Performance of receive head arrays versus ultimate intrinsic SNR at 7 T and 10.5 T

Bei Zhang, Jerahmie W Radder, Ilias Giannakopoulos, Andrea N Grant, Russell Lagore, Matt Waks, Nader Tavaf, Pierre-Francois Van de Moortele, Gregor Adriany, Alireza Sadeghi-Tarakameh, Yigitcan Eryaman, Riccardo Lattanzi, Kamil Uğurbil

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Purpose: We examined magnetic field dependent SNR gains and ability to capture them with multichannel receive arrays for human head imaging in going from 7 T, the most commonly used ultrahigh magnetic field (UHF) platform at the present, to 10.5 T, which represents the emerging new frontier of >10 T in UHFs. Methods: Electromagnetic (EM) models of 31-channel and 63-channel multichannel arrays built for 10.5 T were developed for 10.5 T and 7 T simulations. A 7 T version of the 63-channel array with an identical coil layout was also built. Array performance was evaluated in the EM model using a phantom mimicking the size and electrical properties of the human head and a digital human head model. Experimental data was obtained at 7 T and 10.5 T with the 63-channel array. Ultimate intrinsic SNR (uiSNR) was calculated for the two field strengths using a voxelized cloud of dipoles enclosing the phantom or the digital human head model as a reference to assess the performance of the two arrays and field depended SNR gains. Results: uiSNR calculations in both the phantom and the digital human head model demonstrated SNR gains at 10.5 T relative to 7 T of 2.6 centrally, ˜2 at the location corresponding to the edge of the brain, ˜1.4 at the periphery. The EM models demonstrated that, centrally, both arrays captured ˜90% of the uiSNR at 7 T, but only ˜65% at 10.5 T, leading only to ˜2-fold gain in array SNR in going from 7 to 10.5 T. This trend was also observed experimentally with the 63-channel array capturing a larger fraction of the uiSNR at 7 T compared to 10.5 T, although the percentage of uiSNR captured were slightly lower at both field strengths compared to EM simulation results. Conclusions: Major uiSNR gains are predicted for human head imaging in going from 7 T to 10.5 T, ranging from ˜2-fold at locations corresponding to the edge of the brain to 2.6-fold at the center, corresponding to approximately quadratic increase with the magnetic field. Realistic 31- and 63-channel receive arrays, however, approach the central uiSNR at 7 T, but fail to do so at 10.5 T, suggesting that more coils and/or different type of coils will be needed at 10.5 T and higher magnetic fields.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1219-1231
Number of pages13
JournalMagnetic resonance in medicine
Volume92
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.

Keywords

  • electromagnetic models
  • multichannel receive array
  • ultimate intrinsic signal-to-noise ratio
  • ultrahigh field MRI

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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