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Quality Assuring a Ring Vortex Flow Phantom in Real-Time

TLDR
In this article , the ring vortex phantom is used for real-time quantitative assessment of flow imaging modalities using a linear encoder, laser-photodiode array, and Doppler probe.
Abstract
Introduction: The ring vortex phantom is a novel, cost-effective prototype which generates complex and well-characterised reference flows in the form of the ring vortex. Although its reproducibility has been demonstrated, with ring speeds routinely behaving within 10% tolerances at speeds of approximately 10 - 70 cm/s, a form of real-time QA of the device at the time of imaging is needed to confirm correct function on demand in any environment. Methods: The technology described here achieves real-time QA, comprising a linear encoder, laser-photodiode array, and Doppler probe, measuring piston motion, ring speed and intra-ring velocity respectively. This instrumentation does not interfere with imaging system QA, but allows QA to be performed on both the ring vortex and the device in real-time. Results: The encoder reports the reliability of the piston velocity profile, whilst ring speed is measured by laser behaviour. Incorporation of a calibrated Doppler probe offers a consistency check that confirms behaviour of the central axial flow. For purposes of gold-standard measurement, all elements can be related to previous Laser PIV acquisitions with the same device settings. Conclusion: Consequently, ring vortex production within tolerances is confirmed by this instrumentation, delivering accurate QA in real-time. This implementation offers a phantom QA procedure that exceeds anything seen in the literature, providing the technology to enhance quantitative assessment of flow imaging modalities.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the formation of vortex rings: Rolling-up and production of circulation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the temporal development of the rolling-up process of vortex rings produced in water at a circular nozzle by flow visualization and compared the results with similarity laws for the rolling up of vortex sheets in plane flow.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some experimental studies of vortex rings

TL;DR: A series of experiments designed to reveal the properties of high Reynolds number vortex rings, using flow-visualization and laser-Doppler techniques, has uncovered several interesting and unexpected results as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the stability of vortex rings

TL;DR: In this article, the stability of vortex rings is investigated both theoretically and experimentally, and the results of the analysis show that a vortex ring in an ideal fluid is almost always unstable and the number of waves around the perimeter in the unstable mode depends upon the size of the vortex core.
Journal ArticleDOI

An experimental study of a turbulent vortex ring

TL;DR: In this article, the authors verify the similarity properties of the mean flow, as defined by ensemble averaging, and find the distribution of mean turbulence, turbulent energy, and other quantities in the appropriate non-steady======similarity coordinates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determining the relationship between three-dimensional power Doppler data and true blood flow characteristics: an in-vitro flow phantom experiment.

TL;DR: The objective was to examine the effect of flow rate, vessel number, attenuation and erythrocyte density on these indices and to establish their relationship with true in‐vivo blood flow characteristics.
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