Ultrasound transducer
An ultrasound transducer converts electrical energy into mechanical (sound) energy and back again, based on the piezoelectric effect. It is the hand-held part of the ultrasound machine that is responsible for the production and detection of ultrasound waves.
It consists of five main components:
-
crystal/ceramic element with piezoelectric properties
- usually lead zirconate titanate (PZT)
- may consist of a single element or be a broadband transducer with multiple elements
- element thickness is determined by what resonance frequency is desired
- equal to half the wavelength
- a thicker element produces a lower frequency oscillation while a thinner element produces a higher frequency oscillation
-
positive and ground electrodes on the faces of the element
- this allows for electrical connection
- positive electrode is in the back of the element
- ground electrode is on the front of the element
-
damping (backing) block
- adhered to the back of the crystal (behind the positive electrode)
- absorbs ultrasound energy directed backwards and attenuates stray ultrasound signals from the housing 1
- dampens the resonant vibrations in the element which creates a shorter spatial pulse length; this allows for better axial resolution but higher bandwidth
-
matching layer
- interface between the transducer element and the tissue
- allows close to 100% transmission of the ultrasound from the element into the tissues by minimizing reflection due to traversing different mediums (acoustic impedance) 2
- achieves this by consisting of layers of material with acoustic impedances that are between soft tissue and transducer material.
- may consist of one or multiple layers
- each layer is one-quarter wavelength thick
-
housing
- electrical insulation and protection of the element
- includes a plastic case, metal shield and acoustic insulator
Ultrasound transducers typically consist of 128-512 piezoelectric elements arranged in linear or curvilinear arrays. Each element is equal to or less than a ½ wavelength wide and transducer length is generally 5 to 15 cm. Each element is individually insulated.
Transducers can produce an ultrasound beam in two ways:
- linear array (also called sequential array)
- phased array
As a general rule, if the shape at the top of the images matches the shape at the bottom of the image it is a sequential array. If the shapes are different (e.g. rectangular at the top and curved at the bottom) it is a phased array.
Related Radiopaedia articles
Physics and imaging technology: ultrasound
- ultrasound (introduction)
- ultrasound physics
- basic physics
-
transducers
- ultrasound frequencies
- piezoelectric effect
- linear array
- convex array
- phased array
- beam focusing
- beam steering
- gain
- time gain compensation
- power output
- focal zone
- dynamic range
- frame rate
- line density
- frame averaging (frame persistence)
- ultrasound image resolution
- axial resolution
- lateral resolution
- elevational (azimuthal) resolution
- temporal resolution
- imaging modes and display
- pulse-echo imaging
- real-time imaging
-
Doppler imaging
- Doppler effect
- color Doppler
- power Doppler
- B flow
- color box
- Doppler angle
- pulse repetition frequency and scale
- wall filter
- color write priority
- packet size (dwell time)
- resistive index
- pulsatility index
- panoramic imaging
- compound imaging
- harmonic imaging
- elastography
- scanning modes
- 2D ultrasound
- 3D ultrasound
- 4D ultrasound
- M-mode
-
ultrasound artifacts
- acoustic shadowing
- acoustic enhancement
- beam width artifact
- reverberation artifact
- ring down artifact
- mirror image artifact
- side lobe artifact
- speed displacement artifact
- refraction artifact
- multipath artifact
- anisotropy
- electrical interference artifact
- hardware-related artifacts
- Doppler artifacts
- aliasing
- tissue vibration
- spectral broadening
- blooming
- motion (flash) artifact
- twinkling artifact
- acoustic streaming
- biological effects of ultrasound
- history of ultrasound