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2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38948446

ABSTRACT

Motivation: Low-field MRI has garnered significant attention in recent years due to its unique advantages in safety, cost-effectiveness and accessibility. However, lower field strength comes with an inherently lower SNR as its primary limitation. Goals: In this work, we introduce a novel volume RF coil design using coupled stack-up resonators to mitigate this challenge. Approach: To demonstrate the proposed design, we take 0.5T as an example field strength and designed a prototype coupled stack-up volume coil operating in the 20MHz range. Results: Compared to the birdcage coil, the proposed design significantly improves RF field efficiency and homogeneity, ultimately enhancing the performance of low-field MRI. Impact: The proposed stack-up volume coil outperforms the standard birdcage coil in B1 efficiency and field homogeneity at low fields, ultimately improving the performance of low-field MRI and advancing its applications.

3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38948448

ABSTRACT

Motivation: High performance RF coils are needed for better SNR so that higher resolution and spectral dispersion can be obtained in small animal MR imaging. Goals: To develop a surface coil with improved SNR over the conventional surface coil for small animal imaging at 7T. Approach: A small animal surface coil is designed based on multimodal surface coil technique. The coil is investigated and compared with conventional surface coil using full-wave electromagnetic simulations. Results: The multimodal surface coil shows superior B1 field efficiency and lower E field over standard coils, indicating a potential to gain SNR and resolution. Impact: The proposed multimodal surface coil can operate at high frequency and provides improved SNR over conventional surface coils at 7T, opening avenues for highly efficient coil design in small animal imaging, ultimately enabling the detection of previously indiscernible physiological details.

9.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; PP2023 Dec 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38090865

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Information on the metabolism of tissues in healthy and diseased states plays a significant role in the detection and understanding of tumors, neurodegenerative diseases, diabetes, and other metabolic disorders. Hyperpolarized carbon-13 magnetic resonance imaging (13C-HPMRI) and deuterium metabolic imaging (2H-DMI) are two emerging X-nuclei used as practical imaging tools to investigate tissue metabolism. However due to their low gyromagnetic ratios (ɣ13C = 10.7 MHz/T; ɣ2H = 6.5 MHz/T) and natural abundance, such method required a sophisticated dual-tuned radiofrequency (RF) coil. METHODS: Here, we report a dual-tuned coaxial transmission line (CTL) RF coil agile for metabolite information operating at 7T with independent tuning capability. The design analysis has demonstrated how both resonant frequencies can be individually controlled by simply varying the constituent of the design parameters. RESULTS: Numerical results have demonstrated a broadband tuning range capability, covering most of the X-nucleus signal, especially the 13C and 2H spectra at 7T. Furthermore, in order to validate the feasibility of the proposed design, both dual-tuned 1H/13C and 1H/2H CTLs RF coils are fabricated using a semi-flexible RG-405 .086" coaxial cable and bench test results (scattering parameters and magnetic field efficiency/distribution) are successfully obtained. CONCLUSION: The proposed dual-tuned RF coils reveal highly effective magnetic field obtained from both proton and heteronuclear signal which is crucial for accurate and detailed imaging. SIGNIFICANCE: The successful development of this new dual-tuned RF coil technique would provide a tangible and efficient tool for ultrahigh field metabolic MR imaging.

15.
ArXiv ; 2023 Oct 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37502626

ABSTRACT

Objective: Information on the metabolism of tissues in healthy and diseased states plays a significant role in the detection and understanding of tumors, neurodegenerative diseases, diabetes, and other metabolic disorders. Hyperpolarized carbon-13 magnetic resonance imaging (13C-HPMRI) and deuterium metabolic imaging (2H-DMI) are two emerging X-nuclei used as practical imaging tools to investigate tissue metabolism. However due to their low gyromagnetic ratios (ɣ13C = 10.7 MHz/T; ɣ 2H = 6.5 MHz/T) and natural abundance, such method required a sophisticated dual-tuned radiofrequency (RF) coil. Methods: Here, we report a dual-tuned coaxial transmission line (CTL) RF coil agile for metabolite information operating at 7T with independent tuning capability. The design analysis has demonstrated how both resonant frequencies can be individually controlled by simply varying the constituent of the design parameters. Results: Numerical results have demonstrated a broadband tuning range capability, covering most of the X-nucleus signal, especially the 13C and 2H spectra at 7T. Furthermore, in order to validate the feasibility of the proposed design, both dual-tuned 1H/13C and 1H/2H CTLs RF coils are fabricated using a semi-flexible RG-405 .086" coaxial cable and bench test results (scattering parameters and magnetic field efficiency/distribution) are successfully obtained. Conclusion: The proposed dual-tuned RF coils reveal highly effective magnetic field obtained from both proton and heteronuclear signal which is crucial for accurate and detailed imaging. Significance: The successful development of this new dual-tuned RF coil technique would provide a tangible and efficient tool for ultrahigh field metabolic MR imaging.

16.
J Magn Reson ; 353: 107498, 2023 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37295282

ABSTRACT

In contrast to linearly polarized RF coil arrays, quadrature transceiver coil arrays are capable of improving signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), spatial resolution, and parallel imaging performance. Owing to a reduced excitation power, a low specific absorption rate can also be obtained using quadrature RF coils. However, due to the complex nature of their structure and their electromagnetic properties, it is challenging to achieve sufficient electromagnetic decoupling while designing multichannel quadrature RF coil arrays, particularly in ultra-high fields. In this work, we proposed a double-cross magnetic wall decoupling for quadrature transceiver RF arrays and implemented the decoupling method on common-mode differential mode quadrature (CMDM) quadrature transceiver arrays at an ultrahigh field of 7 T. The proposed magnetic decoupling wall, comprised of two intrinsically decoupled loops, is used to reduce the mutual coupling between all the multi-mode currents present in the quadrature CMDM array. The decoupling network has no physical connection with the CMDMs' resonators, which provides less design constraint over size-adjustable RF arrays. To validate the feasibility of the proposed cross-magnetic decoupling wall, systematic studies on the decoupling performance based on the impedance of two intrinsic loops are numerically performed. A pair of quadrature transceiver CMDMs is constructed along with the proposed decoupling network, and their scattering matrix is characterized using a network analyzer. The measured results indicate that all the current modes from coupling are simultaneously suppressed using the proposed cross-magnetic wall. Moreover, field distribution and local specific absorption rate (SAR) are numerically obtained for a well-decoupled 8-channel quadrature knee-coil array.

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