Materials respond differently to the
force of a magnetic field. A magnet will strongly
attract ferromagnetic materials, weakly attract
paramagnetic materials, and weakly repel diamagnetic
materials. The orientation of the spin of the electrons
in an atom, the orientation of the atoms in a molecule
or alloy, and the ability of domains of atoms or
molecules to line up are the factors that determine how
a material responds to a magnetic field. Ferromagnetic
materials have the most magnetic uses. Diamagnetic
materials are used in magnetic levitation and MRI.
Questions you may have include:
-
What are ferromagnetic materials?
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What are paramagnetic materials?
-
What are diamagnetic materials?
Ferromagnetic materials
Ferromagnetic materials are strongly
attracted by a magnetic force. The elements iron (Fe),
nickel (Ni), cobalt (Co) and gadolinium (Gd) are such
materials. (See the Detailed Periodic Table for more
information on those elements.)
The reasons these metals are strongly
attracted are because their individual atoms have a
slightly higher degree of magnetism due to their
configuration of electrons, their atoms readily line up
in the same magnetic direction, and the magnetic domains
or groups of atoms line up more readily. (See Factors
Determining Magnetic Response for more information.)
Iron is the most common element
associated with being attracted to to a magnet. Steel is
also a ferromagnetic material. It is an alloy or
combination of iron and several other metals, giving it
greater hardness than iron, as well as other specialized
properties. Because of its hardness, steel retains
magnetism longer than iron.
Alloys of iron, nickel, cobalt,
gadolinium and certain ceramic materials can become
"permanent" magnets, such that they retain their
magnetism for a long time.
Strongly magnetic ferromagnetic
materials like nickel or steel lose all their magnetic
properties if they are heated to a high enough
temperature. The atoms become too excited by the heat to
remain pointing in one direction for long.
The temperature at which a metal loses
its magnetism is called the Curie temperature, and it is
different for every metal. The Curie temperature for
nickel, for example, is about 350�C.
Paramagnetic materials
Paramagnetic materials are metals that
are weakly attracted to magnets. Aluminum and copper are
such metals. These materials can become very weak
magnets, but their attractive force can only be measured
with sensitive instruments.
Temperature can affect the magnetic
properties of a material. Paramagnetic materials like
aluminum, uranium and platinum become more magnetic when
they are very cold.
The force of a ferromagnetic magnet is
about a million times that of a magnet made with a
paramagnetic material. Since the attractive force is so
small, paramagnetic materials are typically considered
nonmagnetic.
Diamagnetic materials
Certain materials are diamagnetic, which
means that when they are exposed to a strong magnetic
field, they induce a weak magnetic field in the opposite
direction. In other words, they weakly repel a strong
magnet. Some have been used in simple levitation
demonstrations.
Bismuth and carbon graphite are the
strongest diamagnetic materials. They are about eight
times stronger than mercury and silver. Other weaker
diamagnetic materials include water, diamonds, wood and
living tissue. Note that the last three items are
carbon-based.
The electrons in a diamagnetic material
rearrange their orbits slightly creating small
persistent currents, which oppose the external magnetic
field.
Although the forces created by
diamagnetism are extremely weak--millions of times
smaller than the forces between magnets and
ferromagnetic materials like iron, there are some
interesting uses of those materials.
The most popular application of
diamagnetic materials is magnetic levitation, where an
object will be made to float in are above a strong
magnet. Although most experiments use inert objects,
researchers as the University of Nijmegen in the
Netherlands demonstrated levitating a small frog in a
powerful magnetic field.

Levitated Frog
Magnets will strongly attract
ferromagnetic materials, weakly attract paramagnetic
materials, and weakly repel diamagnetic materials.
Ferromagnetic materials have the most magnetic uses.
Diamagnetic materials are used in magnetic levitation. |