Title: Spins and Relaxation
1Spins and Relaxation
Daniel Bulte
FMRIB Graduate Program Lecture MR Physics
2Objectives
- How does MRI work?
- What is resonance?
- Where does the signal come from?
- What are T1 and T2?
- Where does contrast come from?
- Please ask questions!
3Spin
- Fundamental property of particles, like mass and
charge - Spin comes in quanta of 1/2 (for Fermions)
- Electrons, protons and neutrons all have spin
1/2 - Pairs of these subatomic particles tend to align
with opposite spin and cancel out
4Nuclear Spin
Some nuclei have Spin
If a nucleus has an unpaired proton it will have
spin and it will have a net magnetic moment or
field ? NMR phenomenon
5Common NMR Active Nuclei
Isotope Spin ? I abundance MHz/T
1H 1/2 99.985 42.575 2H 1 0.015 6.53 13C
1/2 1.108 10.71 14N 1 99.63 3.078 15N
1/2 0.37 4.32 17O 5/2 0.037 5.77 19F
1/2 100 40.08 23Na 3/2 100 11.27 31P
1/2 100 17.25
? gyromagnetic ratio
6Alignment of Spins in a Magnetic Field
M
M0
B0 field
7Energy in a Magnetic Field(Zeeman Splitting,
Spin ½)
E1/2 ???B0/2
E-1/2 ??B0/2
mI ½
mI ?½
P1/2 0. 5000049
P-1/2 0.4999951
P(E) ? exp(?E/kT)
8Larmor Frequency
mI ?½
mI ½
E1/2 ???B0/2
E-1/2 ??B0/2
Allowed transitions ?E ??B0
??0
?0 ?B0
9Larmor Frequency
Spins precess at Larmor frequency. Net
magnetisation M0 is static.
B0
?0 ?B0
10Precession
11Important Point 1
- When a particle with net spin is placed in a
magnetic field it precesses at a rate determined
by the field strength and the type of particle
12Resonance
- If a system that has an intrinsic frequency (such
as a bell or a swing) can draw energy from
another system which is oscillating at the same
frequency the 2 systems are said to resonate
13The B1 Field
- A radio frequency (RF) field from an antenna is
simply an alternating electromagnetic field - We can thereby create a magnetic field which
oscillates at a specific frequency
14A Night at the Disco
- Imagine if you will
- a new dance craze to rival the macarena.
- Everybody do the NMR!
15The B1 Field
- This secondary rotating field has the same effect
on the spins as the B0 field it causes them to
precess - The precession is about the direction of the
field, which is itself rotating
16Laboratory Frame
17Rotating Frame
18Spin Excitation
M
M
M
x
rotating frame
B0
laboratory frame
19Review
- NMR signal depends on the quantum mechanical
properties of nuclei. - Larmor equation relates field to frequency.
- ?0 ?B0
- Spins excited by a B1 field, perpendicular to the
B0, rotate around the B1 direction
20Where does the signal come from?
- The net magnetic vector is the sum of all the
spins from all of the protons - Its magnitude in a given direction can be altered
through clever application of the B1 field
21NMR Excitation
Resting state
22NMR Excitation
Excitation
23NMR Excitation
Saturation
24NMR Relaxation
T1 recovery
25Lattice Thermal Processes
- Frequency distribution of molecular motion can be
expressed by the spectral density function - J(?)
- Where ?c is the correlation time or
characteristic time scale of the motion
?c
1 ?2 ?c2
26Lattice Thermal Processes
- The relaxation rate (1/T1) is given by
- R1
-
- Where ?0 is the resonant frequency of the spin
system
? B2xy
27The Simplified Bloch Equation
- Time to reach equilibrium is governed by thermal
processes. - The return to equilibrium is generally
exponential and governed by the equation - T1 is called the spin-lattice relaxation time.
28Mz Recovery Following a 90º Pulse
Mz
M0
z
y
x
t
90o pulse
29What effect does T1 have on Images?
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EPI
EPI
EPI
EPI
30What effect does T1 have on Images?
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Mz
31What effect does T1 have on Images?
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Mz
32What effect does T1 have on Images?
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Mz
33What effect does T1 have on Images?
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Mz
34What effect does T1 have on Images?
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Mz
35What effect does T1 have on Images?
t 0 t 3s t
6s t 9s t 12s
36Effect of Flip Angle
High flip angle
37Effect of Flip Angle
Low flip angle
38The Ernst Angle
- Assume the steady state has been reached.
- Use a flip angle of q degrees.
- Find a condition where the transverse
magnetization following the flip is maximized.
39T1 Recovery Curves
Short T1 (white matter)
Mz
Medium T1 (grey matter)
Long T1 (CSF)
Contrast
TR
40T1-Weighted Imageswith Inversion Recovery
41T1-Weighted Images with Inversion Recovery
42T1-Weighted Images with Inversion Recovery
43T1 Weighted Image
T1/s
R1/s-1
white matter
0.7
1.43
grey matter
1
1
CSF
4
0.25
1.5T
SPGR, TR14ms, TE5ms, flip20º
44NMR Relaxation
T2 relaxation
45T2 Decay Curve
FID dies away with increasing time
FIDAmplitude
æ
ö
t
-
ç
M
M
exp
0
è
ø
T
2
t
46Free Induction Decay
M
FT
time
frequency
FT
Note Signal only detected from Mxy component
time
frequency
47Transverse Relaxation
- Interactions between neighbouring spins causes
loss of coherence in transverse magnetisation
48Transverse Relaxation
- Longitudinal relaxation is driven by field
oscillations in the transverse plane. - Transverse relaxation is driven by field
oscillations in the longitudinal direction. - Random fluctuations in B0 experienced by a
nucleus cause the resonant frequency of that spin
to change ? loss of coherence
49Transverse Relaxation
- The return to equilibrium is governed by the
Bloch equation. - T2 is called the spin-spin relaxation time
50Transverse relaxation
B0
t
Rotating frame
51Transverse relaxation
B0
t
Rotating frame
52Transverse relaxation
B0
t
Rotating frame
53Transverse relaxation
B0
t
Rotating frame
54Transverse relaxation
B0
t
Rotating frame
55Transverse relaxation
B0
t
Rotating frame
56Transverse relaxation
B0
t
Rotating frame
57Transverse relaxation
B0
t
Rotating frame
58Transverse relaxation
B0
t
Rotating frame
59Transverse Relaxation
- If the field experienced by the molecule is
purely random then the effect would time average
to zero. - Correlations in the motion cause a range of
frequencies.
60Transverse Relaxation
Long T2
frequency
Short T2
61T2 Decay Curves
EchoAmplitude
Long T2 (CSF)
Medium T2 (grey matter)
Contrast
Short T2(white matter)
TE
62T2 Weighted Image
T2/ms
CSF
500
80?90
grey matter
70?80
white matter
1.5T
SE, TR4000ms, TE100ms
63Relaxation in a Nutshell
64What is T2
- Loss of coherence in transverse magnetisation
also occurs as a result of bulk magnetic effects - Spatial static B0 field variations within a voxel
lead to identical effects on the signal as
spin-spin interactions
65T2 vs. T2
- The T2 relaxation time depends primarily on
spin-spin interactions - non-reversible - T2 depends on both spin-spin interactions AND
the homogeneity of the external magnetic field -
reversible - Homogeneity depends on how good your magnet is,
and susceptibility-induced field distortions due
to the presence of different tissues - T2 can be considered as the observed or
effective transverse relaxation time
66Optimal TR and TE for T1 Contrast
TR
TE
MR Signal
MR Signal
T1 contrast
T2 contrast
sec
ms
T1 Recovery
T2 Decay
67Optimal TR and TE for T2 and T2 Contrast
TR
TE
T2 Contrast
MR Signal
MR Signal
T1 Contrast
ms
sec
T2 Decay
T1 Recovery
68Important Point 2
- TR controls T1 weighting
- TE controls T2 weighting
- Short T2 tissues are dark on T2 images
- Short T1 tissues are bright on T1 images
69Reversing T2 Losses
- A spin echo can refocus spins that are sitting in
a time invariant B0 field. - A spin echo cannot refocus T2 dephasing.
- A spin echo cannot refocus spins that have
experienced a time varying field, for example
diffusing molecules.
70The Spin Echo
t 0
71The Spin Echo
t gt 0
72The Spin Echo
t t
73The Spin Echo
t gt t
74The Spin Echo
t 2t
75Tutorial
- http//www.revisemri.com/questions/
- basicphysics/