AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to create a new dipole transceiver array for imaging the human head at a high magnetic field of 9.4 Tesla, focusing on improving the separation between adjacent dipole elements.
  • A novel design featuring 8 bent folded-end dipole antennas was tested, utilizing a unique decoupling method that avoids electrical connections and reduces interference by positioning passive dipoles perpendicularly.
  • The results indicated that this modified approach significantly diminished destructive interference while maintaining effective decoupling and efficient transmission across the whole brain.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To develop an unshielded dipole transceiver array for human head imaging at 9.4 Tesla and to improve decoupling of adjacent dipole elements, a novel array design with modified passive dipole antennas was developed, evaluated, and tested.

Methods: The new array consisted of 8 bent folded-end dipole elements placed in a single row and surrounding the head. Adjacent elements of RF transceiver arrays are usually decoupled by introducing circuits electrically connected to elements. These methods are difficult to use for dipole arrays because of the distant location of the adjacent antennas. A recently developed decoupling technique using passive dipoles is simple and does not require any electrical connection. However, common parallel passive dipoles can produce destructive interference with the RF field of the array itself. To minimize this interference, we placed the passive dipoles perpendicularly to the active dipoles and positioned them at the ends of the array. We also evaluated the effect of different passive dipoles on the array transmit performance. Finally, we optimized the array transmit performance by varying the length of the dipole folded portion.

Results: By rotating the passive dipoles 90º and moving them toward the ends of the array, we minimized the destructive interference to an acceptable level without compromising decoupling and the transmit efficiency.

Conclusion: While keeping the benefits of the passive dipole decoupling method, the new modified dipoles produce substantially less destructive interference with the RF field of the array than the common design. The constructed transceiver array demonstrated good decoupling and whole-brain coverage.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mrm.28711DOI Listing

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