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MEDIA CONTACT: Megan Fellman
at (847) 491-3115 or fellman@northwestern.edu
October 3, 2001
Scientists Image Material
That Could Improve MRI Technologies
EVANSTON, Ill. Using a
technique similar to the magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) widely applied by hospitals for
medical diagnosis but at a resolution 10,000
times greater, physicists at Northwestern University
have gained insights into a high-temperature
superconductor that might one day benefit hospital
MRI technologies and the patients who rely on
them.
The research, led by William Halperin, professor
of physics and astronomy, in collaboration with
scientists from Northwestern, Argonne National
Laboratory and the National High Magnetic Field
Laboratory (NHMFL), was the highest magnetic
field imaging experiment ever conducted.
The findings, including the direct evidence
of an electronic Doppler effect, are reported
in the Oct. 4 issue of the journal Nature.
"Currently, hospitals use low-temperature
superconductors in MRI, but high-temperature
superconductors a relatively new discovery
may be a better material, with the bonus
of requiring less cooling, thus reducing costs,"
said Halperin.
To advance its potential application in future
technologies, the researchers first need to
understand the physical properties of these
materials and especially how they behave in
the presence of very large magnetic fields.
"The goal in the medical world is to get
better resolution in MRI technology in order
to improve diagnoses the better the resolution
the more detail for analysis," said Halperin.
"Our imaging method is a major technical
advance in the study of superconductors and
one that has basic implications for magnetic
imaging."
For the first time, researchers were able to
peer into the cores of vortices tiny
electrical tornadoes swirling around in the
copper oxide compound, YBa2Cu3O7, the classic
high-temperature superconducting material. (The
vortices result from magnetic fields trapped
inside the material.) The core of the vortex
in the superconductor is very much like the
eye of a hurricane except that it is so small
it is hard to investigate. Each core measures
only three nanometers across (the width of about
10 atoms strung together). Extremely high resolution
made possible by a large magnetic field
was required to look inside the vortex
core.
Halperins team took advantage of the recently
commissioned hybrid magnet in the Tallahassee
Laboratory of the NHMFL, which provided them
with the highest steady magnetic field in the
world a million times stronger than the
Earths. This allowed the scientists to
distinguish the core from what is around it.
All superconductors have two essential properties.
First, a superconductor, when cooled to its
appropriate temperature, conducts electricity
without any resistance. In other words, an electrical
charge can flow without generating any heat,
which means no loss of energy. Second, a superconductor
expels some of the magnetic field inside it.
In order to keep the desirable zero resistance
state, the magnetic fields remaining in the
material (in the form of vortices) need to be
understood and controlled.
The most important component of the MRI technology
used in hospitals is the main magnet, which
supplies the steady magnetic field critical
for high-quality imaging. Superconducting magnets
are the most widely used because they require
less electricity, thus reducing the cost of
operation. Also important are the gradient magnets
that generate magnetic fields that vary in space.
These non-uniform fields make it possible to
distinguish one region of the body from another,
generating three-dimensional images from any
angle and direction, in a non-invasive fashion.
In order to study superconducting vortices in
tiny crystals of YBa2Cu3O7, Halperin and his
team relied on a similar MRI technique. In this
case, the hybrid magnet at NHMFL weighing
34 tons and standing 22 feet tall provided
the steady magnetic field, and the whirling
electrical tornadoes the vortices in
the material provided the non-uniform
magnetic fields.
The extremely high spatial resolution of their
method revealed new electrical and physical
properties that the researchers did not expect
to find. They learned that the electrons behave
very differently inside the vortexs core
than outside. The core is no longer superconducting
due to the intense magnetic fields generated
by the vortexs swirling "electronic
winds."
Of particular interest was the observation that
the circulating electrical currents surrounding
the vortexs core create an electronic
Doppler effect. The acoustic version of this
effect is well known. For example, sound waves
from the whistle of an approaching train have
a higher pitch than when the train is receding.
Similarly, an electron moving in the current
circulating around the vortex has its energy
shifted upwards if it moves with the current
and downwards if it is moving against the current.
The electronic Doppler effect is key to understanding
many properties of high-temperature superconductors.
In addition to Halperin, other authors on the
paper are Vesna Mitrovic (principal author),
Eric Sigmund and Nathan Bachman, from Northwestern;
Mathias Eschrig, from Argonne National Laboratory;
and William Moulton, Philip Kuhns and Arneil
Reyes, from the National High Magnetic Field
Laboratory.
The research was supported by the National Science
Foundation.
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