Title
Gradient Coil Design and Construction for a Halbach Based MRI System
Author
de Vos, Bart (TU Delft Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science)
Contributor
Remis, Rob (mentor)
Fuchs, Patrick (graduation committee)
Degree granting institution
Delft University of Technology
Project
Low Field MRI
Date
2019-06-26
Abstract
MRI as a medical diagnostics tool is still unavailable to the majority of the developing world. Therefore the design and development of new low-cost hardware are essential. The design of gradient coils corresponding to this hardware is necessary for conventional imaging and reconstruction methods to be used. The target field method, which was originally developed to deal with longitudinal main magnetic fields, is applied to a transverse field, as produced by a Halbach permanent magnet array. Using this method current densities for gradient fields in the three spatial directions are derived. Subsequently, using stream functions, wire patterns for the three gradient coils are determined. These are verified using a commercial magneto-static solver. Furthermore, one of the gradients is constructed to validate the performance of the method. The measured fields are in good agreement with the simulations and their prescribed target fields. This confirms that the proposed method provides a reliable way to design and manufacture gradient coils for various requirements. Based on the experimental review of the constructed coil three optimized gradients are proposed for the low field MRI system developed at the LUMC in cooperation with the TU Delft. The method can also be readily generalized to other geometries and requirements due to the robust fundamental physical basis and accuracy with respect to computer simulations.
Subject
MRI
Gradient Coils
Target Field
Transverse field
Halbach
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:bb09923a-e4b8-45b9-969e-c614e53cdc66
Embargo date
2024-03-28
Part of collection
Student theses
Document type
master thesis
Rights
© 2019 Bart de Vos