G01R33/3621

Coil facility for a magnetic resonance installation and magnetic resonance installation
11340327 · 2022-05-24 · ·

A coil facility for a magnetic resonance installation and a magnetic resonance installation having such a coil facility are provided. The coil facility in this case includes a double-resonant transmit resonator for two frequencies and a first receiver and a second receiver, each for one of the two frequencies. The coil facility has an actuator system for effecting a relative spatial transposition of the transmit resonator, the first receiver, and the second receiver into various settings. In a first setting, only the first receiver, and in a second setting, only the second receiver, for receiving corresponding MR signals is arranged in an examination space that is at least sectionally surrounded by the transmit resonator.

MAGNETIC RESONANCE APPARATUS WITH A PATIENT VENTILATOR AND A METHOD FOR CONTROLLING A PATIENT VENTILATOR
20220151494 · 2022-05-19 · ·

A magnetic resonance (MR) apparatus may include a patient ventilator, a cooler, and at least one electronic component. The patient ventilator may include at least one airflow generator configured to generate an airflow and at least one ventilation duct. The cooler may be configured to cool the at least one electronic component. The cooler may include at least one cooling element coupled to the patient ventilator.

Systems and methods for scanning an object

A system for scanning an object is provided. The system may include: a supporting table configured to support the object; a first signal conversion unit configured to receive one or more first signals associated with the object and convert the first signals into one or more second signals; and a signal receiver board configured to receive the one or more second signals. The first signal conversion unit may include a plurality of first signal receiving channels. Each first signal receiving channel may be configured to receive a first signal associated with a portion of the object. The supporting table and the signal receiver board may be configured to move relative to each other to cause the signal receiver board to receive at least one second signal corresponding to at least one first signal received by at least one target channel of the first signal receiving channels.

NON-RESONANT MAGNETIC RESONANCE COIL AND MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING SYSTEM USING THE SAME

A magnetic resonance coil and a magnetic resonance imaging system using the same are provided. The magnetic resonance coil may include an antenna, an amplifier, and a protective circuit. The antenna may be configured to receive a radio frequency (RF) signal emitted from an object. The antenna may not resonate with the RF signal. The amplifier operably coupled to the antenna configured to amplify the RF signal. The protective circuit may be configured to protect the antenna and the amplifier.

Digital Q-Meter for continuous-wave NMR

A method to perform continuous-wave NMR measurements of nuclear magnetization at high magnetic fields, above 2.5 T, without analog down-mixing is described. An FPGA controls a digital clock pulse which is used to stimulate a resonant circuit and provide a reference signal. An algorithm determines the real portion of a resonant circuit signal near the Larmor frequency of the species of interest using only two measurements of the waveform per cycle. The FPGA automatically alters a variable capacitance to tune the resonant circuit to the Larmor frequency.

Carrier phase tracking using multiple carriers

A clocked electronic device, such as a wireless magnetic resonance (MR) receive coil (20), comprises a wireless receiver or transceiver (30) configured to receive a propagation-delayed wireless clock synchronization signal (54) comprising first and second propagation-delayed carrier signals at respective first and second carrier frequencies separated by a frequency difference, a clock (60) comprising a local oscillator (62) driving a digital counter (64), and at least one electronic signal processing component (66) configured to perform clock synchronization. This includes determining a wrap count (k) from a phase difference (φ.sub.1) between phases of the first and second propagation-delayed carrier signals, unwrapping a wrapped phase (φ.sub.2,wrapped) of the propagation-delayed wireless clock synchronization signal using the wrap count to generate an unwrapped phase (φ.sub.2,wrapped), and synchronizing the clock using the unwrapped phase.

Multiband spiral cardiac MRI with non-cartesian reconstruction methods

A computerized method of reconstructing acquired magnetic resonance image (MRI) data to produce a series of output images includes acquiring a multiband k-space data set from a plurality of multiband slices of spiral MRI data; simultaneously acquiring a single band k-space data set comprising respective single band spiral image slices that are each associated with a respective one of the multiband slices in the multiband k-space data set; using the single band k-space data set, for each individual multiband slice, calculating a respective calibration kernel to apply to the multi-band k-space data set for each individual multiband slice; separating each individual multiband slice from the multiband k space data set by phase demodulating the multi-band k-space data using multiband phase demodulation operators corresponding to the individual multiband slice and convolving phase demodulated multi-band k-space data with a selected convolution operator to form a gridded set of the multi-band k-space data corresponding to the individual multiband slice.

Flexible radio frequency receiving coil array

A flexible radiofrequency receiving coil array. The flexible radiofrequency receiving coil array is provided on a flexible panel and comprises several rows of coil units. Adjacent two rows of coil units in the several rows of coil units are alternately arranged. Preamplifiers are provided in the coil units. In the flexible radiofrequency receiving coil array, two preamplifiers in adjacent two coil units are provided on a same preamplifier mounting plate on the flexible panel, where multiple preamplifier mounting plates are provided on the flexible panel, and the preamplifier mounting plates of different columns and rows are linearly arranged. The flexible radiofrequency receiving coil array effectively reduces the distribution density of the preamplifiers, ensures the flexibility and maximum degree of distension of the coil array, and improves the fit of the coil array to the human body, thus increasing image signal-to-noise ration and image quality.

T1e-SENSITIVE INVERSION-RECOVERY IMAGING FOR EPROI
20230240553 · 2023-08-03 ·

An apparatus and method for improved S/N measurements useful for electron paramagnetic resonance imaging in situ and in vivo, using high-isolation transmit/receive surface coils and temporally spaced pulses of RF energy (e.g., in some embodiments, a RF pi pulse) having an amplitude sufficient to rotate the magnetization by 180 degrees followed after varied delays, by a second RF pulse having an amplitude half that of the initial pulse to rotate the magnetization by, e.g., 90 degrees (a pi/2 pulse), to the plane orthogonal to the static field where it evolves for a short time. Then a third RF pi pulse sufficient to rotate the magnetization by, e.g., 180 degrees, forms an echo (in some embodiments, the second and third pulses are from the same signal as the first pulse but are phase shifted by 0, 90, 180, or 270 degrees to reduce signal artifact), to image human body.

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING RADIO-FREQUENCY COIL ASSEMBLY WITH HIGH TIME-DOMAIN SIGNAL STABILITY
20210364585 · 2021-11-25 ·

Disclosed is a magnetic resonance imaging radio-frequency coil assembly with high time-domain signal stability, mainly including a radio-frequency transmitting coil unit, a plurality of radio-frequency receiving coil units, and a housing structure. A plane area of the radio-frequency transmitting coil unit is larger than a sum of layout plane areas of all of the plurality of radio-frequency receiving coil units. The plurality of radio-frequency receiving coil units are arranged at an internal side of the radio-frequency transmitting coil unit. An overall size of an array formed by the plurality of radio-frequency receiving coil units is larger than a size of an imaging region. A circumference of each radio-frequency receiving coil unit is less than one tenth of a wavelength of a vacuum electromagnetic wave. Thermal noise from the load accounts for a small proportion in the radio-frequency receiving coil units.