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Featured researches published by F. Marica.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2009

Quantitative 23Na magnetic resonance imaging of model foods.

Emil Veliyulin; Bjørg Egelandsdal; F. Marica; Bruce J. Balcom

Partial (23)Na MRI invisibility in muscle foods is often referred to as an inherent drawback of the MRI technique, impairing quantitative sodium analysis. Several model samples were designed to simulate muscle foods with a broad variation in protein, fat, moisture, and salt content. (23)Na spin-echo MRI and a recently developed (23)Na SPRITE MRI approach were compared for quantitative sodium imaging, demonstrating the possibility of accurate quantitative (23)Na MRI by the latter method. Good correlations with chemically determined standards were also obtained from bulk (23)Na free induction decay (FID) and CPMG relaxation experiments on the same sample set, indicating their potential use for rapid bulk NaCl measurements. Thus, the sodium MRI invisibility is a methodological problem that can easily be circumvented by using the SPRITE MRI technique.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2010

Variable bandwidth filtering for magnetic resonance imaging with pure phase encoding

Juan C. García-Naranjo; Paul Glover; F. Marica; Bruce J. Balcom

Magnetic resonance imaging with pure phase encoding (sometimes known as single point or constant time imaging) has many desirable advantages, but is usually time consuming in comparison to frequency encoding methods. In single point imaging the maximum signal bandwidth is proportional to both the phase-encoding gradient amplitude and the object size. It is usual practice to set the acquisition filter bandwidth to the maximum value expected during a measurement. Hence the filtering employed in this kind of measurement is not optimal for the low frequency k-space points. An optimal way to set the filter bandwidth is presented in this study. By reducing the filter bandwidth to match the point sampled in k-space, the inherent SNR is improved and this, in turn, may be used to reduce the number of signal averages required for acceptable SNR. The variable bandwidth filter offers a theoretical SNR increase of 41%. This paper shows the results of its application and comparison with fixed low-pass filtering. Practical measurements show a gain of 20% in SNR, which would translate into a 31% reduction in averaging time required for a single image without any detrimental effects on the image quality.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2017

Local diffusion and diffusion-T2 distribution measurements in porous media

S. Vashaee; Benedict Newling; Bryce MacMillan; F. Marica; Ming Li; Bruce J. Balcom

Slice-selective pulsed field gradient (PFG) and PFG-T2 measurements are developed to measure spatially-resolved molecular diffusion and diffusion-T2 distributions. A spatially selective adiabatic inversion pulse was employed for slice-selection. The slice-selective pulse is able to select a coarse slice, on the order of 1cm, at an arbitrary position in the sample. The new method can be employed to characterize oil-water mixtures in porous media. The new technique has an inherent sensitivity advantage over phase encoding imaging based methods due to signal being localized from a thick slice. The method will be advantageous for magnetic resonance of porous media at low field where sensitivity is problematic. Experimental CPMG data, following PFG diffusion measurement, were compromised by a transient ΔB0(t) field offset. The off resonance effects of ΔB0(t) were examined by simulation. The ΔB0 offset artifact in D-T2 distribution measurements may be avoided by employing real data, instead of magnitude data.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2017

A high-pressure metallic core holder for magnetic resonance based on Hastelloy-C

M. Shakerian; F. Marica; Armin Afrough; Frédéric G. Goora; Ming Li; S. Vashaee; Bruce J. Balcom

A metallic core holder, fabricated from non-magnetic Hastelloy-C276, has been designed for Magnetic Resonance (MR) and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of core plug samples at high pressures and temperatures. Core plug samples, 1.5″ in diameter and 2″ in length, can be tested in the core holder at elevated pressures and temperatures, up to 5000 psi and 80 °C. These are conditions commonly found in petroleum reservoirs. A radio frequency probe, which excites and detects magnetic resonance signals, was placed inside the metal vessel. Proximity to the sample improves the signal to noise ratio of the resulting measurements. The metallic core holder is positioned between the poles of a 0.2 T permanent magnet and subjected to rapidly switched magnetic field gradients as part of the imaging process. This switching induces eddy currents on the conductive core holder, which degrades the magnetic field gradient waveform in the sample space. The low electrical-conductivity of Hastelloy-C276 minimizes the duration and the magnitude of such eddy currents. A recently developed pre-equalization technique was employed to ensure that magnetic field gradient pulses, required for MRI, are near ideal in the sample space. A representative core flooding experiment was undertaken in conjunction with MR/MRI measurements.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2018

Local T 1 -T 2 distribution measurements in porous media

S. Vashaee; Ming Li; Benedict Newling; Bryce MacMillan; F. Marica; H.T. Kwak; J. Gao; A.M. Al-harbi; Bruce J. Balcom

A novel slice-selective T1-T2 measurement is proposed to measure spatially resolved T1-T2 distributions. An adiabatic inversion pulse is employed for slice-selection. The slice-selective pulse is able to select a quasi-rectangular slice, on the order of 1 mm, at an arbitrary position within the sample.The method does not employ conventional selective excitation in which selective excitation is often accomplished by rotation of the longitudinal magnetization in the slice of interest into the transverse plane, but rather a subtraction based on CPMG data acquired with and without adiabatic inversion slice selection. T1 weighting is introduced during recovery from the inversion associated with slice selection. The local T1-T2 distributions measured are of similar quality to bulk T1-T2 measurements. The new method can be employed to characterize oil-water mixtures and other fluids in porous media. The method is beneficial when a coarse spatial distribution of the components is of interest.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2006

Spatially resolved measurement of rock core porosity.

F. Marica; Quan Chen; Andrea Hamilton; C. Hall; Tom A. Al; Bruce J. Balcom


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2007

Quantitative discrimination of water and hydrocarbons in porous media by magnetization prepared centric-scan SPRITE

Linqing Li; F. Marica; Quan Chen; Bryce MacMillan; Bruce J. Balcom


Energy & Fuels | 2017

Polymer Flooding Enhanced Oil Recovery Evaluated with Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Relaxation Time Measurements

Ming Li; Laura Romero-Zerón; F. Marica; Bruce J. Balcom


Archive | 2005

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING OF POROSITY HETEROGENEITY IN BIOTURBATED SANDSTONE FROM THE WHITE ROSE RESERVOIR, ATLANTIC CANADA

A. Belonogov; F. Marica; A. Lawfield; Karl E. Butler; Quan Chen; Murray K. Gingras; Bruce J. Balcom


Energy & Fuels | 2017

A Magnetic Resonance Study of Low Salinity Waterflooding for Enhanced Oil Recovery

Ming Li; Sarah Vashaee; Laura Romero-Zerón; F. Marica; Bruce J. Balcom

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Bruce J. Balcom

University of New Brunswick

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Ming Li

University of New Brunswick

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Bryce MacMillan

University of New Brunswick

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Quan Chen

University of New Brunswick

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S. Vashaee

University of New Brunswick

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Benedict Newling

University of New Brunswick

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Linqing Li

University of New Brunswick

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Tom A. Al

University of New Brunswick

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