Title :
Structural Design of a 9.4 T Whole-Body MRI Superconducting Magnet
Author :
Yinming Dai ; Qiuliang Wang ; Chunzhong Wang ; Lankai Li ; Housheng Wang ; Zhipeng Ni ; Shousen Song ; Shunzhong Chen ; Baozhi Zhao ; Hui Wang ; Yi Li ; Xinning Hu ; Chunyan Cui ; Junsheng Cheng ; Yuanzhong Lei ; Luguang Yan
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Electr. Eng., Beijing, China
fDate :
6/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A project to develop a 9.4 T magnetic resonance imaging system is proposed for bioscience research applications. A whole body superconducting magnet system will be manufactured and test in the Institute of Electrical Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences (IEE, CAS). This magnet system features a room temperature bore of 800 mm in diameter, helium bath cooing, 9.4 T center magnetic field and passive iron shielding. The magnet is designed with radial layer-winding method. Five coaxial coils will be wound independently and assembled together as the main magnet. Coil length of the magnet is 3000 mm. In the magnet design, current density grading is performed to optimize the magnetic field distribution and stress level in the coil windings. The maximum magnetic field is 9.505 T, corresponding to an operating current of 224.515 A. The total magnetic energy storage is 138 MJ. Detailed magnetic and mechanic structure design as well as structure stress analysis are presented in this paper.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; magnetic shielding; superconducting coils; superconducting magnets; bioscience research; coaxial coil; coil length; current density grading; magnet design; magnetic flux density 9.4 T; magnetic flux density 9.505 T; magnetic resonance imaging system; magnetic structure design; mechanic structure design; passive iron shielding; radial layer winding method; structure stress analysis; whole body MRI superconducting magnet; Coils; Magnetic resonance imaging; Magnetic separation; Magnetomechanical effects; Superconducting magnetic energy storage; Superconducting magnets; Windings; High field; MRI; Nb-Ti; magnetic resonance imaging; superconducting magnet;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2012.2184509