Magnetic Resonance - Technology Information Portal Welcome to MRI Technology
Info
  Sheets

Out-
      side
 



 
 'Flux' 
SEARCH FOR    
 
  2 3 5 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Result : Searchterm 'Flux' found in 2 terms [] and 11 definitions []
previous     11 - 13 (of 13)     
Result Pages : [1]  [2 3]
Searchterm 'Flux' was also found in the following services: 
spacer
News  (1)  Resources  (1)  
 
Magnetic Shielding
 
Means to confine the region of strong magnetic field surrounding a magnet; most commonly the use of material with high permeability (passive shielding) or by employing secondary counteracting coils outside of the primary coils (active shielding). The high permeability material can be employed in the form of a yoke immediately surrounding the magnet (self-shielding) or installed in the walls of a room as full or partial room-shielding. Unlike shielding ionizing radiation, for example, magnetic shielding can only be accomplished by forcing the unavoidable magnetic return flux through more confined areas or structures, not by absorbing it.

See also Radio Frequency Shielding Radio Frequency Shielding, and Faraday cage.

See also the related poll result: 'Most outages of your scanning system are caused by failure of'
spacer
 
• Related Searches:
    • Superconducting Magnet
    • 5 Gauss Fringe Field
    • Self Shielding
    • Electromagnet
    • Permanent Magnet
 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
Faraday's Law
   by hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu    
  News & More:
Magnetic Sensitivity of MRI Systems to External Iron: The Design Process
   by www.integratedsoft.com    
Searchterm 'Flux' was also found in the following services: 
spacer
Radiology  (7) Open this link in a new windowUltrasound  (12) Open this link in a new window
Resistive Magnet
 
A type of magnet that utilizes the principles of electromagnetism to generate the magnetic field. Typically large current values and significant cooling of the magnet coils is required. The resistive magnet does not require cryogens, but needs a constant power supply to maintain a homogenous magnetic field, and can be quite expensive to maintain.
Resistive magnets fall into two general categories - iron-core and air-core.
Iron-core electromagnets provide the advantages of a vertically oriented magnetic field, and a limited fringe field with little, if any, missile effects due to the closed iron-flux return path.
Air-core electromagnets exhibit horizontally oriented fields, which have large fringe fields (unless magnetically shielded) and are prone to missile effects. Resistive magnets are typically limited to maximum field strengths of approximately 0.6T.
spacer

• View the DATABASE results for 'Resistive Magnet' (3).Open this link in a new window

MRI Resources 
NMR - Libraries - MRCP - IR - Absorption and Emission - MRI Accidents
 
Yoke
 
High permeability structure used to concentrate the magnetic flux inside itself and thus decrease the magnetic fringe field and increase the field strength in the useful volume of a magnet.
spacer

• View the DATABASE results for 'Yoke' (5).Open this link in a new window

Searchterm 'Flux' was also found in the following services: 
spacer
News  (1)  Resources  (1)  
 
previous      11 - 13 (of 13)     
Result Pages : [1]  [2 3]
 Random Page
 
Share This Page
FacebookTwitterLinkedIn

MR-TIP    
Community   
User
Pass
Forgot your UserID/Password ?    



Next big thing in MRI will be :
AI 
remote operator 
personalized protocols 
helium-free 
molecular MRI 
portable MRI 

Look
      Ups





MR-TIP.com uses cookies! By browsing MR-TIP.com, you agree to our use of cookies.

Magnetic Resonance - Technology Information Portal
Member of SoftWays' Medical Imaging Group - MR-TIP • Radiology-TIP • Medical-Ultrasound-Imaging • 
Copyright © 2003 - 2024 SoftWays. All rights reserved. [ 7 May 2024]
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertising
 [last update: 2024-02-26 03:41:00]