magnetism arises from the spin of electrons in their orbitals. most electrons in atoms are paired so that their magnetic fields cancel but certain atomic structure contain unpaired electrons.
these are what gives atoms magnetism. metallic aluminum has the electron configuration of 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p1 there is one unpaired electron in the 3p orbital is considered to be paramagnetic. although this is largely quenched by the strong delocalization in the p and s orbital. those magnetic substances that are paramagnetic, the orientation of the electron spins are random and has no net field in a macroscopic scale(permanent magnet behaviour). they are only observable by their interaction with anther strong magnetic field that causes the many small fields to align and a small net attraction
this is quantitatively measured by a gouy balance to give a measurement called the magnetic suscepitability which can be corrolated to the number of unpaired electrons (this is espcially useful for the analysis of transition metal compounds)
Aluminum is not attracted to a magnet because it is classified as a paramagnetic metal. The atoms in the metal must all be spinning in the same direction for magnets to attract. With aluminum, they are spinning in different directions.
because its not dense metal only dense metals like iron are magnatic as the spaces belween atom increase the magnetism will vanish
Because it does not contain copper, iron, there is one more but i cant remember it, hope this helps
the mangetic structure e.g. flows in one direction unlike two directions; i don't know sorry but this is what i know
Because the lack of carbon.
it has no magnets in it
cause it isn't
Phosphorus is not a ferrous metal and cannot be attracted by magnet.
NO
Yes
Neither. Aluminum Foil has no magnetic properties.
Yes,always.
No, aluminum is a non ferrous. Only ferrous metals can be attracted to a magnet.
Aluminium is not attracted by a magnet, due to the molecular structures that it forms. Metals which can be readily attracted include iron, cobalt, and nickel, although compounds of these will demonstrate significant differences in magnetism.
You can do this using a magnet. Iron is ferrous, therefore attracted to magnets, whereas aluminium is non-ferrous and is not attracted to magnets.
Because iron is always attracted to a magent, it will be pulled from the mixture. Aluminium will only be pulled by the magnet if certain conditions are met; as long as the metals aren't moving very quickly, a magnet has no effect on it and won't be pulled away.
Anything that is attracted to a permanent magnet will be attracted to (sticks to) a temporary magnet.
Aluminium is not a metal, it is a metalloid. Magnets only attract to three major metal elements at room temperature: nickel, iron, and cobalt.
Phosphorus is not a ferrous metal and cannot be attracted by magnet.
Yes, but not very. Aluminium is paramagnetic, meaning it is very weakly attracted to a magnet. (Materials like iron that are strongly attracted to magnets are called ferromagnetic.)The attraction between aluminium and a magnetic field is small enough that sensitive instrumentation is required to detect it. For all practical purposes, unless you're a scientist aluminium can be considered non-magnetic.
No it would not be attracted by a magnet bc it is non metal
No, yeast is not attracted to a magnet as yeast does not contain any metallic material
Yes.Yes, iron being ferromagnetic in nature, is attracted by a magnet
No. Any metal that cannot be a magnet cannot be attracted by one.