An optimized ultrasound detector for photoacoustic breast tomography
Wenfeng Xia, Daniele Piras, Johan Van Hespen, Spiridon Van Veldhoven,, Christian Prins, Ton Van Leeuwen, Wiendelt Steenbergen, Srirang Manohar

TL;DR
This paper presents the design, simulation, fabrication, and experimental validation of an optimized ultrasound detector tailored for photoacoustic breast imaging, aiming to improve sensitivity and resolution for tumor detection at greater depths.
Contribution
The study introduces a specialized, high-performance ultrasound detector with optimized materials and geometry, enhancing photoacoustic mammography capabilities compared to existing detectors.
Findings
Achieved a center frequency of 1 MHz with ~80% bandwidth.
Minimum detectable pressure of 0.5 Pa enabling deeper imaging.
Detector capable of resolving 1-2 mm vascularized tumors.
Abstract
Photoacoustic imaging has proven to be able to detect vascularization-driven optical absorption contrast associated with tumors. In order to detect breast tumors located a few centimeter deep in tissue, a sensitive ultrasound detector is of crucial importance for photoacoustic mammography. Further, because the expected photoacoustic frequency bandwidth (a few MHz to tens of kHz) is inversely proportional to the dimensions of light absorbing structures (0.5 to 10+ mm), proper choices of materials and their geometries, and proper considerations in design have to be made for optimal photoacoustic detectors. In this study, we design and evaluate a specialized ultrasound detector for photoacoustic mammography. Based on the required detector sensitivity and its frequency response, a selection of active material and matching layers and their geometries is made leading to a functional detector…
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