
pmid: 19098358
Recently a new imaging technique called magnetic particle imaging was proposed. The method uses the nonlinear response of magnetic nanoparticles when a time varying magnetic field is applied. Spatial encoding is achieved by moving a field-free point through an object of interest while the field strength in the vicinity of the point is high. A resolution in the submillimeter range is provided even for fast data acquisition sequences. In this paper, a simulation study is performed on different trajectories moving the field-free point through the field of view. The purpose is to provide mandatory information for the design of a magnetic particle imaging scanner. Trajectories are compared with respect to density, speed and image quality when applied in data acquisition. Since simulation of the involved physics is a time demanding task, moreover, an efficient implementation is presented utilizing caching techniques.
Phantoms, Imaging, Biomedical Engineering, Metal Nanoparticles, Models, Theoretical, Biophysical Phenomena, Magnetics, Nonlinear Dynamics, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Humans, Nanotechnology, Tomography, Algorithms
Phantoms, Imaging, Biomedical Engineering, Metal Nanoparticles, Models, Theoretical, Biophysical Phenomena, Magnetics, Nonlinear Dynamics, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Humans, Nanotechnology, Tomography, Algorithms
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| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Top 1% | |
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