Title :
Analysis of Transient Eddy Currents in MRI Using a Cylindrical FDTD Method
Author :
Trakic, Adnan ; Wang, Hua ; Liu, Feng ; López, Héctor Sánchez ; Crozier, Stuart
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Inf. Technol. & Electr. Eng., Queensland Univ., Brisbane, Qld.
Abstract :
Most magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) spatial encoding techniques employ low-frequency pulsed magnetic field gradients that undesirably induce multiexponentially decaying eddy currents in nearby conducting structures of the MRI system. The eddy currents degrade the switching performance of the gradient system, distort the MRI image, and introduce thermal loads in the cryostat vessel and superconducting MRI components. Heating of superconducting magnets due to induced eddy currents is particularly problematic as it offsets the superconducting operating point, which can cause a system quench. A numerical characterization of transient eddy current effects is vital for their compensation/control and further advancement of the MRI technology as a whole. However, transient eddy current calculations are particularly computationally intensive. In large-scale problems, such as gradient switching in MRI, conventional finite-element method (FEM)-based routines impose very large computational loads during generation/solving of the system equations. Therefore, other computational alternatives need to be explored. This paper outlines a three-dimensional finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method in cylindrical coordinates for the modeling of low-frequency transient eddy currents in MRI, as an extension to the recently proposed time-harmonic scheme. The weakly coupled Maxwell´s equations are adapted to the low-frequency regime by downscaling the speed of light constant, which permits the use of larger FDTD time steps while maintaining the validity of the Courant-Friedrich-Levy stability condition. The principal hypothesis of this work is that the modified FDTD routine can be employed to analyze pulsed-gradient-induced, transient eddy currents in superconducting MRI system models. The hypothesis is supported through a verification of the numerical scheme on a canonical problem and by analyzing undesired temporal eddy current effects such as the B0-shift caused by activ- - ely shielded symmetric/asymmetric transverse x-gradient head and unshielded z-gradient whole-body coils operating in proximity to a superconducting MRI magnet
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; eddy currents; finite difference time-domain analysis; superconducting coils; superconducting magnets; 3D finite-difference time-domain method; Courant-Friedrich-Levy stability condition; FDTD; FEM; Maxwell equations; canonical problem; conducting structures; cryostat vessel; finite-element method; magnetic resonance imaging; pulsed magnetic field gradients; superconducting magnets; switching performance; transient eddy currents; Eddy currents; Encoding; Finite difference methods; Magnetic analysis; Magnetic resonance imaging; Maxwell equations; Superconducting coils; Superconducting magnets; Time domain analysis; Transient analysis; downscaling speed of light; finite-difference time-domain (FDTD); magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); symmetric and asymmetric gradient coils; transient eddy currents;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2006.874000