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Abstract
With the huge progress in micro-electronics and artificial intelligence, the ultrasound probe has become the bottleneck in further adoption of ultrasound beyond the clinical setting (e.g. home and monitoring applications). Today, ultrasound transducers have a small aperture, are bulky, contain lead and are expensive to fabricate. Furthermore, they are rigid, which limits their integration into flexible skin patches. New ways to fabricate flexible ultrasound patches have therefore attracted much attention recently. First prototypes typically use the same lead-containing piezo-electric materials, and are made using micro-assembly of rigid active components on plastic or rubber-like substrates. We present an ultrasound transducer-on-foil technology based on thermal embossing of a piezoelectric polymer. High-quality two-dimensional ultrasound images of a tissue mimicking phantom are obtained. Mechanical flexibility and effective area scalability of the transducer are demonstrated by functional integration into an endoscope probe with a small radius of 3 mm and a large area (91.2×14 mm2) non-invasive blood pressure sensor.
Current ultrasound transducers are bulky and rigid. Here, the authors describe a new way to realize large-area and mechanically flexible ultrasound arrays on polymer foils suited for wearable ultrasound applications
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1 TNO, Acoustics & Underwater Warfare, The Hague, The Netherlands (GRID:grid.4858.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 0208 7216)
2 TNO, Holst Centre, Eindhoven, The Netherlands (GRID:grid.500333.6) (ISNI:0000 0004 0581 2681)
3 TNO, Human Performance, Soesterberg, The Netherlands (GRID:grid.4858.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 0208 7216)
4 Radboud university medical centre, Medical Ultrasound Imaging Center, Department of Medical Imaging, Nijmegen, The Netherlands (GRID:grid.10417.33) (ISNI:0000 0004 0444 9382)
5 Radboud university medical centre, Medical Ultrasound Imaging Center, Department of Medical Imaging, Nijmegen, The Netherlands (GRID:grid.10417.33) (ISNI:0000 0004 0444 9382); Twente University, Physics of Fluids Group, Techmed Centre, Enschede, the Netherlands (GRID:grid.6214.1) (ISNI:0000 0004 0399 8953)