
- 1 July 2005 -
New MPI technique for materials
analysis
Scientists at Philips Research have been active in developing
a completely new imaging technique called Magnetic Particle
Imaging (MPI) and have demonstrated the feasibility of the
technique. Still in the early research stages, the new technique
offers potential as a valuable addition to the current armory
of imaging techniques for medical imaging and materials analysis.
The work was published in Nature
The idea behind MPI is to produce spatial images by measuring
the magnetic fields generated by magnetic particles in a tracer.
While previous approaches to realise this resulted in relatively
poor spatial resolution or low sensitivity, Philips' method
generates high-res images at low dosages by combining the
nonlinear magnetisation curve of the small magnetic particles
with an inhomogeneous magnetic field.
The particles are subjected to a time-varying sinusoidal
magnetic field with sufficiently high amplitude to drive their
magnetization into the non-linear region. This induces high-frequency
harmonics in the resulting time-varying magnetisation that
can be easily extracted from the fundamental or drive frequency
by filtering.
If the magnetic particles are exposed to a time-constant
magnetic field of sufficiently large magnitude, simultaneously,
the particle magnetisation becomes saturated and the generation
of harmonics is suppressed.
This opens the possibility of producing an imaging device
in which the time-constant field is constructed such that
the magnitude of the field drops to zero at a single point
in the field known as the 'field-free point' and increases
in magnitude towards the edges.
A signal containing harmonics will then be detected only
from magnetic particles located in the vicinity of the field-free
point; at all other points the magnetic particles are fully
saturated by the time-constant field and produce no signal.
So by scanning the field-free point through the volume of
interest, it is possible to develop a 3D image of the magnetic-particle
distribution
. Movement of the field-free point can be achieved either
mechanically or by field-induced movement. Both techniques
have been investigated by the Philips researchers.
The researchers have evaluated the new MPI technique using
commercially-available magnetic tracers. Conducted on 'phantom'
objects, these investigations demonstrate the feasibility
of MPI and show that it has potential to be developed into
an imaging method characterised by both high spatial resolution
and high sensitivity. The expected high sensitivity leads
to the presumption that the technique could become a valuable
addition to other medical imaging modalities.
Besides its potential in medical imaging, MPI also shows
promise as an imaging technique for materials research - specifically
in the investigation of cracks and cavities in insulating
materials like polymers or ceramics.
Source: Philips
|