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2.2 State of the Art

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Take-home message: Dielectric resonators have been used in microwave engineering for decades. More recently, probes for electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) applications at several scales have been designed as well. In EPR, several theoretical tools to quantify the transmit efficiency have been developed. The engineering of high-permittivity, low-loss materials has significantly contributed to the development of these probes.

Dielectric resonators have been used in microwave engineering for decades, since they serve as miniaturized circuit components like antennas and filters, which is of great interest for telecommunication applications [1–6]. More recently, probes for MR applications at several scales have been designed as well.

In EPR, dielectric resonators are used instead of metallic cavities since they have reduced dimensions for the same resonance frequency and much higher quality factors [7,8]. They are built with ferroelectric materials and used at microwave frequencies. Several theoretical tools have been developed to quantify the transmit efficiency of ceramic probes [7,9,10].

Prototypes of dielectric resonators probes for MRI have been proposed at several B0 field strengths and for various applications, as listed in Table 2.1. Dielectric resonators can be used in transmit/receive mode or as transmitters only. In most cases, the constitutive dielectric material is a high- to very high-permittivity (relative permittivity ϵr≥100) ceramic based on calcium and barium/strontium titanates. One exception in this review is the probe for wrist clinical imaging made of water (ϵr ~ 80).

The engineering of high-permittivity, low-loss dielectric materials has contributed significantly to the development of these probes. The high permittivity helps to confine the electromagnetic field within the resonator, while the low losses inside the material limit noise during the signal acquisition. The development of ferroelectric ceramic materials with perovskite crystalline structures has enabled the reachable permittivity to be increased while keeping the losses low [11,12].

Table 2.1 Literature review of dielectric probes for MRI.

Application B0(T) Frequency (MHz) r Imaging zone (height x diameter) Type of probe Dielectric material Exploited distribution Tuning technique
[13] Human breast 3 128 1000 15 cm × 10 cm Volume (BaSr)TiO3 + Mg TE01δ (5 coupled disks) Interdisk gap adjustment
[14] Wrist 7 298 80 10 cm × 10 cm Volume Water HEM11δ Capacitors (coupling loops electronic network)
[15] Cardiac (torso) 7 298 165 Surface (BaSr)TiO3 TE01δ (array of 8 resonators)
[16] Microscopy 14.1 600 156 24 mm × 4.8 mm Volume CaTiO3 TE01δ Overlap with copper foils
[17] Microscopy 14.1 600 323 4 mm × 3.8 mm Volume (BaSr)TiO3 2 coupled TE01δ modes Overlap with copper strips
[18] Microscopy 17.2 730 536 10 mm × 5.6 mm Volume (BaSr)TiO3 + Mg TE01δ Temperature
[19] Microscopy 17.2 730 536. 10 mm × 5.6 mm twice Volume (BaSr)TiO3 + Mg 2 coupled TE01δ modes Temperature
Magnetic Resonance Microscopy

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