Purpose: To develop and characterize the performance of a 128-channel head array for brain imaging at 10.5 tesla and evaluate the potential of brain imaging at this unique, >10 tesla magnetic field.
Methods: The coil is composed of a 16-channel self-decoupled loop transmit/receive array with a 112-loop receive-only (Rx) insert. Interactions between the outer transmitter and the inner 112Rx insert were mitigated using coaxial cable traps placed every 1/16 of a wavelength on each feed cable, locating most preamplifier boards outside the transmitter field and miniaturizing those placed directly on individual coils.
Results: The 128-channel array described herein achieved 77% of ultimate intrinsic SNR in the center of the brain. Transmit field maps obtained experimentally on a phantom with and without the receive array were similar and matched EM simulations, leading to FDA approval for human imaging. Anatomical and functional data, including with power demanding sequences, were acquired successfully on human volunteers.
Conclusions: Counterintuitive to expectations based on magnetic fields ≤7T, the higher channel counts provided SNR gains centrally, capturing ∼80% uiSNR. Fraction of uiSNR achieved centrally in 64Rx, 80Rx, and 128Rx arrays suggested that a plateau was being reached at 80%. At this plateau, linear to approximately quadratic B 0 dependent SNR gains for the periphery and the center, respectively, were observed for 10.5T relative 7T.