Abstract: | The number of possible applications of NMR spectroscopy has rapidly increased during the past few years. New fields of applications have been opened by the development of supraconducting solenoids and various spin-decoupling techniques and by the method of “pulsed Fourier transform NMR-spectroscopy”. These methods originate mainly from progress in instrumentation. Recently, another “technique” has been introduced into NMR spectroscopy, which—principally on the basis of chemical and spectroscopic experience—is much less expensive but nevertheless useful. The basic principles, background, and most important applications of this method, known as the “NMR-shift-reagent technique”, form the subject of this paper. |