Ultrasound is a great imaging modality that’s also used in a number of therapeutic applications. Its advantages include being able to penetrate tissue without using ionizing radiation, as well as the ability to see moving objects in real-time. A serious limitation, though, is that Ultrasound waves*are dispersed when they meet a hard object on the way to their real target. This, for example, Makes **n-invasive monitoring of blood flow in the brain and Ultrasound targeting of brain tumors particularly difficult. Researchers from***rth Carolina State University and*Massachusetts Institute of Tech**logy have seemingly overcome this limitation that may open new doors for Ultrasound in clinical use.
The technique relies on a special metamaterial that restores the sound waves that have been affected by the dense material in the way of the target. The technique has only been tested in a computer simulation so far, but the researchers are already building a prototype that will take advantage of the metamaterial. In the simulation, 28% of energy was able to make it past a layer of bone, while 88% made it Through when taking advantage of the metamaterial.
Details from the study abstract:
In this paper, we investigate a type of anisotropic, acoustic complementary metamaterial (CMM) and its application in restoring acoustic fields distorted by aberrating layers. The proposed quasi two-dimensional (2D), **nresonant CMM consists of unit cells formed by membranes and side branches with open ends. Simultaneously, anisotropic and negative density is achieved by assigning membranes facing each direction (x and y directions) different thicknesses, while the compressibility is tuned by the side branches. Numerical examples demonstrate that the CMM, when placed adjacent to a strongly aberrating layer, could acoustically cancel out that aberrating layer. This leads to dramatically reduced acoustic field Distortion and enhanced sound transmission, therefore virtually removing the layer in a **ninvasive manner. In the example where a focused beam is studied, using the CMM, the acoustic intensity at the focus is increased from 28% to 88% of the intensity in the control case (in the absence of the aberrating layer and the CMM). The proposed acoustic CMM has a wide realm of potential applications, such as cloaking, all-angle antireflection layers, Ultrasound imaging, detection, and treatment Through aberrating layers.