Advanced ultrasonics platform
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Nottingham
Department Name: Sch of Electrical and Electronic Eng
Abstract
Ultrasonics is a powerful and widely used investigative tool which is used for examination and diagnosis across many areas of engineering and in medicine. It is valued because of its power to image and measure, and because it is non-invasive, and non-damaging to the structures, or people, under examination. In this proposal we will extend the use of ultrasonics far beyond its current boundaries, and in two directions: firstly we intend to enable its use in highly complex materials which are close to opaque to ultrasonic measurements, and secondly, to extend the scale at which ultrasonics operates downwards to the nanoscale so that we can bring the power of ultrasonic imaging and measurement to bear on nanomachines and nanomaterials and even inside single living cells. These two directions are strongly linked: many of the advanced materials we aim to tackle derive their overall macroscopic properties from their structure at a tiny scale - right down to the nanoscale - many of the nanoscale systems we wish to study require measurements at this scale within the context of much larger structures - for instance, it may be advantageous to study the internal environment of a living cell whilst it is part of a much larger living organ inside the body.The traditional ultrasonic techniques fail for both complex materials and at the nanoscale. Complex materials return signals that lack any direct relationship between the data acquired and the state of the material, and this makes it difficult to infer the state of the sample from the experimental observations. At the nanoscale a catalogue of basic but fundamental problems mean that the usual ways of performing ultrasonic measurements cannot be used. These range from the fundamental, and massive attenuation of very high frequency ultrasound, to the simple problem of how to attach a wire to a nanometre sized transducer.We will use advanced theory and modelling to design measurement systems to extract data from these complex materials and turn it into information directly related to the state of the sample. At the same time we will use innovative wireless ultrasonic transducers powered by high speed lasers to generate ultrasound at multiple GHz frequencies to probe the samples at the nanoscale.
Organisations
Publications
Mezil S
(2017)
Active chiral control of GHz acoustic whispering-gallery modes
in Applied Physics Letters
Perez-Cota F
(2017)
Cell imaging by phonon microscopy: sub-optical wavelength ultrasound for non-invasive imaging
in Imaging and Microscopy
Fuentes-Domínguez R
(2020)
Characterising the size and shape of metallic nano-structures by their acoustic vibrations.
in Nanoscale
Pérez-Cota F
(2023)
Classification of cancer cells at the sub-cellular level by phonon microscopy using deep learning
in Scientific Reports
Mark AF
(2017)
Comparison of grain to grain orientation and stiffness mapping by spatially resolved acoustic spectroscopy and EBSD.
in Journal of microscopy
Li W
(2016)
Crystallographic Orientation Determination of Hexagonal Structure Crystals by Laser Ultrasonic Technique
in Journal of Physics: Conference Series
Smith R
(2012)
Design and fabrication of nanoscale ultrasonic transducers
in Journal of Physics: Conference Series
Smith R
(2011)
Design and fabrication of ultrasonic transducers with nanoscale dimensions
in Journal of Physics: Conference Series
Li W
(2012)
Determination of crystallographic orientation of large grain metals with surface acoustic waves.
in The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
Colombi A
(2017)
Enhanced sensing and conversion of ultrasonic Rayleigh waves by elastic metasurfaces.
in Scientific reports
Description | This platform grant contributed to fundamental understanding of elastic wave phenomena at the nanoscale and in complex materials. The work is on going and has lead to the nano-ultrasonic imaging of small objects such as cells and has also lead to novel experiments in metamaterials |
Exploitation Route | Yes and this is in progress |
Sectors | Aerospace, Defence and Marine,Agriculture, Food and Drink,Chemicals,Electronics,Energy,Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology |
Description | This contributed to a public engagement exercise, "Let Nano Fly!" |
First Year Of Impact | 2011 |
Sector | Aerospace, Defence and Marine,Creative Economy,Education,Electronics,Energy,Leisure Activities, including Sports, Recreation and Tourism,Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology |
Impact Types | Cultural,Societal |