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Universal Equations for Linear Adiabatic Pulses and Characterization of Partial Adiabaticity

✍ Scribed by Yasvir A. Tesiram; M.Robin Bendall


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
269 KB
Volume
156
Category
Article
ISSN
1090-7807

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✦ Synopsis


A numerical analysis of the sech/tanh (or hyperbolic secant) and tanh/tan adiabatic inversion pulses provides a set of master equations for each type of pulse that guarantee their optimal implementation over a wide range of practical conditions without needing to further simulate the inversion profiles of the pulses. These simple equations determine the necessary maximum RF amplitude (RF max ) required for a preselected degree of inversion across a chosen effective bandwidth (bw eff ) and for a chosen pulse length (T p ). The two types of pulse function differently: The sech/tanh pulse provides a rectangular inversion profile with bw eff being a large fraction of the adiabatic frequency sweep (bwdth), whereas for tanh/tan bw eff is ≀bwdth /20. If the quality of inversion is defined as the minimum allowable extent of inversion, ΞΉ bw , at the boundaries of bw eff , two basic linear equations are found for both types of pulse and these are of the form (RF max T p ) 2 = m 1 T p bwdth + c 1 and T p bwdth = m 3 T p bw eff + c 3 . The different behavior of the two pulses is expressed as different dependencies of the slopes m n and intercepts c n on ΞΉ bw and allowances are made for second order effects within these equations. The availability of these master relationships enables a direct comparison of the two types of adiabatic pulse and it is found that tanh/tan requires about half the pulse length of an equivalent sech/tanh pulse and also has the advantage of being less sensitive to the effects of scalar coupling. In contrast sech/tanh delivers about half the total RF power of an equivalent tanh/tan pulse. It is expected that the forms of these two basic linear equations are generally applicable to adiabatic inversion pulses and thus define the concept of "linear adiabaticity." At low values of T p bwdth or T p bw eff the linear equations no longer apply, defining a region of "partial adiabaticity." Normal adiabatic pulses in the middle of this partial region are more efficient in terms of RF max or T p but are moderately less tolerant to RF inhomogeneity. A class of numerically optimized pulses has recently been developed that specifically trades adiabaticity in an attempt to gain RF max or T p efficiency. In comparison to normal adiabatic pulses implemented under optimal conditions, these new partially adiabatic pulses show only marginal improvements; they are restricted to single values of T p bw eff , and they are vastly less tolerant to RF inhomogeneity. These comparisons, and direct comparisons between any types of inversion pulse, adiabatic or otherwise, can be made using plots of (RF max T p ) 2 or (Total Power) T p versus T p bw eff .


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