Radiofrequency shielding of surface coils at 4.0 t

Abstract
Because radiation loss associated with a radiofrequency (RF) coil increases as roughly the fourth power of the frequency, this loss mechanism may become important in high-field studies above 2.0 T. In this study, the contribution of radiation losses at 4.0 T were determined in a rectangular surface coil using an RF shield to modify the radiation losses. The effect of this shield was determined on coil Q, B1 distribution, and signal to noise as a function of distance between the coil and the shield. Phantoms and human tissue were evaluated to characterize the loss mechanisms. The results demonstrate a large radiation loss in the unshielded surface coil. However, the radiation losses in vivo were not dominant owing to a large inductive loss occurring from dielectric currents in the body at 170 MHz.