Thomas Grafendorfer1,2, Greig Scott2,
Paul Calderon3, Fraser Robb4, Shreyas Vasanawala5
1RX & ATD Coils, GE Healthcare,
Stanford, CA, United States; 2Electrical Engineering, Stanford
University, Stanford, CA, United States; 3MR Hardware Engineering,
GE Healthcare, Fremont, CA, United States; 4Advanced Technology,
GEHC Coils, Aurora, OH, United States; 5Radiology, Stanford
University, Stanford, CA, United States
Placing
the preamplifiers close to the coil elements in multi-channel arrays
increases preamplifier-decoupling performance, which leads to better SNR and
better acceleration performance. Unfortunately it also opens a new feedback
path that can easily lead to oscillation. We developed a new strategy by
applying frequency selective negative feedback that suppresses the gain at
the so-called match split peaks outside the frequency band relevant for MRI.
This greatly reduces the possibility for oscillation, and the gain within the
signal band stays more or less unaffected.