Publications by authors named "Frederic Goora"

Eddy currents caused by pulsed field gradients in magnetic resonance measurements of high-speed flow cause the magnetic field gradient amplitude waveform experienced by the sample to be different from the waveform demanded of the magnetic field gradient amplifiers. By measuring and using the system impulse response, pre-equalization magnetic field gradient waveform correction can be used to counteract the resulting errors in measured signal phase at the cost of minimal additional experimental time. The effectiveness of the pre-equalization method of magnetic field gradient waveform correction is tested with a motion-sensitized (pulsed field gradient) version of the SPRITE imaging pulse sequence which requires extreme gradient slew rates in excess of 1000 T/m/s in a 6.

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MRI has great potential for providing quantitative, spatially resolved information about fluids imbibed in porous media. The pure phase encode SPRITE technique has proven to be a very general method for the generation of density images in porous media; however, low flip-angle RF pulses and broad filter widths, required by short encoding times, yield sub-optimal S/N images. A 1-D phase-encoding sequence for T2(∗) mapping, named FID-SPI, is presented and analyzed in terms of image quality and accuracy of fluid content distribution in porous media.

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The time-varying magnetic fields used in magnetic resonance applications result in the induction of eddy currents on conductive structures in the vicinity of both the sample under investigation and the gradient coils. These eddy currents typically result in undesired degradations of image quality for MRI applications. Their ubiquitous nature has resulted in the development of various approaches to characterize and minimize their impact on image quality.

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High pressure measurements in most scientific fields rely on metal vessels given the superior tensile strength of metals. We introduce high pressure magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measurements with metallic vessels. The developed MRI compatible metallic pressure vessel concept is very general in application.

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