Real-Time 3-D Imaging Using an Air-Coupled Ultrasonic Phased-Array

IEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control. 2021 Mar;68(3):796-806. doi: 10.1109/TUFFC.2020.3005292. Epub 2021 Feb 25.

Abstract

We present an air-coupled ultrasonic imaging system based on a 40-kHz 8×8 phased-array for 3-D real-time localization of multiple objects in the far-field. By attaching a waveguide to the array, the effective interelement spacing is reduced to half wavelength. This enables grating lobe-free transmit and receive beamforming with a uniform rectangular array of efficient low-cost transducers. The system further includes custom transceiver electronics, an field programmable gate array (FPGA) system-on-chip and a PC for GPU accelerated frequency domain signal processing, consisting of matched filtering, conventional beamforming, and envelope extraction using Nvidia Compute Unified Device Architecture (CUDA) and OpenGL for visualization. The uniform rectangular layout allows utilizing multiple transmit and receive methods, known from medical imaging applications. Thus, the system is dynamically adaptable to maximize the frame rate or detection range. One implemented method demonstrates the real-time capability by transmitting a hemispherical pulse (HP) with a single transducer to irradiate the surroundings simultaneously, whereas all transducers are used for echo reception. The imaging properties, such as axial and lateral resolution, field of view and range of view, are characterized in an anechoic chamber. The object localization is validated for a horizontal and vertical field of view of ±80° and a range of view of 0.5-3 m with 29 frames/s. Using the same system, a comparison between the HP method and the dynamic transmit beamforming method, which transmits multiple sequential beamformed pulses for long-range localization, is provided.