A Paramagnetic Gas Can be changed in posistion from its rested state with a magnet. Lets say it (the Gas) was in a sealed glass tube and you could see it move or change in color when a magnet Was close to it, That would be a paramagnetic response. JUd D Sloan
Oxygen's paramagnetic property causes a gas sample containing oxygen to move within a magnetic field. Thermistor pairs, which are part of a wheatstone bridge circuit, sense the "magnetic wind" created by the gas movement. The resulting signal, along with heat capacity and viscosity measurements, is used by the microprocessor to calculate the oxygen percentage accurately. Pradeep
i have no idea :)
Substances which undergoes burning is combustible substances. eg: paper ,cloth , wood substances which doesnt undergoes burning is non_combustible substances. eg: stone, bricks soil ,water. So, paper is combustible .
HOW DO WE DISTINGUISH SUBSTANCES? HOW DO WE DISTINGUISH SUBSTANCES?
Substances that do not dissolve are insolubles, because they are not soluble they do not dissolve.
Paramagnetic substances are attracted to a magnetic field, while diamagnetic substances are repelled by a magnetic field. This difference is due to the presence of unpaired electrons in paramagnetic substances, which align with the magnetic field, whereas diamagnetic substances have all paired electrons that create a weak opposing magnetic field.
Paramagnetic substances are those that are weakly attracted to a magnetic field, such as oxygen and aluminum. Diamagnetic substances, on the other hand, are weakly repelled by a magnetic field, like copper and bismuth. The key difference between them lies in their response to magnetic fields: paramagnetic substances are attracted, while diamagnetic substances are repelled.
One can determine if a substance is diamagnetic or paramagnetic by observing its response to a magnetic field. Diamagnetic substances are weakly repelled by magnetic fields, while paramagnetic substances are weakly attracted to magnetic fields. This behavior can be tested using a magnet or a magnetic field detector.
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.
it produces magnetic field that can attract ferromagnetic or paramagnetic substances that fall in its vicinity or in its field.
No, argon is not paramagnetic.
Yes, AL2 is paramagnetic.
B2 is paramagnetic.
Vanadium is paramagnetic.
Susceptibility is defined as the ration of intensity of magnetisation to the magnetizing field intensity So k = I / H In case of paramagnetic substances, I will be in the same direction with H but for a larger H there will be a weak I So I/H will be very much less than 1 and it is positive Hence the relative permeability of paramagnetic substance is slightly greater than 1.
Some examples of paramagnetic materials include oxygen, aluminum, and titanium. These materials are weakly attracted to magnetic fields and have unpaired electrons in their atomic or molecular structures.