
The use of conventional nuclear magnetic resonance is limited by
the fact that the object needs to be carried to the NMR equipment
and needs to fit inside large superconducting magnets. Both
limitations are removed by single-sided NMR probes based on open
magnets specially adapted to the object under study. These can be
inexpensive and portable sensors that give access to a large
number of applications inaccessible with using conventional magnet
geometries. Substantial improvements in the magnet design,
detection electronics, and the implementation of suitable
techniques to work in the inhomogeneous magnetic fields of open
magnets have allowed scientists and engineers to measure
relaxation-time distributions, diffusion coefficients, 3D images,
velocity distributions, and even highly resolved NMR spectra in
the stray field of the magnet. This book is the first
comprehensive account describing the key issues to be considered
at the time of designing and building open magnets, and
summarizing the arsenal of pulse sequences available today for
material analysis.

Dynamic Pulsed-Field-Gradient NMR