric signal and subjecting the electric signal to temporal delay to obtain an ultrasound beam signal; a signal processing circuit for extracting a frequency component required for imaging from the ultrasound beam signal and subjecting the frequency component to detection-logarithmic compression in order to convert the frequency component into image luminance information, thereby obtaining an image signal on a scan line; a scan converter for converting the obtained image signal into a digital signal and subjecting all scan lines to work for storing the digital signal at a place corresponding to a position of a scan line in a frame memory to configure an image; and a monitor for displaying the image, wherein the ultrasound probe is the above-mentioned ultrasound probe according to the present invention.
The present invention can provide an ultrasound probe which maintains sufficient adhesion strength of layers configuring the ultrasound probe and matches the acoustic impedance of the organism to that of a piezoelectric element, and an ultrasound diagnostic device including the same. By matching the acoustic impedance of the organism to that of the piezoelectric element, it is possible to improve diagnostic performance (resolution performance, observation performance of a deep part) and shorten a diagnosis time. Further, by maintaining the sufficient adhesion strength of the layers, the manufacturing yield of the ultrasound probe can be improved.
Hereinafter, embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the drawings. However, the scope of the present invention is not limited to the following examples. In the following description, components having the same functions and configurations are given the same reference numerals, and the description once described will not be repeated after the second time.
In an ultrasound probe 100a according to the present example, lead zirconate titanate (hereinafter referred to as PZT) as a piezoelectric ceramic was used as a piezoelectric member configuring a piezoelectric element 6E. Vanadium glass was applied as an adhesive 14A in order that the acoustic impedance of an adhesion layer 14A adhering the piezoelectric element 6E to a first acoustic matching layer 2A which was an acoustic matching layer closest to the piezoelectric element 6E followed s a matching curve 13. The acoustic impedance of PZT is about 35 Mrayls, and the acoustic impedance of the vanadium glass is about 15 Mrayls. By using the above materials as the piezoelectric element 6E and the adhesion layer 14A, the acoustic impedances of the piezoelectric element 6E and the adhesion layer 14A can be made to follow the matching curve 13, which can reduce the attenuation of an ultrasound signal.
The difference in thermal expansion coefficient between the piezoelectric element 6E and the adhesion layer 14A is preferably as small as possible from the viewpoint of adhesion strength. In this respect, since the thermal expansion coefficient of PZT is 5 to 10 ppm/K and the thermal expansion coefficient of the vanadium glass is 7 to 9 ppm/K, the matching of the thermal expansion coefficients of both the materials is good and sufficient adhesion strength is obtained. The thermal expansion coefficient of the vanadium glass can be adjusted by the type and concentration of an additive component (various oxides or filler materials to be described later) to be added to the vanadium glass.
Considering the heat resistant temperature (unpolarizing temperature) of PZT, the softening point of the vanadium glass to be applied to the adhesion layer 14A is preferably 450° C. or less. The softening point of the vanadium glass can be adjusted by an additive (for example, P2O5). In the present example, low melting point glass (containing barium, phosphorus, and antimony as an additive element) having a softening point of 445° C. was used.
Here, the definition of the softening point of the present invention will be described below.
As shown in
The transition point Tg and the softening point Ts are values such as 373° C. and 445° C., and vanadium glass heated at a temperature in a range of the softening point to a working point can act as an adhesive.
The vanadium glass can be prepared by adding phosphorus (P) or the like as a vitrifying component to vanadium pentoxide (V2O5) to obtain a mixture and melting the mixture. The addition amount of V2O5 is preferably 20 to 70 vol %, and more preferably 40 to 60 vol %. The addition amount of V2O5 of less than 20 vol % provides an insufficient effect of the vanadium glass (matching of acoustic impedance and thermal expansion coefficient with those of the piezoelectric element 6E). The addition amount of V2O5 exceeding 70 vol % excessively increases the acoustic impedance. The acoustic impedance deviates from the matching curve 13. The addition amount of V2O5 exceeding 70 vol % causes voids of air generated in a material, which attenuates an acoustic signal itself, to decrease the resolution of the ultrasound probe.
The vanadium glass contains the above vanadium glass as a main component. The vanadium glass may contain various elements as additives if necessary. For example, the vanadium glass may contain phosphorus (P) which is a vitrifying component, antimony (Sb), barium (Ba), or iron (Fe) which is a water resistance improving component, manganese (Mn), tellurium (Te), sodium (Na), potassium (K), zinc (Zn), or tungsten (W) which is a glass stabilizing component, or the like.
The above elements can be added to the vanadium glass in forms of phosphorus pentoxide (P2O5), antimony trioxide (Sb2O3), barium oxide (BaO), iron (III) oxide (Fe2O3), manganese (II) oxide (MnO), manganese dioxide (MnO2) tellurium dioxide (TeO2), sodium oxide (Na2O), potassium oxide (K2O), ZnO (zinc oxide) and tungsten oxide (WO3) or the like.
In order to apply the vanadium glass on the piezoelectric element 6E, the vanadium glass is made paste. There is no particular limitation on a method of preparing the paste. For example, the paste can be prepared by mixing ethyl cellulose and diethylene glycol monobutyl ether acetate with the vanadium glass in a kneader, followed by performing a vacuum defoaming treatment.
The piezoelectric element 6E and the acoustic matching layer 2A can be bonded to each other by applying the paste on the piezoelectric element 6E, placing the acoustic matching layer 2A on the piezoelectric element 6E to form a laminate, and heating the laminate at a temperature of 450 to 500° C. for 15 minutes.
In the present example, after the piezoelectric member 6E and the first acoustic matching layer 2A are bonded with the adhesion layer 14A, a backing layer (not shown) is bonded to a lower portion of the piezoelectric element 6E, and the subsequent second acoustic matching layer 2B was bonded to an upper portion of the acoustic matching layer 2A to manufacture the ultrasound probe. For adhesion layers 11B to 11D, a conventional epoxy resin adhesive was used.
In the present example, the materials of respective acoustic matching layers were selected so that the acoustic impedance characteristics of respective layers were the acoustic impedance characteristics shown in
Examples of glasses having an acoustic impedance of about 15 Mrayls include Pb (lead)-based glass and Bi (bismuth)-based glass in addition to vanadium glass, but the use of the Pb-based glass is inappropriate as it is environmentally harmful. Since the Bi (bismuth)-based glass has a softening point of higher than 600° C. and a thermal expansion coefficient of 10 to 12 ppm, and the difference between the Bi (bismuth)-based glass and PZT is larger than the difference between the vanadium glass and PZT, the Bi (bismuth)-based glass is not preferable considering the heat resistance temperature of PZT and the bonding strength of the ultrasound probe.
The piezoelectric member 9 configuring the piezoelectric element 6E is not limited to the above-described PZT, and various piezoelectric materials can be used. For example, as an inorganic piezoelectric material, thin films made of quartz, piezoelectric ceramics such as PZT, (Pb, La) (Zr, Ti)Ox perovskite compound (PZLT), and piezoelectric single crystals such as lead niobate zirconate-lead titanate solid solution (PZN-PT), lead magnesium niobate-lead titanate solid solution (PMN-PT), lithium niobate (LiNbO3), lithium tantalate (LiTaO3), potassium niobate (KNbO3), zinc oxide (ZnO) and aluminum nitride (AlN) can be used. Examples of an organic piezoelectric material include polyvinylidene fluoride, polyvinylidene fluoride copolymers, polyvinylidene polyanide, vinylidene cyanide copolymers, odd nylons such as nylon 9 and nylon 11, aromatic nylons, alicyclic nylons, polylactic acid, polyhydroxycarboxylic acid such as polyhydroxybutyrate, cellulose derivatives, and polyurea. Further, a composite material including the inorganic piezoelectric material and the organic piezoelectric material in combination, or including the inorganic piezoelectric material and an organic polymer material in combination can also be used. The acoustic impedance of the piezoelectric material is about 20 to 40 Mrayls, and the thermal expansion coefficient is about 5 to 10 ppm/K which is the same as that of PZT. With respect to the heat resistance of the piezoelectric body, the adhesion treatment temperature (450 to 500° C.) of vanadium glass having a softening point of 450° C. or lower has no problem.
As the constituent materials of the acoustic matching layers 2A to 2C, aluminum (Al), aluminum alloys such as aluminum-magnesium (Al—Mg) alloys, magnesium alloys, glass, fused quartz, polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), polycarbonate (PC), acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene resins (ABC resins), acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene copolymerization synthetic resins (ABS resins), acrylonitrile-acrylic ester-styrene copolymerization synthetic resins (AAS resins), acrylonitrile-ethylene-propylene-diene-styrene copolymerization synthetic resins (AES resins), nylon (PA6, PA 6-6), polyphenylene oxide (PPO), polyphenylene sulfide (PPS, may contain a glass fiber), polyphenylene ether (PPE), polyetheretherketone (PEEK), polyamide imide (PAI), polyethylene terephthalate (PETP), epoxy resins, and urethane resins or the like can be used. Preferably, a molded product obtained by adding zinc oxide (ZnO), titanium oxide (TiO2). silica (SiO2), alumina (Al2O3), red iron oxide, ferrite, tungsten oxide (WO2), yttrium oxide (Y2O3), barium sulfate (BaSO4), tungsten (W), and molybdenum (Mo) or the like as a filler to a thermosetting resin such as an epoxy resin, and followed by molding can be applied.
An acoustic lens 1, a backing layer 4 and an electrode 5 are not particularly limited, and conventional materials can be used therefor. For the acoustic lens 1, silicone rubber or the like is mainly used. As the backing layer 4, an epoxy resin filled with metal powder, and rubber filled with filament powder, or the like are used. As the electrode 5, a gold electrode or the like is mainly used.
In example 1, the vanadium glass was applied only to the adhesion layer 14A between the piezoelectric member 6E and the first acoustic matching layer 2A. However, in the present example, an example in which vanadium glass is applied also to an adhesion layer 14B between a first acoustic matching layer 2A and a second acoustic matching layer 2B will be described with reference to
As described above, the acoustic impedance of the adhesion layer 14B can be adjusted not only by adjusting the additive of the vanadium glass but also by adding the filler material to the vanadium glass. The acoustic impedance can be adjusted by adjusting the addition amount of the filler material. As the filler material, alumina (Al2O3) and silica (SiO2) can be preferably used. Since alumina is heavier (has a larger mass number) than vanadium glass, the alumina is preferably added when the acoustic impedance is set to be larger than that of the vanadium glass . Since silica is lighter (has a smaller mass number) than the vanadium glass, the silica is preferably added when the acoustic impedance is set to be larger than that of the vanadium glass . Material cost can be reduced by adding the relatively inexpensive filler material in place of the vanadium glass.
A method of preparing the adhesion layer 14B to which the filler material is added is not particularly limited, but the adhesion layer 14B can be produced by, for example, adding a finely powdered filler material to finely powdered vanadium glass, followed by powder compacting.
A glass sheet (plate thickness: 100 μm) made of vanadium glass as a first acoustic matching layer 15A is inserted between a piezoelectric member 6E (PZT) and a second acoustic matching layer 2B, followed by bonding. The bonding was carried out by thinly applying a vanadium glass paste having the same composition as that of the glass sheet on the upper and lower surfaces of the acoustic matching layer 15A, and laminating the piezoelectric element 6E and the acoustic matching layer 2B, followed by firing.
Since the three layers can realized with one material (vanadium glass) in the present example, process cost can be reduced. In terms of the characteristics of the acoustic matching layer, the attenuation of the ultrasound signal in these layers was small, and the bonding strength could also be increased.
In order to apply vanadium glass to the acoustic matching layer 2B, it is necessary to lower the acoustic impedance to about 10 Mrayls. Therefore, by adding 40 vol % silica (SiO2) powder (average particle diameter: 10 μm) as a filler material to the vanadium glass, the acoustic impedance was reduced to about 10 Mrayls, to form an acoustic matching layer 15B. Since an acoustic matching layer 15A and the acoustic matching layer 15B which included the vanadium glass were bonded to each other, the acoustic matching layer 15A and the acoustic matching layer 15B could be bonded by firing at 450° C. or more in a state where flat surfaces of both the layers were exposed.
Since the four layers can be realized with the vanadium glass according to the present example, process cost can be reduced. In terms of the characteristics of the acoustic matching layer, the attenuation of the ultrasound signal in these layers was small, and the bonding strength could also be improved.
In the present example, the acoustic impedance was reduced to about 10 Mrayls by the addition of a filler material in the same manner as the method of the acoustic matching layer 15B of example 4, and a first acoustic matching layer 15C shown in
As shown in
In the present example, by using the ultrasound probes of examples 1 to 5 as the ultrasound probe 16, the acoustic impedance matching properties of respective layers configuring the ultrasound probe are improved, which can provide an ultrasound diagnostic device making it possible to improve diagnostic performance (resolution performance, deep part) and shorten a diagnosis time.
As described above, it was proved that the present invention can provide an ultrasound probe which maintains sufficient adhesion strength of respective layers configuring an ultrasound probe and matches the acoustic impedance of the organism to that of a piezoelectric element, and an ultrasound diagnostic device including the same.
The present invention is not limited to the above-described examples, and includes various modifications. For example, the above-described examples are described in detail for convenience of description and good understanding of the present invention, and thus the present invention is not limited to one including all the described configurations. In the present invention, it is possible to delete some of the configurations of embodiments and examples in the present specification, replace some of the configurations by the other configurations, and add the other configurations to some of the configurations.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2015-037602 | Feb 2015 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2016/052308 | 1/27/2016 | WO | 00 |