JoVE Logo

로그인

29.18 : Magnetic Susceptibility and Permeability

In linear magnetic materials, like paramagnets and diamagnets, magnetization is proportional to the magnetic field intensity. The constant of proportionality, a dimensionless number, is called magnetic susceptibility. The value of the susceptibility depends on the type of material.

When diamagnetic materials are placed under an external magnetic field, the moments opposite to the field are induced. Hence, the susceptibility for diamagnets has a minimal negative value of 10-5–10-6. Since diamagnetism occurs due to the orbital motion of electrons independent of temperature, the susceptibility value is also independent of temperature.

For paramagnets, a torque acts on the moments under the application of an external magnetic field that tends to align the moments along the external field's direction. However, the random thermal motion of electrons produces a torque opposite to the field and tries to disorient the moments. These competing effects align only a few moments along the field direction, causing magnetization. Thus, the susceptibility is a minimal positive value of the order of 10-5 to 10-6. Since temperature causes the randomization of the moments, the susceptibility is temperature-dependent.

Magnetic permeability is a material's ability to penetrate the magnetic field lines. The ratio of material permeability to vacuum permeability is called relative permeability. Since diamagnets repel the external magnetic field, the relative permeability is slightly less than unity. However, paramagnetic materials attract the external magnetic field. Hence, the relative permeability is slightly greater than unity for paramagnets.

Ferromagnetic materials exhibit hysteresis. Thus, a non-linear dependence of magnetization on the magnetic field intensity is observed, and the susceptibility and relative permeability values are not constant. However, these values are higher compared to paramagnets at any condition. The relative permeability of ferromagnets is much larger than unity, around 1,000–100,000. The susceptibility value is usually of the order of 103 to 104, depending on the history of the applied magnetic field.

Tags

Magnetic SusceptibilityMagnetic PermeabilityParamagnetsDiamagnetsMagnetizationRelative PermeabilityTemperature DependenceHysteresisFerromagnetic MaterialsExternal Magnetic FieldElectron MotionMaterial Properties

장에서 29:

article

Now Playing

29.18 : Magnetic Susceptibility and Permeability

Sources of Magnetic Fields

889 Views

article

29.1 : 움직이는 전하로 인한 자기장

Sources of Magnetic Fields

8.2K Views

article

29.2 : 비오-사바트 법칙

Sources of Magnetic Fields

5.7K Views

article

29.3 : Biot-Savart Law: 문제 해결

Sources of Magnetic Fields

2.4K Views

article

29.4 : 얇은 직선 와이어로 인한 자기장

Sources of Magnetic Fields

4.7K Views

article

29.5 : 두 개의 직선 와이어로 인한 자기장

Sources of Magnetic Fields

2.3K Views

article

29.6 : 두 개의 병렬 전류 사이의 자기력

Sources of Magnetic Fields

3.4K Views

article

29.7 : 전류 루프의 자기장

Sources of Magnetic Fields

4.3K Views

article

29.8 : 자기장의 발산(Divergence and Curl)

Sources of Magnetic Fields

2.7K Views

article

29.9 : 암페어의 법칙

Sources of Magnetic Fields

3.6K Views

article

29.10 : 암페어의 법칙: 문제 해결

Sources of Magnetic Fields

3.5K Views

article

29.11 : 솔레노이드

Sources of Magnetic Fields

2.4K Views

article

29.12 : 솔레노이드의 자기장

Sources of Magnetic Fields

3.7K Views

article

29.13 : 토로이드

Sources of Magnetic Fields

2.8K Views

article

29.14 : 자기 벡터 전위

Sources of Magnetic Fields

512 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

개인 정보 보호

이용 약관

정책

연구

교육

JoVE 소개

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. 판권 소유