ferromagnetic
Physics
(adjective)
Of a material, such as iron or nickel, that is easily magnetized.
Chemistry
(noun)
the basic mechanism by which certain materials form permanent magnets, or are attracted to magnets
Examples of ferromagnetic in the following topics:
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Ferromagnetism
- Ferromagnetism is the property of certain materials that enables them to form magnets and be attracted to magnets.
- An everyday example of ferromagnetism is a refrigerator magnet used to hold notes on a refrigerator door.
- Domains are small and randomly oriented in an unmagnetized ferromagnetic object.
- Thus ferromagnetism only occurs in materials with partially filled shells.
- Such materials are called ferromagnetic, after the Latin word for iron, ferrum.
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Ferromagnets and Electromagnets
- Such magnets are called ferromagnets.
- These materials are called ferromagnetic, after the Latin word ferrum (iron).
- In an unmagnetized ferromagnetic object, domains are small and randomly oriented.
- Due to the high magnetic permeability μ of the ferromagnetic material, the ferromagnetic core increases the magnetic field to thousands of times the strength of the field of the coil alone.
- This is called a ferromagnetic-core or iron-core electromagnet.
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Permanent Magnets
- Permanent magnets are objects made from ferromagnetic material that produce a persistent magnetic field.
- Materials that can be magnetized, which are also the ones that are strongly attracted to a magnet, are called ferromagnetic.
- When a magnet is brought near a previously unmagnetized ferromagnetic material, it causes local magnetization of the material with unlike poles closest .
- However, before magnetization these regions are small and randomly oriented throughout the unmagnetized ferromagnetic objects, so there is no net magnetic field.
- This arrangement can become permanent when the ferromagnetic material is heated and then cooled.
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Solenoids, Current Loops, and Electromagnets
- Combining a ferromagnet with an electromagnet can produce particularly strong magnetic effects.
- Whenever strong magnetic effects are needed (such as lifting scrap metal, or in particle accelerators) electromagnets are enhanced by ferromagnetic materials.
- Currents, including those associated with other submicroscopic particles like protons, allow us to explain ferromagnetism and all other magnetic effects.
- Ferromagnetism, for example, results from an internal cooperative alignment of electron spins, possible in some materials but not in others.
- An electromagnet induces regions of permanent magnetism on a floppy disk coated with a ferromagnetic material.
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Physical Properties and Atomic Size
- Ferromagnetism occurs when individual atoms are paramagnetic and the spin vectors are aligned parallel to each other in a crystalline material.
- Metallic iron is an example of a ferromagnetic material involving a transition metal.
- Anti-ferromagnetism is another example of a magnetic property arising from a particular alignment of individual spins in the solid state.
- Ferromagnetism is the physical theory which explains how materials become magnets.
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Paramagnetism and Diamagnetism
- Unlike ferromagnets, paramagnets do not retain any magnetization in the absence of an externally applied magnetic field, because thermal motion randomizes the spin orientations responsible for magnetism.
- However, for materials that display some other form of magnetism (such as ferromagnetism or paramagnetism), the diamagnetic contribution becomes negligible.
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Transition Metals
- Ferromagnetism occurs when individual atoms are paramagnetic and the spin vectors are aligned parallel to each other in a crystalline material.
- Metallic iron and the alloy alnico are examples of ferromagnetic materials involving transition metals.
- Anti-ferromagnetism is another example of a magnetic property arising from a particular alignment of individual spins in the solid state.
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Transformers
- A typical construction of a simple transformer has two coils wound on a ferromagnetic core that is laminated to minimize eddy currents.
- Any change in current in the primary induces a current in the secondary.The figure shows a simple transformer with two coils wound on either sides of a laminated ferromagnetic core.
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Electron Configurations and Magnetic Properties of Ions
- Permanent magnets have persistent magnetic fields caused by ferromagnetism, the strongest and most familiar type of magnetism.
- If the spins tend to align spontaneously in the absence of a magnetic field, the resulting species is termed ferromagnetic.
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The Third Law of Thermodynamics and Absolute Energy
- Only ferromagnetic, antiferromagnetic, and diamagnetic materials can satisfy this condition.