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Frequency Tuning of Collapse‐Mode Capacitive Micromachined Ultrasonic Transducer

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HighlightsFrequency tuning of CMUT operated in (deep‐)collapse mode is experimentally quantified.The CMUT is operated at bias voltages up to three times higher than the collapse voltage.Fabricated CMUT operates reliably for… Click to show full abstract

HighlightsFrequency tuning of CMUT operated in (deep‐)collapse mode is experimentally quantified.The CMUT is operated at bias voltages up to three times higher than the collapse voltage.Fabricated CMUT operates reliably for single‐use imaging catheter application.Images are constructed based on combinations of driving frequency and bias voltage.Reciprocity measurements indicate the same bias voltage can be used for transmit and receive. &NA; The information in an ultrasound image depends on the frequency that is used. In a clinical examination it may therefore be beneficial to generate ultrasound images acquired at multiple frequencies, which is difficult to achieve with conventional transducers. Capacitive micromachined ultrasonic transducers (CMUTs) offer a frequency response that is tunable by the bias voltage. In this study we investigate this frequency tunability for ultrasonic imaging. We characterized a CMUT array operated at bias voltages up to three times higher than the collapse‐voltage. All elements of the array were connected to a single transmit and receive channel through a bias circuit. We quantified the transmit‐receive and transmit sensitivity as a function of frequency for a range of bias voltages. Impulse response measurements show that the center frequency is modifiable between 8.7 MHz and 15.3 MHz with an applied bias voltage of −50 V to −170 V. The maximum transmit sensitivity is 52 kPa/V at a center frequency of 9.0 MHz with an applied bias voltage of −105 V. The −3 dB transmit range in center frequency accessible with the variable bias voltage is 6.7–15.5 MHz. This study shows that a collapse‐mode CMUT can operate efficiently at multiple center frequencies when the driving pulse and the bias voltage are optimized. We demonstrate the usefulness of frequency tuning by comparing images at different optimal combinations of driving frequency and bias voltage, acquired by linearly moving the transducer across a tissue mimicking phantom.

Keywords: frequency; voltage; bias voltage; collapse mode

Journal Title: Ultrasonics
Year Published: 2017

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