Transmit/receive radiofrequency coil with individually shielded elements

Magn Reson Med. 2010 Dec;64(6):1640-51. doi: 10.1002/mrm.22574. Epub 2010 Jul 20.

Abstract

A novel method for decoupling coil elements of transmit/receive (transceive) arrays is reported. Each element of a coil array is shielded both concentrically and radially to reduce the magnetic flux linkage between neighboring coils; this substantially reduces the mutual inductance between coil elements and allows them to behave independently. A six-channel transceive coil was developed using this decoupling scheme and compared with two conventional decoupling schemes: the partial overlapping of adjacent elements and capacitive decoupling. The radiofrequency coils were designed to image the human head and were tested on a 7-T Varian scanner. The decoupling, transmit uniformity, transmit efficiency, signal-to-noise ratio, and geometry factors were compared between coils. The individually shielded coil achieved higher minimum isolation between elements (2.7-4.0 dB) and lower geometry factors (2-14%) than the overlapped and capacitively decoupled coils, while showing a reduction in transmit efficiency (2.8-5.9 dB) and signal-to-noise ratio (up to 34%). No difference was found in the power absorbed by the sample during a 90° radiofrequency pulse. The inset distance of coil elements within their shields was then reduced, resulting in significant improvement of the transmit efficiency (1.3 dB) and signal-to-noise ratio (28%). The greatest asset of this decoupling method lies in its versatility: transceive coils can be created with elements of arbitrary shape, size, location, and resonant frequency to produce three-dimensional conformal arrays.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Brain Mapping / methods*
  • Equipment Design
  • Humans
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging / instrumentation*
  • Phantoms, Imaging
  • Radio Waves