Determining The Impedance Matching Requirements of RF Coils Using The Transmission-Line Modelling Method
Determining The Impedance Matching Requirements of RF Coils Using The Transmission-Line Modelling Method
Ro
L p +
Req
Ro
where N is the tapped-capacitor turns ration (N = 1 for single capacitance RF coils and N = 1 + C2/C1 for tapped-capacitance RF coils), Ceq is the equivalent capacitance and Req is the equivalent resistance of the RF coils, Lp is the inductance of the coupling loop, M is the mutual inductance of the coupled coils obtained from co-tuning coupled coils and determining their coupling coefficient k from Eq.(3) [5], is the angular resonance frequency, new is the new angular resonance frequency due to coupling and Ro is the impedance of the RF system. Experimental Comparisons: Corresponding RF coils were constructed for use on a 7 Tesla micro-imaging system, and a variable capacitor (1-10 pF, NMNT106E, Voltronics Corporation, Denville, NJ, USA) was characterised using a known inductor, a search coil, and S11 measurements of the resonance frequency at each complete revolution of the capacitors rotor using a network analyser (HP8712ET, Agilent Technologies, Palo Alto, CA, USA). The same variable capacitor was then used to impedance match the RF coils in the unloaded and krebs loaded conditions. When the matching condition was reached, the value of matching capacitance Cm was noted and compared to the TLM determined values. Results Agreements between TLM and experiment of < 0.5 pF for values of Cm were obtained for the impedance matching schemes depicted in Figs. 1a to 1d for the micro-imaging RF coils in the unloaded and krebs loaded conditions. Fig. 1. Equivalent Req lumped-element circuit (b) (a) Ro Cm Req representations of RF coils and matching schemes: Ro Cm C1 (a) Capacitively matched E Ceq Leq single-tune capacitance Leq Alderman-Grant coil. (b) Capacitively matched C2 Req E distributed tune capacitance AldermanGrant coil. (d) (c) M (c) Capacitively matched Ro Cm C1 Ro Cm Req birdcage coils (also applicable to TEM coils) C3 Leq (d) Series-tuned inductively coupled E C2 E Lp Leq Ceq arbitrary RF coil.
Discussion The methods presented here, although applied to micro-imaging coils, are applicable to all RF coils and capacitive and inductive impedance matching schemes, and require no additional computational effort once the equivalent lumped-element circuit components have been extracted. The results are in excellent agreement with experiment, but it should be borne in mind that the interaction between tuning and matching has to be considered, and therefore the methods presented here are useful only as a guide for component selection purposes. However, using the equivalent lumped-element circuit representations presented here, it should be relatively easy to determine the tuning and matching requirements of RF coils concurrently, and future work will examine the utility of this approach. References 1. Johns PB and Beurle RF, Proc. IEE, 118, No.9, 1203-8 (1971). 2. Cassidy PJ et al., MAGMA 14,1:20-29 (2002). 3. Chen CN and Hoult DI, Biomedical Magnetic Resonance Technology, Bristol & New York: IOP Publishing (1989). 4. Krauss HL et al., Solid State Radio Engineering, New York: John Wiley & Sons (1980). 5. Terman FE, Radio Engineers Handbook. New York and London: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc. (1943).
2378
2M 2
(2)
Cm = NCeq
Req
1/ 2
Cm =
k= new
(3)