I am a student, and I could certainly know more about the topic of how nmrs are manufactured, but I wanted to add that it can be done tiny, one could potentially 3d print most of the metal or plastic parts of the probe and have the glass mount thingy made (is it easy to make precise glass bits? I don't know.) I would love to make one of these. Check out picospin. They made an 82Mhz nmr the size of a shoebox that uses a 2T magnet. The similarly sized 45mhz one that they make costs $25k (maybe more or less now, they got bought by thermoscientific) according to a powerpoint presentation I saw on it. I realize this is an old discussion, did anything come of it?
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