Monday, December 1, 2008
Scientists Tackle Quantum Mechanics to Improve MRI Sensitivity
Filed under: in the news...

Research scientists from Ohio State University in Columbus, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, the Université d'Orléans, and the Université de Lyon in France have described a new method to improve image quality of MRI machines of the future, via a previously poorly understood quantum mechanical phenomenon called super-adiabaticity.
The National Science Foundation elaborates:
In developing a model to explain the motion of atoms in a magnetic field, scientists have overcome a decades-old obstacle to understanding a key component of magnetic resonance..."An adiabatic process can be visualized as one where a system is 'held tightly'and slowly dragged by a controlling force from one state to the next," said chemist Philip Grandinetti of Ohio State. In MRI, magnetic energy holds the atoms in a patient's body in a steady state while radio waves are the controlling force that drags the atoms from one state to the next. "In a 'perfect' adiabatic process, the controlling force is moved infinitely slowly with the system's trajectory locked to the controlling force's trajectory," said Grandinetti.
Both NMR and MRI exploit a peculiar quantum mechanical property of subatomic particles called "spin". The nuclei of many atoms, most notably hydrogen, spin like tiny tops and possess a magnetic moment like a tiny bar magnet. In NMR and MRI the object under investigation--in medical applications, the patient--is placed inside a strong magnetic field that causes these tiny tops to align with the magnetic field and precess (or wobble, much like a child's top), in the direction of the gravitational field.
For MRI, the strong magnetic field needed for these techniques is generated inside the all too familiar tube that causes many patients claustrophobia, which can require sedation before a procedure. Once inside the magnet, each nucleus broadcasts its identity by emitting radio waves at its unique precession frequency, which depends on its interaction with surrounding atoms as well as the magnetic field strength.
The interaction with surrounding atoms is what makes NMR such a useful tool for chemists and biologists, allowing them to identify different chemical environments and molecular structures.
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