Ultrasound refers to sound waves with frequencies above the upper limit of human hearing (above 20 kHz). In medical applications, frequencies in the range 1–15 MHz are used — much higher than in industrial or cleaning applications.
Ultrasound is a longitudinal mechanical wave: the particles of the medium oscillate parallel to the direction of energy transfer, forming compressions and rarefactions. Unlike X-rays, ultrasound is non-ionising, making it safe for imaging foetuses and soft tissues.
Medical ultrasound uses pulsed waves — a short pulse is sent, then the transducer waits to receive echoes before sending the next pulse. The time delay between sending and receiving tells you the depth of the reflecting surface.
Ultrasound scanning relies on two key facts:
- Ultrasound is reflected at boundaries between materials of different densities (e.g. tissue–organ, tissue–bone)
- Ultrasound is pulsed — the transducer sends a pulse, then listens for returning echoes
Because ultrasound cannot pass through air (nearly all of it reflects at an air–tissue boundary), a coupling gel must be used between the transducer and the skin. More on this later.