Li Y, Robinson B
CSIRO Telecommunication and Industrial Physics, West Lindfield, NSW, Australia.
IEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control. 2000;47(1):49-57. doi: 10.1109/58.818747.
For part I see ibid., vol.47, p.29 (2000). A small element array algorithm for phase-aberration correction using near-field signal redundancy was proposed in part I. Using this algorithm, subarrays are formed to narrow the transmitted and received beams when collecting common midpoint signals, so that angle-dependent aberration profiles across the array can be measured. In this paper, this algorithm is tested on data collected from a phantom with a non-isoplanatic aberrator attached to the front surface of a phased array. The aberrator is made from cast room temperature vulcanizing (RTV) silicone rubber, which has a sound velocity of about 1.02 mm.micros(-1). Results show that the subarray technique can be used to measure and correct angle-dependent, phase-aberration profiles. The theoretical results regarding the performance of several implementation methods for dynamic near-field delay correction on subarrays are also experimentally tested using data from a phantom.