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Abstract
Therapeutic ultrasound for brain stimulation has increased in the last years. This energy has shown promising results for treating Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and traumatic brain injury, among other conditions. However, the application of ultrasound in the brain should trespass a natural but highly attenuating and distorting barrier, the cranium. Implantable ceramic materials can be used to replace part of the cranium as an alternate method to enhance ultrasound transmission. In this work, it is presented the acoustic characterization of alumina ceramic disks that can be employed as cranial implants for acoustic windows-to-the-brain. Alumina samples were prepared using current-activated pressure-assisted densification and were acoustically characterized. Acoustic impedance and attenuation of the samples were determined for different porosities. Additionally, measured and modeled acoustic fields are presented and analyzed in terms of the total ultrasound transmitted through the ceramics. Results indicate a resonant behavior in the alumina disks when the thickness corresponds to a half-wavelength of ultrasound; this resonance permits a total of 95.4% of ultrasound transmission; for thicknesses out of the resonant zone, transmission is 53.0%. Alumina proves to be an excellent medium for ultrasound transmission that, in conjunction with its mechanical and optical properties, can be useful for cranium replacement in mixed opto-acoustic applications.
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1 CONAHCYT—Instituto Nacional de Rehabilitación Luis Guillermo Ibarra Ibarra, División de Investigación en Ingeniería Médica, Calz. Mexico Xochimilco, Col. Arenal de Guadalupe—Tlalpan, Alcaldía Tlalpan , Mexico City, 14389, Mexico
2 Jacobs School of Engineering Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California San Diego , San Diego, CA 92161, United States of America; Rolls-Royce High Temperature Composites , Cypress, CA 90630, United States of America
3 Jacobs School of Engineering Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California San Diego , San Diego, CA 92161, United States of America
4 Department of Toxicology, Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Cinvestav-IPN , Mexico City 07360, Mexico
5 Department of Electrical Engineering, Bioelectronics Section, Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Cinvestav-IPN , Mexico City 07360, Mexico