Claims
- 1. Ultrasonic visualization head circuitry comprising:
- (a) a linear array of transducers, said array including n sub-arrays periodically arranged within said array such that for every transducer in each sub-array, the next transducer in that sub-array is the n.sup.th next transducer in said array;
- (b) n shift enable means for enabling a transducer in one of said sub-arrays, and for sequentially shifting the enabled transducer to the next transducer in said sub-array, each of said n shift enable means corresponding to each of said n sub-arrays;
- (c) mean shift means for sequentially activating shifts by said n shift enable means; said main shift means activating each of said shift enable means in a periodic fashion such that at any time the n transducers enabled by said shift enable means are adjacent; and
- (d) n pulse driver means for exciting enabled transducers in one of said sub-arrays; each of said pulse driver means corresponding to each of said sub-arrays.
- 2. Ultrasonic visulatization head circuitry comprising:
- (a) a linear array of transducers, said array including four sub-arrays periodically arranged such that for every transducer in each sub-array, the next transducer in that sub-array is the fourth next transducer in said array;
- (b) four shift enable means each for enabling a transducer in one of said sub-arrays, and for sequentially shifting the enabled transducer to the next transducer in that sub-array; said four shift enable means having an initial enable condition in which said four shift enable means enable the first four transducers in said array; and
- (c) main shift means for sequentially and periodically activating shifts by each of said four shift enable means, to cause the four enabled transducers to incrementally step along said array.
- 3. The ultrasound visualization head circuitry of claim 2 additionally comprising:
- (d) four pulse driver means, each for periodically exciting enabled transducers in one of said sub-arrays, said four pulse driver means corresponding to each of said four sub-arrays.
- 4. The ultrasound visualization head circuitry of claim 3 additionally comprising:
- (e) pulse delay decoder means, said means including means for detecting which of said shift enable means is shift activated by said main shift means, means for determining, in response to which shift enable means has been shift activated by said main shift means, to which of said four sub-arrays the middle two of the four enabled transducers belong, and means for delaying the excitation pulse to the two middle of the four enable transducers.
- 5. The ultrasound visualization head circuitry of claim 4 in which said delaying means includes means for delaying the excitation by the two pulse driver means which correspond to the two sub-arrays to which the middle two of the four enabled transducers belong.
- 6. The ultrasound visualization head circuitry of claim 5 in which each sub-array includes n transducers in parallel circuit with each other, each of said n transducers being isolated from the other transducers in the sub-array by a diode which is in series with that transducer and in parallel with the other transducers in the sub-array and in which each of said four pulse driver means includes
- (1) n switches, each of n switches being in parallel with one of the transducers in the sub-array to which the pulse driver means corresponds,
- (2) means for applying a voltage differential to the sub-array,
- (3) means for selectively discharging the voltage differential to one of the subarrays, said selective discharge means including means for closing the switch in parallel with that transducer, whereby that transducer is excited to generate an ultrasound signal,
- (4) recharge means for reapplying the voltage differential to said excited transducer; and
- (5) means for applying a constant current to the excited transducer through the diode corresponding to that excited transducer to maintain that diode in a forward biased state while the excited transducer receives echo signals.
Parent Case Info
This application is a division, of application Ser. No. 204,589, filed Nov. 6, 1980, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,381,675.
US Referenced Citations (17)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry |
"A Companded One-Bit Coder for Television Transmission", R. H. Bosworth et al., The Bell System Technical Journal, vol. 48, May-Jun. 1969, pp. 1459-1479. |
"Adaptive Delta Modulation with a One-Bit Memory", N. S. Jayant, The Bell System Technical Journal, vol. 49, No. 3, Mar. 1970, pp. 321-342. |
Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
204589 |
Nov 1980 |
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