Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) cryoporometry is a non-invasive method for determining the pore size distributions of materials such as porous silica. Cryoporometry has several advantages over other porometric techniques. It is able to measure the melting process in a series of discrete steps, whereas transient heat flow techniques, such as differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), have a minimum rate of measurement, and, secondly, NMR cryoporometry can analyze pore shapes with any geometry, where nitrogen porosimetry is complicated for samples with spherical pores with narrow necks. However, one key drawback of the method is that, for any one liquid observed in any one material, there is a lack of consensus in the two parameters, kckc andV...