Magnetic modeling of actively shielded rotating MRI magnets in the presence of environmental steel

Phys Med Biol. 2021 Feb 2;66(4):045004. doi: 10.1088/1361-6560/abd010.

Abstract

Rotating MRI systems could enable novel integrated medical devices such as MRI-Linacs, MRI-xray-angiography systems, and MRI-proton therapy systems. This work aimed to investigate the feasibility of rotating actively shielded superconducting MRI magnets in the presence of environmental steel-in particular, construction steel in the floor of the installation site. Two magnets were investigated: a 1.0 T split bore magnet, and a 1.5 T closed bore magnet. Each magnet was scaled to emulate field strengths of 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 T. Finite Element Modeling was used to simulate these magnets in the presence of a 3 × 4 m steel plate located 1250 mm or 1400 mm below the isocenter. There are two possible rotation directions: around the longitudinal (z) axis or around the transverse (x) axis. Each model was solved for rotation angles between 0 and 360° in 30° intervals around each of these axes. For each simulation, a 300 mm DSV was extracted and decomposed into spherical harmonics. For the closed-bore magnet, total induced perturbation for the zero degree rotation angle was 223, 432, and 562 μT peak-to-peak (pk-pk) for the 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 T models respectively (steel at 1250 mm). For the split-bore magnet, the same numbers were 1477, 16747, and 1766 μT. The substantially higher perturbation for the split-bore magnet can be traced to its larger fringe field. For rotation around the z-axis, total perturbation does not change as a function of angle but is exchanged between different harmonics. For rotation around the x-axis, total perturbation is different at each rotation angle. For the closed bore magnet, maximum perturbations occurred for a 90° rotation around the transverse axis. For the split-bore magnet, the opposite was observed, with the same 90° rotation yielding total perturbation lower than the conventional position. In all cases, at least 95% of the total perturbation was composed of 1st and 2nd order harmonics. The presence of environmental steel poses a major challenge to the realization of an actively shielded rotating superconducting MRI system, requiring some novel form of shimming. Possible shimming strategies are discussed at length.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging / methods*
  • Magnets*
  • Models, Theoretical*
  • Particle Accelerators
  • Rotation
  • Steel*

Substances

  • Steel