Abstract

Tuning of nuclear magnetic resonance pulse sequences with pulsed “crusher” gradients or phase cycling serves to remove unwanted spin populations from the data acquisition window. Verification that unwanted spin population are not detected is often determined by the absence of obvious artifacts in an image. This approach is unsatisfactory in some instances because signal contamination with unwanted spin populations may not be obvious. This is a particular concern with multiple-spin echo, volume-selective, and other multiple-pulse sequences. A solution to this problem is the separation of spin populations using gradient echoes, allowing the existence of unwanted populations to be easily observed separately. Tuning of a pulse sequence is straightforward when spin populations can be independently observed.

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