Iron, nickel, cobalt, gadolinium and their alloys.
A ferromagnetic material is a substance that is highly susceptible to magnetization. The most common of these substances is iron.
Hard magnets are magnets that don't lose their magnetism at room temperature. Steal, aluminium, nickel and cobalt.
Diatomic Oxygen O2 and Chlorine Cl2 are some examples of para-magnetic substances.
iron, paperclips, barium ferrite
cobalt
Heating a ferromagnetic substance causes the heat to disrupt the magnetic particles thatÊpoint in the same direction and therefore it becames paramagnetic which is barely magnetic at all.
A paramagnetic element is one that has unpaired electrons. Aluminum is one example, as is oxygen.
air is paramagnetic and this caused by the presence of O2 which is paramagnetic as it has 2 unpaired electrons.
Yes, lithium is paramagnetic because it has one unpaired electron.
Arsenic is paramagnetic because the electron configuration is {Ar}4s^2,3d^10,4p^3. Due to the unpaired electron at the end (4p^*3*) the atom in ground state is paramagnetic. **OR Arsenic would be paramagnetic since the 4 p orbitals each contain one electron with parallel spin. These three unpaired electrons give arsenic its paramagnetic property.
A paramagnet is a substance that is weakly attracted by the poles of a magnet. Iridium is an example of a chemical element that is paramagnetic.
Paramagnetic substance
remove the iron in the compound
Heating a ferromagnetic substance causes the heat to disrupt the magnetic particles thatÊpoint in the same direction and therefore it becames paramagnetic which is barely magnetic at all.
Curie point is the temperature above which a ferromagnetic substance behaves as a paramagnetic substance.
A paramagnetic element is one that has unpaired electrons. Aluminum is one example, as is oxygen.
I'm not sure what you mean, but a substance's magnetism (in chemistry) is usually defined as paramagnetic or diamagetic.
I'm not sure what you mean, but a substance's magnetism (in chemistry) is usually defined as paramagnetic or diamagetic.
No, argon is not paramagnetic.
paramagnetic
apparantely it is paramagnetic
air is paramagnetic and this caused by the presence of O2 which is paramagnetic as it has 2 unpaired electrons.