K Saito, T Taniguchi, H Yoshimura, K Ito
IEICE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRONICS E84C(7) 948-954 2001年7月
The microwave coagulation therapy has been used mainly for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (small size tumor in the liver). In the treatment, a thin microwave antenna is inserted into the tumor, and the microwave e energy heats up the turner to produce the coagulated region including the cancer cells. At present, a problem occurs: the size of the coagulated region is insufficient, especially in the perpendicular direction of the antenna axis. In order to overcome this problem without increasing the physical load of the patient, the authors introduced a new type of array applicator composed of two coaxial-slot antennas. However, we cannot estimate heating characteristics of this array applicator precisely by using the FDTD calculation, because the use of staircasing approximation, which employs rectangular parallelepiped cells, is unsuitable for the analysis. Therefore, in this paper, we introduce the finite element method (FER I), which employs tetrahedral cells, to estimate the heating: characteristics of the array applicator.