Scientific Reports (Aug 2022)

A lightweight magnetically shielded room with active shielding

  • Niall Holmes,
  • Molly Rea,
  • James Chalmers,
  • James Leggett,
  • Lucy J. Edwards,
  • Paul Nell,
  • Stephen Pink,
  • Prashant Patel,
  • Jack Wood,
  • Nick Murby,
  • David Woolger,
  • Eliot Dawson,
  • Christopher Mariani,
  • Tim M. Tierney,
  • Stephanie Mellor,
  • George C. O’Neill,
  • Elena Boto,
  • Ryan M. Hill,
  • Vishal Shah,
  • James Osborne,
  • Rosemarie Pardington,
  • Peter Fierlinger,
  • Gareth R. Barnes,
  • Paul Glover,
  • Matthew J. Brookes,
  • Richard Bowtell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-17346-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Magnetically shielded rooms (MSRs) use multiple layers of materials such as MuMetal to screen external magnetic fields that would otherwise interfere with high precision magnetic field measurements such as magnetoencephalography (MEG). Optically pumped magnetometers (OPMs) have enabled the development of wearable MEG systems which have the potential to provide a motion tolerant functional brain imaging system with high spatiotemporal resolution. Despite significant promise, OPMs impose stringent magnetic shielding requirements, operating around a zero magnetic field resonance within a dynamic range of ± 5 nT. MSRs developed for OPM-MEG must therefore effectively shield external sources and provide a low remnant magnetic field inside the enclosure. Existing MSRs optimised for OPM-MEG are expensive, heavy, and difficult to site. Electromagnetic coils are used to further cancel the remnant field inside the MSR enabling participant movements during OPM-MEG, but present coil systems are challenging to engineer and occupy space in the MSR limiting participant movements and negatively impacting patient experience. Here we present a lightweight MSR design (30% reduction in weight and 40–60% reduction in external dimensions compared to a standard OPM-optimised MSR) which takes significant steps towards addressing these barriers. We also designed a ‘window coil’ active shielding system, featuring a series of simple rectangular coils placed directly onto the walls of the MSR. By mapping the remnant magnetic field inside the MSR, and the magnetic field produced by the coils, we can identify optimal coil currents and cancel the remnant magnetic field over the central cubic metre to just |B|= 670 ± 160 pT. These advances reduce the cost, installation time and siting restrictions of MSRs which will be essential for the widespread deployment of OPM-MEG.