Traditional high field NMR spectrometers are costly to purchase and maintain, and generally require expert users. NMR provides information about chemical structure, and is a valuable technique in the analytical chemist’s tool kit. Many smaller labs cannot afford such instrumentation, and instead use other techniques to piece together the required information.
An 80MHz bench-top NMR spectrometer has high enough resolution to provide specific structural information about a sample. For example, a mass spectrum of an unknown material provides a molecular mass and possibly a fragmentation pathway, giving structural information. Without further MS information, it is often impossible to be certain of a specific structural isomer, and it is in these cases where a 1H 1D NMR spectrum proves invaluable.
In the case of a possible designer drug sample, for example, it may be crucial to determine whether a functional group is at position 1 (legal) or position 2 (illegal) on an aliphatic chain. Standard mass spectra of both samples will be similar, showing cleavage of similar bonds, but comparison of 1H NMR spectra will be noticeably distinct.