Design and fabrication of a three-axis edge ROU head and neck gradient coil

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Abstract

The design, fabrication, and testing of a complete three-axis gradient coil capable of imaging the human neck is described. The analytic method of constrained current minimum inductance (CCMI) was used to position the uniform region of the gradient coil adjacent to and extending beyond the physical edge of the coil. The average gradient efficiency of the three balanced axes is 0.37 mT/m/A and the average inductance is 827 μH. With maximum amplifier current of 200A and receive signal sweep width of ±125 kHz, the average minimum FOV using this gradient set is 7.9 cm. The completed coil has an inner diameter of 32 cm, an outer diameter of 42 cm, and a length (including cabling connections) of 80 cm. The entire coil was built in-house. The structure is actively water cooled. Heating measurements were made to characterize the thermal response of the coil under various operating conditions and it was determined that a continuous current of 100A could be passed through all three axes simultaneously without increasing the internal coil temperature by more than 23°C. Eddy current measurements were made for all axes. With digital compensation, the gradient eddy current components could be adequately compensated. A large B(o) eddy current field is produced by the Gz axis that could be corrected through the use of an auxiliary B(o) compensation coil. Preliminary imaging results are shown in both phantoms and human subjects. (C) 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Chronik, B. A., Alejski, A., & Rutt, B. K. (2000). Design and fabrication of a three-axis edge ROU head and neck gradient coil. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 44(6), 955–963. https://doi.org/10.1002/1522-2594(200012)44:6<955::AID-MRM18>3.0.CO;2-1

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