G16.4427 Practical MRI 1 – 9 th February 2015 G16.4427 Practical MRI 1 Magnetization, Relaxation,...

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G16.4427 Practical MRI 1 – 9 th February 2015 G16.4427 Practical MRI 1 Magnetization, Relaxation, Bloch Equation, Basic Radiofrequency (RF) Pulse Shapes

Transcript of G16.4427 Practical MRI 1 – 9 th February 2015 G16.4427 Practical MRI 1 Magnetization, Relaxation,...

Page 1: G16.4427 Practical MRI 1 – 9 th February 2015 G16.4427 Practical MRI 1 Magnetization, Relaxation, Bloch Equation, Basic Radiofrequency (RF) Pulse Shapes.

G16.4427 Practical MRI 1 – 9th February 2015

G16.4427 Practical MRI 1

Magnetization, Relaxation, Bloch Equation, Basic Radiofrequency (RF) Pulse Shapes

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Felix Bloch“ The magnetic moments of nuclei in normal matter will results in a nuclear paramagnetic polarization upon establishment of equilibrium in a constant magnetic field. It is shown that a radio-frequency (RF) field at right angles to the constant field causes a forced precession of the total polarization around the constant field with decreasing latitude as the Larmor frequency approaches adiabatically the frequency of the RF field. Thus there results a component of the nuclear polarization in right angles to both the constant and the RF field and it is shown that under normal laboratory conditions this component can induce observable voltages.”

23rd October 1905 - 10th September 1983

Before emigrating in the US and becoming the first professor of theoretical physics at Stanford, he worked in Europe with Heisenberg, Pauli, Bohr and Fermi.

• In 1946 he proposed the Bloch equations• In 1952 he shared the Nobel prize with Purcell• From 1954 to 1955 he served as the first director-general of CERN

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Nuclear Magnetization

“ The magnetic moments of nuclei in normal matter will results in a nuclear paramagnetic polarization upon establishment of equilibrium in a constant magnetic field...”

• Nuclei with an odd number of protons and/or neutrons have an intrinsic spin• They behave as tiny magnets with the magnetic moment proportional to the spin• The proportionality constant is the gyromagnetic ratio• At equilibrium the nuclei align with the external magnetic field, but they also precess around its axis (the torque is perpendicular to the magnetic moment and so to the spin)

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Larmor FrequencyThe frequency of the precession is known as the Larmor frequency:

11th July 1857 - 19th May 1942

Sir Joseph Larmor

where γ is the gyromagnetic ratio, a known constant, unique for each type of atom and B0 is the external magnetic field.

Nuclear Isotope γ/2π1H (spin = 1/2) 42.58 [MHz/T]

23Na (spin = 3/2) 11.26 [MHz/T]13C (spin = 1/2) 10.71 [MHz/T]

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RF Excitation“ ... It is shown that a radio-frequency (RF) field at right angles to the constant field causes a forced precession of the total polarization around the constant field with decreasing latitude as the Larmor frequency approaches adiabatically the frequency of the RF field. Thus there results a component of the nuclear polarization in right angles to both the constant and the RF field and it is shown that under normal laboratory conditions this component can induce observable voltages.”

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MR Signal• To obtain an MR signal we need to excite the

the spins out of the equilibrium (i.e. we must tip the net magnetization away from the B0 direction)

• We apply an RF pulse B1 in the x-y plane, tuned at the resonance (i.e. Larmor) frequency of the spins

• The magnetization will rotate at the Larmor frequency the nuclei precess in phase

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Precession• At thermal equilibrium, M and B0 will be pointed in

the same direction. The torque applied to a dipole momentum μ in the presence of B0 is:

• Multiplying both sides by γ and summing over a unit volume:

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The Bloch Equations• The dynamics of nuclear magnetization are described

phenomenologically by the Bloch equations:

• The last term accounts for transfer of magnetization by diffusion, with D = molecular self-diffusion coefficient

• Note that precession does not change the magnitude of M, whereas both T1 and T2 relaxation effects do– In species with T2 much shorter than T1, magnetization can temporarily

decay to zero prior to its regrowth along the longitudinal direction

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Longitudinal Relaxation• The longitudinal component of the magnetization behaves

according to:

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Question:What is Mz after a 90° pulse?

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Longitudinal Relaxation• The longitudinal component of the magnetization behaves

according to:

• For a 90° pulse Mz(0) = 0 so

• T1 is called the spin-lattice time constant and characterizes the return to equilibrium along the z-direction (i.e. direction of B0) – T1 involves the exchange of energy between the nuclei and the

surrounding lattice, due to xy-component field fluctuations– QUESTION: does T1 depends on field strength? If so, how?

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Longitudinal Relaxation• The longitudinal component of the magnetization behaves

according to:

• For a 90° pulse Mz(0) = 0 so

• T1 is called the spin-lattice time constant and characterizes the return to equilibrium along the z-direction (i.e. direction of B0) – T1 involves the exchange of energy between the nuclei and the

surrounding lattice, due to xy-component field fluctuations– T1 lengthen with increasing B0 as greater energy exchange is required at

higher frequencies to return to thermal equilibrium

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Transverse Relaxation• The transverse component of the magnetization behaves

according to:

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Question:What is Mxy after a 90° pulse?

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Transverse Relaxation• The transverse component of the magnetization behaves

according to:

• For a 90° pulse Mxy(0) = M0 so

• T2 is called the spin-spin time constant and characterizes the decay of the transverse magnetization– T2 depends on the same xy-component field fluctuation that accounts

for T1 relaxation, but also on z-component field fluctuations

QUESTION: What’s the result of that?

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Transverse Relaxation• The transverse component of the magnetization behaves

according to:

• For a 90° pulse Mxy(0) = M0 so

• T2 is called the spin-spin time constant and characterizes the decay of the transverse magnetization– T2 depends on the same xy-component field fluctuation that accounts

for T1 relaxation, but also on z-component field fluctuations ( T2 ≤ T1)– The effect manifests as a loss of phase coherence (dephasing) of the

transverse component

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Any questions?

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Rotating Frame• A rotating frame is a coordinate system whose

transverse plane is rotating clockwise at an angular frequency ω

• In MRI, we commonly visualize the RF excitation using a frame that rotates with B1

– B1 is stationary in the rotating frame

– B0 can be ignored if B1 on resonance– In the rotating frame the magnetization rotates

around B1, as in the laboratory frame it rotates about B0

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Laboratory Frame vs. Rotating Frame

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Magnetization in the Rotating Frame• The rate of change of the magnetization in the

rotating reference frame (ignoring relaxation) is:

• In the rotating frame, the equation describing the behavior of M takes the same form as the original Bloch equation but now influenced by an effective field Beff:

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Circularly-Polarized B1 Field• Suppose the carrier frequency of the applied RF field is ωrf,

then the quadrature field is:

• If the excitation is at the Larmor frequency, the rapidly oscillating field is transformed into a much simpler form in the rotating frame:

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General Case Bloch Equation• Let’s assume a left-circularly polarized B1 field along

the x’ axis of the rotating frame:

• The Bloch equations become:

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Small Tip-Angle Approximation• It is easier to solve the Bloch equation after making

the following assumptions:– At equilibrium Mrot = [0 0 M0] (initial condition)– RF pulse is weak leading to a small tip angle θ < 30°

• The Bloch equations become:

= 0 Why ?

We also turn off the RF field before observing the evolution of the magnetization

No Off-Resonance Effects ωrf = ω0

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Solution of the Bloch Equation• The transverse and longitudinal components are

decoupled:

• We are usually interested in the transverse component, as it determines the time signal detected:

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Free Induction Decay (FID)• An initial radiofrequency pulse is applied to spinning protons and

tips their vector toward the x-y plane• Amplitude of signal (S0) is proportional to net vector in x-y plane

(maximum signal for 90° RF pulse)• An exponentially decaying signal is then received in the absence

of any gradients.

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Any questions?

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Bloch Simulators

• There are many free educational MRI software that allows to simulate the evolution of magnetization for different MRI experiments.

• This one can be run directly from the web at: http://www.drcmr.dk/BlochSimulator• And it has a video introduction on YouTube: http://www.drcmr.dk/bloch

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Basic Radiofrequency (RF) Pulse Shapes

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Useful Quantities to Describe RF Pulses• Pulse width (T)– Indicates the duration of the RF pulse– Typically measured in seconds or milliseconds

• RF bandwidth (∆f)– A measure of the frequency content of the pulse– FWHM of the frequency profile– Specified in hertz or kilohertz

• Flip angle (θ)– Describes the nutation angle produced by the pulse– Measured in radians or degrees– Calculated by finding the area underneath the envelope

of the RF pulse

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RF Envelope• Denoted with B1(t) and measured in microteslas• Relatively slowly varying function of time, with

at most a few zero-crossings per millisecond• The RF pulse played at the transmit coil is a

sinusoidal carrier waveform that is modulated (i.e. multiplied) by the RF envelope

• The frequency of the RF carrier is typically set equal to the Larmor frequency ± the frequency offset required for the desired slice location

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RF Envelope vs. RF CarrierRF envelope - B1(t)

RF carrier

• The RF envelope describes the pulse shape, i.e. the magnetic field in the rotating frame

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Specific Absorption Rate (SAR)• RF pulses deposit RF energy that can cause

unwanted heating of the patient– This heating is measured by SAR (Watts/Kg)– In the clinical range of field strengths:

SAR ∝B02 θ2 ∆f

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Specific Absorption Rate (SAR)• RF pulses deposit RF energy that can cause

unwanted heating of the patient– This heating is measured by SAR (Watts/Kg)– In the clinical range of field strengths:

SAR ∝B02 θ2 ∆f

• The energy involved in tipping the spins is negligible compared to the energy dissipate as heat. As a result:– The spatial distribution of SAR is not concentrated near

the selected slice, but covers the entire sensitive region of the RF transmit coil

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Rectangular Pulses• A rectangular (or hard) pulse is shaped like a

rectangular window function in the time domain• Used when no spatial selection is required– They are played without a concurrent gradient– The bandwidth is broad enough to affect spins with a

wide range of resonant frequencies– The pulse length can be very short

B1

T

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Properties of Rectangular Pulses• In the small flip angle approximation, the

corresponding frequency profile is a SINC

– As the first zero-crossing of the SINC is the inverse of the corresponding pulse width, a small T means that a hard pulse flips spins over a wide bandwidth

• The flip angle is directly proportional to the amplitude (B1) and the width (T) of the pulse:

θ = γB1T

FWHM = 1.22/T

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Problem

B1

T

A commercial MR scanner generates a maximum B1 field of 30 μT. What is the width of a hard pulse that gives a 90° flip angle?

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SINC Pulses• Widely used for selective excitations. Why?

– In practice, the sinc pulse must have finite duration, so it is truncated except for the central lobe and few side lobes

– An apodization window is usually applied to smooth the slice profile• On commercial scanners, tailored pulses have replaced many

sinc pulses, but they remain popular as they are easy to implement B1(t)

t

t0t0

A = Peak RF amplitude

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Mathematical Description

• NL and NR are the number of zero crossing to the left and right of the central peak, respectively– If NL = NR then the sinc pulse is symmetric

• With good approximation, the bandwidth is given by:

• The dimensionless time-bandwidth product is:

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Effect of Truncating the Sinc• Because NL and NR are both finite, the sinc pulse has

discontinuity in the first derivative at NLt0 and NRt0 :

• This results in ringing at the edge of the slice profile – Can be reduced using an apodization window

For NL = NR = N

t

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See you on Thursday!