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Preface

A project log for MiniMRI

The goal is to build a hand size LowField MRI

davide-ruzzaDavide Ruzza 10/18/2022 at 21:540 Comments

Presentations

Hi, this is my first time documenting my work so I need time to get used to this kind of communication. 

I present myself, my name is Davide and I come from Italy. I'm currently studying material engineer at the University of Napoli Federico II. My main subjects of course regard matter from large to the nanoscale, anyway my courses are based largely on physics (and chemistry).


Ok, now I know this project will take some time, and before publishing this first log I've already documented myself more or less on how an MRI works. So I have a general idea of how to proceed. 

A Review of an MRI

An MRI which stands for "Magnetic Resonance Imaging"  is a fascinating device that allows you to take a picture of a slice of your body. Maybe in another log ill explain in detail how it works. Still, the main function in a very simple fashion is to use a strong magnetic field (usually achieved with a superconductor ring) so all the electrons in our body "align" with it. we then send some signal with a specially tuned antenna, therefore we receive back another signal. The final step is to reconstruct the image with some fancy math that involves a Fourier transform. The image is grayscale, and every value corresponds to electron density (aka matter density) so we can discriminate all the different body tissues (skin, bone, brain, organs, fat, muscle, ...).

Obviously in reality an MRI is extremely more complex but we can section it, into individual and independent pieces:

Scheme of Magnetic Resonance

In order to build a complete an functional MRI I need to build this 3 main parts. Of course, there is more to talk about this but in the future, I'm going to cover as much as I can in detail. In the next log I'm going to disscus how i'm going to measure the magnetic field that I will produce in future.

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