Iron, Nickel, Cobalt and Gadolinium are the 4 metallic elements with strong magnetic properties but their are more materials than can be magnetic. Steel is an iron alloy that is magnetic. Stainless steel is an alloy of iron, chromium and maybe other materials. Not all stainless steel is magnetic. The amount of magnetic material in it (iron, nickel) determines if it is magnetic or not. ALNICO magnets made of Aluminum, Nickel, and Cobalt are very strong permanent magnets. Ceramic magnets are made of a powdered magnetic material mixed with a ceramic material that gives them a softer texture that will not scratch surfaces and they are popular as refrigerator magnets.
Typically you can magnetize iron or steel by exposing it to a strong magnetic field. Common "ceramic" magnets may not be strong enough, but you may need a strong rare earth magnet or a strong electro magnet.
Graphite isn't a ceramic material itself, however it can be made into a ceramic material
Temporary magnets are created using an electrical field. Once the current is switched off, it is no longer magnetic. A permanent magnet on the other hand, such as the common Ferro-ceramic magnet remains magnetic all the time because it was manufactured with all of its iron particles facing the same way.
The metallic coil is embedded in a ceramic plate, heating it up, from this ceramic material the heat is distributed to the surrounding area.
yes
3 ways.- natural elements and compounds that are naturally magnetic.- Iron that is forge struck will pick up a magnetic charge.- iron and ceramic elemental magnets that are charged electrically.
To my knowledge, you can't - nor would you want to. Ceramic cartridges are the cheapest of the cheap. If you have a receiver with an input for magnetic cartridge, save your money and buy a good turntable/magnetic cartridge combo (Crutchfield sells them). Your records will sound 10 times better, and wear out only 1/10th as much.
Naturally magnetic rocks don't compare to human made magnets.
Iron, Nickel, Cobalt and Gadolinium are the 4 metallic elements with strong magnetic properties but their are more materials than can be magnetic. Steel is an iron alloy that is magnetic. Stainless steel is an alloy of iron, chromium and maybe other materials. Not all stainless steel is magnetic. The amount of magnetic material in it (iron, nickel) determines if it is magnetic or not. ALNICO magnets made of Aluminum, Nickel, and Cobalt are very strong permanent magnets. Ceramic magnets are made of a powdered magnetic material mixed with a ceramic material that gives them a softer texture that will not scratch surfaces and they are popular as refrigerator magnets.
natural TM has possible use in ferrites(ceramic,magnetic,and materals) used in microwave eqipament
BARIUM IS NOT A MAGNETIC MATERIAL. THE THREE MAGNETIC MATERIALS ARE NICKEL, COLBALT AND IRON OR METAL MIXTURES CNTAINING ONE OF THESE SUCH AS STEEL. However, Technology has expanded the availability of magnetic materials to include various manmade products, all based, however, on naturally magnetic elements Ceramic, or ferrite, magnets are made of a sintered composite of powdered iron oxide and barium/strontium carbonate ceramic. Also, this site may answer your specific question: www.cheniere.org/techpapers/on_the_principles_of_permissible.htm - 425k
If you mean superconductors, no not yet. The best so far are the copper oxide ceramic superconductors that work at liquid nitrogen temperatures.I know of nothing called a "magnetic semiconductor".
Typically you can magnetize iron or steel by exposing it to a strong magnetic field. Common "ceramic" magnets may not be strong enough, but you may need a strong rare earth magnet or a strong electro magnet.
the examples of ceramic materials are: 1. ceramic art 2. ceramic 3. ceramic classfication 4. ceramic wall 5. ceramic material 6. ceramic man made
chipped ceramic cup
ceramic is not made of metal. Ceramic objects are made of clay.