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Inhomogeneity of the transmitted radiofrequency field () is a major factor hindering the image quality in Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) at high field strengths. Here, a novel approach is presented, to locally modulate the utilizing an array of high permittivity materials with switchable connections. A 33 array of barium titanate suspension elements was constructed, with two PIN diode-based switchable connectors per element. Electromagnetic simulations were performed to determine configurations that produce strong modulation. Remote field switching was tested in a disk- and a torso-shaped phantom at 3T by applying different bias voltages to the PIN diodes. The attained modulation was assessed at various switching pattern positions and various depths within the phantoms. The configuration with the strongest effect size has produced up to 11 modulation in simulations at 15 mm depth, with excellent translation properties. The effects were successfully replicated in phantoms, with a 5 V bias voltage producing up to 11.6±0.2 modulation. At the relative depth of the human heart, up to 6 of modulation was observed in the torso phantom. The presented method may provide a promising direction for cost-effective, and adaptive shimming without changes to the scanner hardware.
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Inhomogeneity of the transmitted radiofrequency field () is a major factor hindering the image quality in Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) at high field strengths. Here, a novel approach is presented, to locally modulate the utilizing an array of high permittivity materials with switchable connections. A 33 array of barium titanate suspension elements was constructed, with two PIN diode-based switchable connectors per element. Electromagnetic simulations were performed to determine configurations that produce strong modulation. Remote field switching was tested in a disk- and a torso-shaped phantom at 3T by applying different bias voltages to the PIN diodes. The attained modulation was assessed at various switching pattern positions and various depths within the phantoms. The configuration with the strongest effect size has produced up to 11 modulation in simulations at 15 mm depth, with excellent translation properties. The effects were successfully replicated in phantoms, with a 5 V bias voltage producing up to 11.6±0.2 modulation. At the relative depth of the human heart, up to 6 of modulation was observed in the torso phantom. The presented method may provide a promising direction for cost-effective, and adaptive shimming without changes to the scanner hardware.
On the longevity and inherent hermeticity of silicon-ICs: evaluation of bare-die and PDMS-coated ICs after accelerated aging and implantation studies (Nature Communications, (2025), 16, 1, (12), 10.1038/s41467-024-55298-4)
Journal article(2025)
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Kambiz Nanbakhsh, Ahmad Shah Idil, Callum Lamont, Csaba Dücső, Ömer Can Akgun, Domonkos Horváth, Kinga Tóth, Wouter Serdijn, Vasiliki Giagka, More Authors...
Correction to: Nature Communicationshttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-55298-4, published online 02 January 2025 In this article the following sentence was omitted from the acknowledgements section, ‘This research was funded by the following projects: Project CANDO (Controlling Network Dynamics with Optogenetics), funded by UK EPSRC (grant ref: NS/A000026/1) and the Wellcome Trust (contract ref: 102037/Z/13/Z)’. The original article has been corrected.
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Correction to: Nature Communicationshttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-55298-4, published online 02 January 2025 In this article the following sentence was omitted from the acknowledgements section, ‘This research was funded by the following projects: Project CANDO (Controlling Network Dynamics with Optogenetics), funded by UK EPSRC (grant ref: NS/A000026/1) and the Wellcome Trust (contract ref: 102037/Z/13/Z)’. The original article has been corrected.