CH - 5 - Magnetic Properties of Material
CH - 5 - Magnetic Properties of Material
CH - 5 - Magnetic Properties of Material
• Any two equal and opposite magnetic poles separated by a small distance constitute a
magnetic dipole. It is given by
𝜇𝑚 = 𝑙𝑚
Where, 𝑙 is distance from the south pole to north pole and 𝑚 is pole strength of the dipole
(ampere x meter) .
Magnetization(M)
• Magnetization is the magnetic moment per unit volume developed inside solid and given by
𝜇𝑚
𝑀=
𝑉
• In para- or ferromagnetic material the
magnetic induction (B) inside the material
consists of the free-space component (𝜇0 𝑯)
plus a contribution by the material (𝜇0 𝑴)
• The magnetic field lines outside a material
point from the north to the south poles,
whereas inside of para- or ferromagnetic, 𝑩
and 𝜇0 𝑴 point from south to north in order
to maintain continuity.
Magnetic
Materials
• Thus, a plot of 1/χ versus T should give a straight line of slope 1/C passing through the origin (0K) as
shown in Figure a.
• Materials which obey this law are materials in which the magnetic moments are localised at the atomic
or ionic sites and where there is no interaction between neighbouring magnetic moments.
• This expression is approximately true for many solids, liquids, as well as for at least one of the two
common paramagnetic gases, oxygen and nitric oxide.
• Unfortunately, it has been observed that
more accurate magnetic measurements lead
to greater deviations from Curie's law are
discovered. For many systems, a plot of 1/χ
versus T gives straight line, but the intercept
is non-zero on the temperature axis as
shown in Figure b. Figure a: Plot of 1/χ versus T
• It is common to have non-zero intercept in
the systems that are not magnetically dilute
i.e., pure solid paramagnetic materials. In
these systems, interionic or intermolecular
interactions cause neighbouring magnetic
moments to become aligned and contribute
to the value of intercept.
• Magnetic Materials are used for recording/reading of the audio and video signals.
They are used in storage devices such as magnetic tapes, floppy disks and hard disks.
• Hard Magnetic Materials (large remanence Br (or Mr), a relatively large coercivity Hc,
and a large area within the hysteresis loop.) are used in making permanent magnets,
magnetic separators, magnetic detectors, speakers, microphones, etc.