Pranav S. Athalye, Milan M. Ilić, Pierre-Francois van de Moortele, Andrew J. M. Kiruluta, Branislav M. Notaroš
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引用次数: 3
Abstract
RF coil design for human ultra-high field (7 T and higher) magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is an area of intense development, to overcome difficult challenges such as RF excitation spatial heterogeneity and low RF transfer efficiency into the spin system. This article proposes a novel category of multi-channel RF volume coil structures at both 7 T and 10.5 T based on a subject-loaded multifilar helical-antenna RF coil that aims at addressing these problems. In some prior applications of helix antennas as MR RF coils at 7 T, the imaged sample was positioned outside the helix. Here, we introduce a radically different approach, with the inner volume of a helix antenna being utilized to image a sample. The new coil uniquely combines traveling-wave behavior through the overall antenna wire structure and near-field RF interaction between the conducting elements and the imaged tissues. It thus benefits from the congruence of far- and near-field regimes. Design and analysis of the novel inner-volume coils are performed by numerical simulations using multiple computational electromagnetics techniques. The fabricated coil prototypes are tested, validated, and evaluated experimentally in 7-T and 10.5-T MR human wide bore (90-cm) MR scanners. Phantom data at 7 T show good consistency between numerical simulations and experimental results. Simulated B1+ transmit efficiencies, in T/√W, are comparable to those of some of the conventional and state-of-the-art RF coil designs at 7 T. Experimental results at 10.5 T show the scalability of the helix coil design.
期刊介绍:
Concepts in Magnetic Resonance Part B brings together engineers and physicists involved in the design and development of hardware and software employed in magnetic resonance techniques. The journal welcomes contributions predominantly from the fields of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), but also encourages submissions relating to less common magnetic resonance imaging and analytical methods.
Contributors come from both academia and industry, to report the latest advancements in the development of instrumentation and computer programming to underpin medical, non-medical, and analytical magnetic resonance techniques.