Abstract

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is an increasingly popular non-invasive diagnostic imaging tool in modern healthcare. The signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of MRI can be improved by locally enhancing radiofrequency (RF) magnetic field using metamaterials — without the need for stepping up static magnetic field strength. However, designing a thin and compact metamaterial-based structure for the most commonly used 1.5T MRI systems (operating at f0∼64MHz) remains highly challenging due to long vaccum wavelength λ0∼4.7m at resonance. The limited free space available inside MRI receive coil arrays (typically 10-20mm) restricts the practical usability of any bulky resonator (with dimensions in order of meters) inside commercial 1.5T MRI head transceiver-coils. In this paper, we design a thin and compact RF metamaterial-based pad comprising dual-layer wire-array resonators that fits in the available space and provides significant magnetic field enhancement at 1.5T MRI. The metamaterial-based pad provides the SNR enhancement by a factor of ∼19, on the surface of bio-model in contact with the pad, as compared to the case without pad while maintaining specific absorption rate well below the standard safety limit. We present an equivalent circuit approach combined with a transformer-based model to compute the SNR enhancement factor of metamaterial-based pad, which adequately explains the underlying physical mechanism of metamaterial’s magnetic resonance and closely estimates our numerical findings. We believe that, when integrated into the clinical 1.5T MRI systems, our proposed metamaterial-based pad can help improve the SNR of head MRI scans, resulting in either higher image quality or reduced scan time.

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