[145081] |
Title: Design of a Magnetostimulation Head Coil with Rutherford Cable Winding. |
Written by: A. A. Ozaslan, A. R. Cagil, M. Graeser, T. Knopp, E. U. Saritas |
in: <em>International Journal on Magnetic Particle Imaging</em>. (2020). |
Volume: <strong>6</strong>. Number: (2), |
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Note: inproceedings
Abstract: Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI) uses sinusoidal drive fields to excite the magnetic nanoparticles. These time-varying magnetic fields form electric fields within the body, which in turn can cause peripheral nerve stimulation, also known as magnetostimulation. In this work, we propose a design for a human head-size magnetostimulation coil with a Rutherford cable winding. This design achieves 12-fold decrease in the voltages needed to generate a given magnetic field, facilitating the safety of human subject experiments. With electromagnetic simulations, we determine the electric field patterns on a human head model to determine the potential primary locations of magnetostimulation.
[145081] |
Title: Design of a Magnetostimulation Head Coil with Rutherford Cable Winding. |
Written by: A. A. Ozaslan, A. R. Cagil, M. Graeser, T. Knopp, E. U. Saritas |
in: <em>International Journal on Magnetic Particle Imaging</em>. (2020). |
Volume: <strong>6</strong>. Number: (2), |
on pages: |
Chapter: |
Editor: |
Publisher: |
Series: |
Address: |
Edition: |
ISBN: |
how published: |
Organization: |
School: |
Institution: |
Type: |
DOI: |
URL: |
ARXIVID: |
PMID: |
Note: inproceedings
Abstract: Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI) uses sinusoidal drive fields to excite the magnetic nanoparticles. These time-varying magnetic fields form electric fields within the body, which in turn can cause peripheral nerve stimulation, also known as magnetostimulation. In this work, we propose a design for a human head-size magnetostimulation coil with a Rutherford cable winding. This design achieves 12-fold decrease in the voltages needed to generate a given magnetic field, facilitating the safety of human subject experiments. With electromagnetic simulations, we determine the electric field patterns on a human head model to determine the potential primary locations of magnetostimulation.