In this paper we present two design options for a tabletop liquid-helium-free, persistent-mode 1.5-T/90-mm MgB "finger" MRI magnet for osteoporosis screening. Both designs, one with and the other without an iron yoke, satisfy the following criteria: 1) 1.5-T center field with a 90-mm room-temperature bore for a finger to be placed at the magnet center; 2) spatial field homogeneity of <5 ppm over a 20-mm diameter of spherical volume (DSV); 3) persistent-mode operation with temporal stability of <0.1 ppm/hr; 4) liquid-helium-free operation; 5) 5-gauss fringe field radius of <50 cm from the magnet center; and 6) small and light enough for placement on an exam table. Although the magnet is designed to operate nominally at 10 K, maintained by a cryocooler, it has a 5-K temperature margin to keep its 1.5-T persistent field up to 15 K. The magnet will be immersed in a volume of solid nitrogen (SN) that provides additional thermal mass when the cryocooler is switched off to provide a vibration-free measurement environment. The SN enables the magnet to maintain its persistent field over a period of time sufficient for quiescent measurement, while still limiting the magnet operating temperature to ≤15 K. We discuss first pros and cons of each design, and then further studies of our proposed MgB finger MRI magnet.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5813820 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TASC.2017.2773830 | DOI Listing |
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