Laser ultrasonics is a remote nondestructive evaluation technique suitable for real-time monitoring of fabrication processes in semiconductor metrology, advanced manufacturing, and other applications where non-contact, high fidelity measurements are required. Here we investigate laser ultrasonic data processing approaches to reconstruct images of subsurface side drilled holes in aluminum alloy specimens. We demonstrate through simulation that the model-based linear sampling method (LSM) can perform accurate shape reconstruction of single and multiple holes and produce images with well-defined boundaries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVaporizable endoskeletal droplets are solid hydrocarbons in liquid fluorocarbon droplets in which melting of the hydrocarbon phase leads to the vaporization of the fluorocarbon phase. In prior work, vaporization of the endoskeletal droplets was achieved thermally by heating the surrounding aqueous medium. In this work, we introduce a near-infrared (NIR) optically absorbing naphthalocyanine dye (zinc 2,11,20,29-tetra--butyl-2,3-naphthalocynanine) into the solid hydrocarbon (eicosane, -CH) core of liquid fluorocarbon (CF) drops suspended in an aqueous medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntra- and inter-layer integrity of components fabricated with advanced manufacturing techniques, such as laser powder bed fusion, is dependent upon rapid heating, melting, and solidification processes. There is a need for new techniques to provide in situ feedback of these processes. Here a laser-based ultrasonic technique to probe thermal effects induced by a high-power continuous wave laser in titanium samples is described.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA photoacoustic contrast mechanism is presented based on the photoacoustic fluctuations induced by microbubbles flowing inside a micro-vessel filled with a continuous absorber. It is demonstrated that the standard deviation of a homogeneous absorber mixed with microbubbles increases non-linearly as the microbubble concentration and microbubble size is increased. This effect is then utilized to perform photoacoustic fluctuation imaging with increased visibility and contrast of a blood flow phantom.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this work, we report that gold nanorods coated with hydrophobically-modified mesoporous silica shells not only enhance photoacoustic (PA) signal over unmodified mesoporous silica coated gold nanorods, but that the relationship between PA amplitude and input laser fluence is strongly nonlinear. Mesoporous silica shells of ~14 nm thickness and with ~3 nm pores were grown on gold nanorods showing near infrared absorption. The silica was rendered hydrophobic with addition of dodecyltrichlorosilane, then re-suspended in aqueous media with a lipid monolayer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanodrops comprising a perfluorocarbon liquid core can be acoustically vaporized into echogenic microbubbles for ultrasound imaging. Packaging the microbubble in its condensed liquid state provides some advantages, including activation of the acoustic signal, longer circulation persistence, and the advent of expanded diagnostic and therapeutic applications in pathologies which exhibit compromised vasculature. One obstacle to clinical translation is the inability of the limited surfactant present on the nanodrop to encapsulate the greatly expanded microbubble interface, resulting in ephemeral microbubbles with limited utility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control
June 2021
The utility of ultrasound imaging and therapy with microbubbles may be greatly enhanced by determining their impulse-response dynamics as a function of size and composition. Prior methods for microbubble characterization utilizing high-speed cameras, acoustic transducers and laser-based techniques typically scan a limited frequency range. Here, we report on the use of a novel photoacoustic technique to measure the impulse response of single microbubbles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobubble translations driven by ultrasound-induced radiation forces can be beneficial for applications in ultrasound molecular imaging and drug delivery. Here, the effect of size range in microbubble populations on their translations is investigated experimentally and theoretically. The displacements within five distinct size-isolated microbubble populations are driven by a standard ultrasound-imaging probe at frequencies ranging from 3 to 7 MHz, and measured using the multi-gate spectral Doppler approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interaction between an acoustically driven microbubble and a surface is of interest for a variety of applications, such as ultrasound imaging and therapy. Prior investigations have mainly focused on acoustic effects of a rigid boundary, where it was generally observed that the wall increases inertia and reduces the microbubble resonance frequency. Here we investigate the response of a lipid-coated microbubble adherent to a rigid wall.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFocusing light through turbid media using wavefront shaping generally requires a noninvasive guide star to provide feedback on the focusing process. Here we report a photoacoustic guide star mechanism suitable for wavefront shaping through a scattering wall that is based on the fluctuations in the photoacoustic signals generated in a micro-vessel filled with flowing absorbers. The standard deviation of photoacoustic signals generated from random distributions of particles is dependent on the illumination volume and increases nonlinearly as the illumination volume is decreased.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLamb waves exhibit conical dispersion at zero wave number when an accidental degeneracy occurs between thickness mode longitudinal and shear resonances of the same symmetry. Here we investigate the propagation of Lamb waves generated at the conical point frequency and the interaction of these waves with defects and interfaces. The group velocity and mode shapes of Lamb waves at the conical point are found, and it is shown that as the wavenumber gets close to zero, considerable group velocity is seen only for material properties supporting a degeneracy or near-degeneracy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhospholipid-coated microbubbles are being developed for several biomedical applications, but little is known about the effect of temperature on the viscoelastic properties of the shell. Here, we report on the use of a photoacoustic technique to study the shell properties of individual microbubbles as a function of temperature. The microbubbles were driven into small-amplitude oscillations by ultrasound waves generated from the absorption of an intensity-modulated infrared laser, and these oscillations were detected by forward-light scattering of a second blue laser.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLipid monolayer rheology plays an important role in a variety of interfacial phenomena, the physics of biological membranes, and the dynamic response of acoustic bubbles and drops. We show here measurements of lipid monolayer elasticity and viscosity for very small strains at megahertz frequency. Individual plasmonic microbubbles of 2-6 μm radius were photothermally activated with a short laser pulse, and the subsequent nanometer-scale radial oscillations during ring-down were monitored by optical scatter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the presented work, the characterization of plates using zero group velocity Lamb modes is discussed. First, analytical expressions are shown for the determination of the k-ω location of the zero group velocity Lamb modes as a function of the Poisson's ratio. The analytical expressions are solved numerically and an inverse problem is formulated to determine the unknown wave velocities in plates of known thickness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe use of wavefront shaping to compensate for scattering has brought a renewed interest as a potential solution to imaging through scattering walls. A key to the practicality of any imaging through scattering technique is the capability to focus light without direct access behind the scattering wall. Here we address this problem using photoacoustic feedback for wavefront optimization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe excitability of zero group velocity (ZGV) Lamb waves using a pulsed laser source is investigated experimentally and through numerical simulation. Experimentally, a laser based ultrasonic technique is used to find the optical spot size on the sample surface that allows an optimal coupling of the optical energy into the ZGV mode. Numerical simulations, using the time domain finite differences technique, are carried out to model the thermoelastic generation process by laser irradiation and the propagation of the generated acoustic waves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElastic waves are guided along finite structures such as cylinders, plates, or rods through reflection, refraction, and mode conversion at the interfaces. Such wave propagation is ubiquitous in the world around us, and studies of elastic waveguides first emerged in the later part of the 19(th) century. Early work on elastic waveguides revealed the presence of backward propagating waves, in which the phase velocity and group velocity are anti-parallel.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Opt Express
December 2014
Liquid perfluorocarbon (PFC) droplets incorporating optical absorbers can be vaporized through photothermal heating using a pulsed laser source. Here, we report on the effect of droplet core material on the optical fluence required to produce droplet vaporization. We fabricate gold nanoparticle templated microbubbles filled with various PFC gases (C3F8, C4F10, and C5F12) and apply pressure to condense them into droplets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on the optical excitation and detection of resonant microbubble oscillations. Optically absorbing nanoparticles were attached to the shell of a lipid-encapsulated microbubble, allowing for optical pulsing to photothermally drive the microbubble into resonance. A modified optical microscope was used to track the bubble wall radius as a function of time using light scattering.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate enhanced three-dimensional photoacoustic imaging behind a scattering material by increasing the fluence in the ultrasound transducer focus. We enhance the optical intensity using wavefront shaping before the scatterer. The photoacoustic signal induced by an object placed behind the scattering medium serves as feedback to optimize the wavefront, enabling one order of magnitude enhancement of the photoacoustic amplitude.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Opt Express
January 2013
The laser generation of vapor bubbles around plasmonic nanoparticles can be enhanced through the application of an ultrasound field; a technique referred to as photoacoustic cavitation. The combination of light and ultrasound allows for bubble formation at lower laser fluence and peak negative ultrasound pressure than can be achieved using either modality alone. The growth and collapse of these bubbles leads to local mechanical disruption and acoustic emission, and can potentially be used to induce and monitor tissue therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn experimental setup for nucleating clouds of bubbles in a high-pressure spherical resonator is described. Using nanosecond laser pulses and multiple phase gratings, bubble clouds are optically nucleated in an acoustic field. Dynamics of the clouds are captured using a high-speed CCD camera.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcousto-optic imaging is a hybrid imaging technique that exploits the interaction between light and sound to image optical contrast at depth in optically turbid media with the high spatial resolution of ultrasound. Quantitative measurement of optical properties using this technique is confounded by multiple parameters that influence the detected acousto-optic signal. In this article, we describe the origin of the acousto-optic response and review techniques that have been proposed to relate this response to the optical properties of turbid media.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control
January 2011
Scanning acoustic microscopy techniques operating at frequencies in the gigahertz range are suitable for the elastic characterization and interior imaging of solid media with micrometer-scale spatial resolution. Acoustic wave propagation at these frequencies is strongly limited by energy losses, particularly from attenuation in the coupling media used to transmit ultrasound to a specimen, leading to a decrease in the depth in a specimen that can be interrogated. In this work, a laser-based acoustic microscopy technique is presented that uses a pulsed laser source for the generation of broadband acoustic waves and an optical interferometer for detection.
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