Mitsubishi Electric, Kyoto University and Tohoku University announced today the world’s first successful 3 tesla Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) using a small model MRI with high-temperature superconducting coils that do not require cooling with increasingly scarce liquid helium. Mitsubishi Electric achieved a strong, stable 3 tesla magnetic field by increasing the precision of the coil winding. Existing commercially available MRIs use low-temperature superconducting wires with a round or square cross section of 2- to 3-millimeters. The high-temperature superconducting wires are about 0.2 millimeter thick and 4- to 5-millimeters wide and are usually wound several hundred times, creating a pancake coil. Small discrepancies in the thickness and width of the wire give the coil an uneven height that can disrupt the magnetic field and distort imaging.
Mitsubishi Electric solved this problem by using laser displacement meters to measure the coil height and then adjusting it with correction sheets. This realized a winding accuracy of 0.1 millimeter for pancake coils with an outer diameter of about 400 millimeters, achieving the magnetic field homogeneity required for commercial imaging. The small model has an imaging space 25 millimeters in diameter with field homogeneity of less than two-millionths, the same level required for a 230-mm dia. x 650-mm cylinder in a commercial-size MRI. Using this new approach, Mitsubishi Electric succeeded in imaging a 25-millimeter mouse fetus at 3 tesla. Mitsubishi Electric, Kyoto University and Tohoku University plan to increase the size of the system to one half of a full-size MRI scanner by 2020 and to commercialize a full-size version from 2021.