Magnetic Resonance Microscopy. Группа авторов
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Magnetic Resonance Microscopy - Группа авторов страница 24

Название: Magnetic Resonance Microscopy

Автор: Группа авторов

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Химия

Серия:

isbn: 9783527827251

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ excitation source is an electric dipole antenna, generating a circulating magnetic field around the dipole axis and positioned on the lateral side of the resonator, perpendicular to the ring axis to excite the first TE mode, and parallel for the first hybrid electromagnetic (HEM) mode.

      Figure 2.12 Experimental setup. Fixing the resonant frequency at the Larmor frequency is enabled by thermostating the resonator at a given temperature (left). Matching is performed by sliding the excitation loop (right). With permission from [30].

      Figure 2.13 Temperature dependence of the ceramic relative permittivity and therefore of the probe resonant frequency. With permission from [30].

      2.4.2 Performance

      The ceramic probe designed in [30] was experimentally compared to the reference probe, which is a solenoid coil optimally designed for the same required field of view.

      Figure 2.14 Measured transmit field pattern in a homogeneous liquid phantom for the reference optimal solenoid probe with Fluorinert (top) and for the designed ceramic (bottom), at 17.2 T. Data from [30].

      Figure 2.15 Experimental comparison of the designed ceramic probe and the reference optimal solenoid at 17 T. (Left) signal and noise maps measured in a homogeneous tissue-mimicking liquid phantom. (Right) microscopy images obtained with both probes; (first line) Ilex aquifolium fruit; (second line) chemically fixed rat spinal cord; (third line) 3D rendering and image slice of a plant petiole (obtained with the ceramic probe). With permission from [30].

      Better performance of the ceramic probe can be observed in Figure 2.15 (right panel): microscopy images obtained with this probe demonstrate improved quality compared with those obtained using the reference probe, since more structural details can be distinguished.

      2.4.3 Dual Ceramic Coils

      Figure 2.17 MR images of plant petioles using a solenoid coil and a ceramic probe exploiting the coupling of two dielectric ring resonators. In the latter, petioles from two different plants are imaged: sample 1 in (b) and sample 2 in (d), during the same acquisition time slot. Images of sample 1 are also acquired with the solenoid coil for comparison (a). A quantitative comparison of the two coils performance is provided in (c) with the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) distribution of given regions of interest in sample 1. From [33] .

      2.5 Conclusion and Future Prospects

      While used for years in the field of microwave engineering, ceramic probes dedicated to MRI have only recently been developed for other various applications, from clinical imaging to microscopy. The principle is to excite one specific eigenmode of a high-permittivity resonator like a disk or ring, and to exploit the stimulated mode magnetic СКАЧАТЬ