There are multiple applications of magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy for which it is useful to be able to attenuate the signal that arises from surface structures. Surface signal can be attenuated by using local coils which generate a spatially varying magnetic field that decays rapidly with distance from the surface. In previous work, crushing has been accomplished by using “meander-line” coils which the current flow is predominantly along one dimension. Here we design novel crusher coils in which the current equally flows along two orthogonal directions, and demonstrate via simulations and experiments at 3 T that these coils offer advantages for surface signal crushing.
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