In this activity you will be modeling the ultrasound amplitude scan, or A-scan, which has commonly been used to examine the structure of the eye. As you can see in Figure 1, as the ultrasound entered the cornea some is reflected from its front surface giving rise to the first part of spike C; the second part of C is the reflection from its rear surface. The L1 spike is the reflection from the front surface of the eye lens and L2 from its rear surface. The first spike at R is where contact is made with the retina, and the others from the sclera — the fibrous outer coating of the eye — and from fat within the orbit.
The key to detecting structures in the body is that where they differ in acoustic impedance the ultrasound will get reflected, partially reflected and transmitted further. The table in Figure 2 overleaf shows how the acoustic impedances and speeds of ultrasound vary for different body materials.
Medium | Specific acoustic impedance (x106) kg m–2 s–1 | Speed of ultrasound m·s–1 |
---|
Fat | 1.38 | 1450 |
Human tissue | 1.63 | 1540 |
Blood | 1.61 | 1570 |
Eye: vitreous humor | 1.52 | 1520 |
Eye: aqueous humor | 1.50 | 1500 |
Eye: lens | 1.84 | 1670 |
Muscle | 1.70 | 1590 |
Bone | 5.6-7.8 | 4080 |
Figure 2: table showing range of acoustic impedances and speeds of ultrasound for a range of body materials
It can be shown that, if the ultrasound beam is normal to the boundary between the different media, then (i) the ratio of the reflected intensity Ir to the incident intensity Ii is given by the expression:
Ir/Ii = (Z2 - Z1)2/(Z2 + Z1)2
and (ii) the ratio of the transmitted intensity It to the incident intensity Ii is given by the expression:
It/Ii =4Z2 Z1/(Z2 + Z1)2
where Z1 is the specific acoustic impedance of the first medium and Z2 that of the second. So, if the ultrasound beam is travelling from the aqueous humor into the eye lens, little is reflected as Ir/Ii = (1.84 x 106 – 1.50 x106)2/(1.84x106 + 1.50x106)2= 0.01 (1%) and so most, 0.99 (99%), will be transmitted.
Q1 What would be the ratio of the reflected intensity Ir to the incident intensity Ii if the ultrasound was travelling from fat to bone? Use an average bone specific acoustic impedance of 6.5 x 106 kg m–2 s–1
To represent the different materials in the eye you will be using coaxial cable of differing electrical impedances joined together in series. Electrical pulses of frequency near 140 kHz will be sent down them and these will partially reflect on entry, where they join, and at the far end of the pair. The speeds of such pulses down coaxial cables is very much faster than that of ultrasound — usually of the order of 2 x 108 m/s or two-thirds of the speed of light in a vacuum.
Your task
The find the lengths of each of the cables, much in the same way as the distance from the front of the cornea to its rear surface, or to the front of the eye lens or to its rear surface, or to the retina, you just need to know how long reflections from their ends took and the speeds of the electrical pulses along them. You will find the speeds of the electrical pulses along the cables written on labels on each of them.
Setting up your investigation
Connect the USB cable from the PicoScope 2202 to a USB socket on the computer. (If you are using an ADC-200: connect the parallel cable from the ADC-200 to the parallel port socket on the computer. Plug in the ADC-200’s power supply.) Assemble the apparatus as shown in Figure 3 with the Pulse Generator socket marked Pico connected to Channel A of the PicoScope 2202 and the Cable socket connected to cable A. Use the coaxial line.
Figure 3: arrangement of the PicoScope 2202, pulse generator, and cables