MICROWAVE APPARATUS AND METHOD
20220175448 · 2022-06-09
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B2018/1892
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A microwave apparatus comprises: a microwave feed line configured to deliver microwave energy having a selected operational frequency or range of frequencies to a radiating element extending from or coupled to a distal end of the microwave feed line; the radiating element; and a reactive element formed in or on the microwave feed line; wherein the operational frequency or range of frequencies is selected such that the reactive element both provides a desired degree of match between an impedance of the radiating element and an impedance of the microwave feed line, and reduces or eliminates surface currents flowing on a ground of the feed line.
Claims
1. A microwave apparatus comprising: a microwave feed line configured to deliver microwave energy having a selected operational frequency or range of frequencies to a radiating element extending from or coupled to a distal end of the microwave feed line; the radiating element; and a reactive element formed in or on the microwave feed line; wherein the operational frequency or range of frequencies is selected such that the reactive element both provides a desired degree of match between an impedance of the radiating element and an impedance of the microwave feed line, and reduces or eliminates surface currents flowing on a ground of the feed line.
2. A microwave apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the microwave feed line comprises a coaxial cable, and wherein the ground comprises an outer conductor of the coaxial cable.
3. A microwave apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the reactive element comprises at least one aperture formed in the outer conductor of the coaxial cable by selective removal of part of the outer conductor.
4. A microwave apparatus according to claim 3, wherein the at least one aperture comprises at least one longitudinal slot.
5. A microwave apparatus according to claim 4, wherein at least one conductive strip remains between the longitudinal slot or slots, the at least one conductive strip forming an inductive conductor element.
6. A microwave apparatus according to claim 4, wherein the reactive element further comprises at least one conductive wire positioned across the at least one longitudinal slot, thereby forming an inductive conductor element.
7. A microwave apparatus according to claim 3, wherein the reactive element comprises at least one capacitive ring at a distal end of the coaxial cable, the or each capacitive ring comprising a ring of outer conductor material remaining after formation of the at least one aperture.
8. A microwave apparatus according to claim 7, or claim 6, wherein the at least one capacitive ring is electrically connected to at least one inductive conductor element.
9. A microwave apparatus according to claim 5, wherein the inductive conductor element comprises at least one discontinuity along the length of the inductive conductor element, the at least one discontinuity providing a capacitance.
10. A microwave apparatus according to claim 4, wherein the at least one longitudinal slot varies in width along the length of the slot.
11. A microwave apparatus according to claim 4, wherein the at least one longitudinal slot has a stepped width such that different portions of the longitudinal slot have different widths.
12. A microwave apparatus according to wherein: a) the at least one longitudinal slot is a single longitudinal slot; or b) the at least one longitudinal slot is a radially opposed pair of longitudinal slots; and/or c) the radiating element comprises a monopole antenna.
13. (canceled)
14. (canceled)
15. A microwave apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the radiating element comprises an exposed distal portion of an inner conductor of the coaxial cable, which is longer than an outer conductor of the coaxial cable.
16. A microwave apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the surface currents comprise common mode currents.
17. A microwave apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the microwave apparatus is configured to perform microwave ablation of tissue and/or tissue hyperthermia at the operational frequency or range of frequencies.
18. A microwave system comprising: a microwave generator; a controller configured to control the microwave generator to generate microwave energy having a selected operational frequency or range of frequencies; a microwave feed line configured to deliver the microwave energy to a radiating element extending from or coupled to a distal end of the microwave feed line; the radiating element; and a reactive element formed in or on the microwave feed line; wherein the operational frequency or range of frequencies is selected such that the reactive element both provides a desired degree of match between an impedance of the radiating element and an impedance of the microwave feed line and reduces or eliminates surface currents flowing on a ground of the feed line.
19. A method comprising: controlling a microwave generator to generate microwave energy having a selected operational frequency or range of frequencies; and delivering by a microwave feed line the microwave energy to a radiating element extending from or coupled to a distal end of the microwave feed line, wherein a reactive element is formed in or on the microwave feed line; wherein the operational frequency or range of frequencies is selected such that the reactive element both provides a desired degree of match between an impedance of the radiating element and an impedance of the microwave feed line and reduces or eliminates surface currents flowing on a ground of the feed line.
20. A method of designing a microwave apparatus, the method comprising: simulating operation at a selected frequency or range of frequencies of a radiating element extending from or coupled to a distal end of a microwave feed line; and performing an iterative design procedure comprising: simulating detuning of the radiating element; and selecting reactive properties of a reactive element formed in or on the microwave feed line, the iterative design procedure being repeated until at the selected frequency or range of frequencies the reactive properties of the reactive element provide a desired degree of match between a simulated impedance of the radiating element and a simulated impedance of the microwave feed line while reducing or eliminating simulated surface currents flowing on a ground of the feed line.
21. A method of fabricating a microwave apparatus, the method comprising: providing a coaxial cable; at a distal end of the coaxial cable, selectively removing a distal portion of the outer conductor of the coaxial cable to expose a distal portion of the inner conductor to form a radiating antenna element; selectively removing at least one further portion of the outer conductor of the coaxial cable, thereby forming at least one aperture in the outer conductor of the coaxial cable, wherein parameters of the at least one aperture are selected to provide a desired degree of match between an impedance of the radiating element and an impedance of the microwave feed line and to reduce or eliminate surface currents flowing on a ground of the feed line, when operated at a selected operational frequency or range of frequencies.
22. A method according to claim 21, wherein: a) the at least one aperture comprises at least one longitudinal slot; and/on b) the selective removing of the at least one further portion of the outer conductor comprises at least one of: sawing, slicing, cutting, burning, melting, eroding, planning, polishing, hydroforming, machining, laser cutting, etching, acid erosion.
23. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0053] Embodiments of the invention are now described, by way of non-limiting examples, and are illustrated in the following figures, in which:
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DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0079] An antenna component that both provides impedance matching and reduces or removes surface currents may be referred to as a matching-choke. The matching-choke may provide a high impedance discontinuity to effect an impedance transformation to match the radiating element to the transmission channel. The matching-choke may simultaneously limit the return of surface currents onto the outer conductor of the transmission line.
[0080] An equivalent circuit representing an antenna matching-choke is illustrated in the circuit diagram of
[0081] In the embodiment of
[0082] In this simplified circuit, a series inductance of the coaxial feed is represented by the inductor 1. A series capacitance of the coaxial feed is represented by capacitance 2. The circuit also includes a reactive element in parallel with the coaxial feed line inductance. The reactive element is representative of a reactive property of the matching-choke. The reactive element comprises a capacitive property 3 and an inductive property 4.
[0083] In the embodiment shown in
[0084] An example of a realisation of the matching-choke is illustrated in
[0085] In the embodiment of
[0086] The radiating monopole 7 is separated from the outer conductor of the coaxial feed by an insulating dielectric 8 of the coaxial feed. The radiating monopole 7 is detuned to present a mismatch between the radiating monopole 7 and the coaxial feed that will be used by the matching-choke.
[0087] The metal conductive parts are illustrated by 9 (inductive feed), 11 (capacitive ring) and 10 (coaxial outer conductor). The slot 5 in
[0088] The slot 5 extends longitudinally along a portion of the coaxial feed. The slot 5 extends around the circumference of the coaxial feed by, for example, around 120 to 150 degrees. A further slot 5A is positioned on the opposite side of the coaxial feed from the slot 5 and has the same proportions as the slot 5.
[0089] Slots 5 and 5A do not extend to the distal end of the coaxial feed. When part of the outer conductor is removed to form slots 5 and 5A, a ring of outer conductor material remains at the distal end of the coaxial feed. The ring may be referred to as a capacitive ring 11.
[0090] The parallel inductive component shown in the circuit diagram as inductive component 4 is generated by a conductive element 9 which may be referred to as an inductive feed. The conductive element 9 joins the main body of the outer conductor of the coaxial cable to the ring element 11 near the monopole feed point. The conductive element 9 is formed of the part of the outer conductor that remains between the slots 5 and 5A. A further conductive element 12 is present on the opposite side of the coaxial feed.
[0091] The slots 5 and 5A formed in the outer conductor and corresponding ring element 11 create the capacitive properties that balance with the inductive elements 9 and 12 to match the monopole to the coaxial feed line. Simultaneously, the inductive elements 9 and 12 provides a high impedance path to suppress the surface currents that would flow on the outer conductor 10. In this embodiment there are two conductive strips 9 and 12 placed diametrically to provide a balanced pair of inductive conductors. The inductive conductors 9, 12 may not interfere with the roundness of the radiated field in the tangential axes since the inductive conductors 9, 12 are disposed away from the radiating element 7.
[0092] A number of cross sections of the antenna of
[0093] In the embodiment of
[0094] In the example shown in the third view of
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[0096] A further embodiment having a single conductive strip 17 is illustrated in
[0097] In the embodiment of
[0098] Another variant is presented in
[0099] The arrangement of inductive conductors may also include stepped sections to add additional capacitance as illustrated in
[0100] The third view and fourth (bottom) view of
[0101] Other embodiments include an inductive element with a capacitive discontinuity 25 as shown in
[0102] A capacitive discontinuity may also exist at a number of other regions.
[0103] The discontinuities may be further spaced in any stepped arrangement 28 of various length or spaces. One embodiment having a stepped arrangement of discontinuities is presented in
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[0105] A number of slot sections can be employed to further enhance the attenuation of surface currents. An example of a typical monopole radiation pattern is presented in
[0106] This plot has been made for a spot frequency of 2.45 GHz. In this specific example the monopole is mis-matched at the frequency of interest (2.45 GHz) as documented in the simulated S11 return loss plot in
[0107] A radiation pattern for a modified version of the monopole of
[0108] In this specific example the mis-matched monopole now has an improved match across a wide bandwidth, centred for operation at the frequency of interest (2.45 GHz) as illustrated in the simulated S11 return loss plot in
[0109] The pattern of simulated necrosis 118 for the antenna of
[0110] The shape of the necrosis region may be further optimised by the use of multiple inductive conductor/slot pairs to add additional surface current reduction. The overall design is balanced in terms of antenna mismatch, overall S11 match, and radiation pattern as all these factors interact.
[0111] An example of a constructed monopole antenna with a matching-choke element is illustrated in
[0112] In an alternative arrangement displayed in
[0113] In this embodiment a different form of conductive interconnect was used instead of leaving a conductive strip of outer conductor material between slots. The conductive interconnects were two 0.45 mm (25 AWG) wires attached to electrically bridge the gap creating the slots. This arrangement was explored as an alternative (cost effective) fabrication method to establish if the same performance could be achieved by other means.
[0114] The fabricated antenna was tested in ex-vivo bovine liver (10° C. storage) to determine the radiation pattern. The radiation zone in the ex-vivo tissue is displayed in
[0115] It has been found that methods described above may produce a more desired ablation pattern with limited surface current utilising the minimum of materials to construct a very efficient and cost effective radiator.
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[0117] In embodiments, a reactive element (not shown in
[0118] The microwave cable 112, the reactive element and the antenna apparatus 114 may be similar to any cable, reactive element and antenna apparatus described above with reference to any of
[0119] In use, the controller 115 selects an operational frequency or range of frequencies and controls the microwave generator 111 to provide microwave energy at the operational frequency or range of frequencies to the microwave cable 112.
[0120] The antenna apparatus 114 is positioned in or adjacent to tissue, for example tissue of a human patient or other subject. The antenna apparatus 114 radiates microwave energy into the tissue, causing tissue heating. The tissue heating may be such as to cause ablation.
[0121] In operation, the reactive element at least partially matches an impedance of the antenna apparatus 114 to an impedance of the microwave cable 112. The reactive element also reduces or eliminates surface currents on the microwave cable 112. Parameters of the reactive element are selected to balance matching against surface current reduction. In embodiments, a design process is used to design a reactive element, which may be referred to as a matching-choke. A radiating element (for example, a monopole antenna), a microwave feed line (for example, a coaxial cable), and a matching-choke are simulated using any suitable simulation software. Parameters of the radiating element and matching-choke are adjusted until the matching-choke substantially matches the microwave antenna to the microwave feed line while also reducing or eliminating surface currents on the microwave feed line. In some embodiments, an iterative design process is used in which the radiating element is detuned to obtain a mismatch between the radiating element and the microwave feed line at a desired frequency of operation. Parameters of the matching-choke are adjusted to compensate for the mismatch. The detuning and parameter adjustment may be repeated until values for the parameters are obtained that substantially match the microwave antenna to the microwave feed line while also reducing or eliminating surface currents on the microwave feed line. The parameters of the matching-choke may comprise, for example, slot width, slot length, slot position, number of slots, ring width, ring position, number of rings, conductive strip length, conductive strip width, conductive strip position, wire length, wire width, wire position. The parameters of the matching-choke may comprise an inductance value for at least one inductor. The parameters of the matching-choke may comprise a capacitance value for at least one capacitor.
[0122] In some circumstances, a match may change with tissue type. For example, tissue with less water, for example lung, may not be as well matched as those with higher water content, for example liver. The match may improve or degrade depending upon how the changing dielectric influences the overall design. Therefore, different designs may be used for different target dielectrics. In designing, a dielectric constant of 43 may be used for liver at 2.45 GHz. A dielectric constant of 20.5 may be used for inflated lung at 2.45 GHz. A dielectric constant of 48.4 may be used for deflated lung at 2.45 GHz.
[0123] Different designs may be used for different cable diameters.
[0124] In some circumstances, the slots may be shorted and the amount of slots may be doubled to improve attenuation. Adding further slots may have the effect of adding extra filtering elements. For example, two sets of two slots may be used.
[0125] In design, a high priority may be given to attenuating the surface waves to improve the sphericity of the pattern.
[0126] The monopole length dictates a mismatch which may be, for example, between 10 and 12 dB at the frequency of interest. In an exemplary design, increasing the slot length increases inductance. The slot conductive element 9 increases capacitance as it widens.
[0127] When the conductive element thickness is reduced the inductance increases. The overall slot length may be shortened to produce a compensatory effect of increasing the capacitance as the top end of the slot moves closer to the bottom end of the slot.
[0128] A height of the ring element 11 increases or decreases capacitance, with a taller height having greater capacitance and a shorter height having less capacitance.
[0129] In practice, the design process may start with the monopole. The ring element 11 and slot are then introduced and are optimised in length and width for a given cable diameter and tissue type. Parameters of the ring element and slot are optimised to improve match and ablation zone shape at the same time.
[0130] A target for matching may be to achieve a return loss of 12 dB to 15 dB at a frequency of interest. It has been found that designs as described above produce a very broadband frequency match. It has been found that further improvements in match may sacrifice ablation shape and vice versa.
[0131] In embodiments described above, a monopole antenna is formed from the coaxial cable. The monopole antenna comprises an exposed portion of the inner conductor of the coaxial cable. In other embodiments, an antenna may be formed from or coupled to the coaxial cable in any suitable manner.
[0132] Although embodiments above are described in relation to a coaxial cable, in other embodiments any suitable transmission line may be used. Any suitable reactive element may be formed in or on the transmission line.
[0133] It will be understood that the present invention has been described above purely by way of example, and modifications of detail can be made within the scope of the invention. Each feature disclosed in the description, and (where appropriate) the claims and drawings may be provided independently or in any appropriate combination.