Highly efficient head-only magnetic field insert gradient coil for achieving simultaneous high gradient amplitude and slew rate at 3.0T (MAGNUS) for brain microstructure imaging

Thomas K.F. Foo*, Ek Tsoon Tan, Mark E. Vermilyea, Yihe Hua, Eric W. Fiveland, Joseph E. Piel, Keith Park, Justin Ricci, Paul S. Thompson, Dominic Graziani, Gene Conte, Alex Kagan, Ye Bai, Christina Vasil, Matthew Tarasek, Desmond T.B. Yeo, Franklyn Snell, David Lee, Aaron Dean, J. Kevin DeMarcoRobert Y. Shih, Maureen N. Hood, Heechin Chae, Vincent B. Ho

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

78 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: To develop a highly efficient magnetic field gradient coil for head imaging that achieves 200 mT/m and 500 T/m/s on each axis using a standard 1 MVA gradient driver in clinical whole-body 3.0T MR magnet. Methods: A 42-cm inner diameter head-gradient used the available 89- to 91-cm warm bore space in a whole-body 3.0T magnet by increasing the radial separation between the primary and the shield coil windings to 18.6 cm. This required the removal of the standard whole-body gradient and radiofrequency coils. To achieve a coil efficiency ~4× that of whole-body gradients, a double-layer primary coil design with asymmetric x-y axes, and symmetric z-axis was used. The use of all-hollow conductor with direct fluid cooling of the gradient coil enabled ≥50 kW of total heat dissipation. Results: This design achieved a coil efficiency of 0.32 mT/m/A, allowing 200 mT/m and 500 T/m/s for a 620 A/1500 V driver. The gradient coil yielded substantially reduced echo spacing, and minimum repetition time and echo time. In high b = 10,000 s/mm2 diffusion, echo time (TE) < 50 ms was achieved (>50% reduction compared with whole-body gradients). The gradient coil passed the American College of Radiology tests for gradient linearity and distortion, and met acoustic requirements for nonsignificant risk operation. Conclusions: Ultra-high gradient coil performance was achieved for head imaging without substantial increases in gradient driver power in a whole-body 3.0T magnet after removing the standard gradient coil. As such, any clinical whole-body 3.0T MR system could be upgraded with 3-4× improvement in gradient performance for brain imaging.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2356-2369
Number of pages14
JournalMagnetic Resonance in Medicine
Volume83
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jun 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • advanced diffusion imaging
  • brain imaging
  • brain microstructure imaging
  • echo planar imaging
  • electric fields
  • gradient coil
  • gradient coil insert
  • high efficiency coil
  • high gradient amplitude
  • high gradient slew rate
  • high-performance gradient
  • magnetic fields
  • peripheral nerve stimulation

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