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A diamagnetic substance is one whose atoms have no permanent magnetic dipole moment. When an external magnetic field is applied to a diamagnetic substance such as bismuth or silver a weak magnetic dipole moment is induced in the direction opposite the applied field. All materials are actually diamagnetic, in that a weak repulsive force is generated by in a magnetic field by the current of the orbiting electron. Some materials, however, have stronger paramagnetic qualities that overcome their natural diamagnetic qualities. These paramagnetic materials, such as iron and nickel, have unpaired electrons.

Some Diamagnetic Elements

  • Bismuth
  • Mercury
  • Silver
  • Carbon
  • Lead
  • Copper

Some Ferromagnetic Elements

  • Iron
  • Nickel
  • Cobalt
  • Gadolinium
  • Dysprosium

Some Paramagnetic Elements

  • Uranium
  • Platinum
  • Aluminum
  • Sodium
  • Oxygen

Diamagnetic Levitation

Diamagnetic Levitation occurs by bringing a diamagnetic material in close proximity to material that produces a magnetic field. The diamagnetic material will repel the material producing the magnetic field. Generally, however, this repulsive force is not strong enough to overcome the force of gravity on the Earth's surface. To cause diamagnetic levitation, both the diamagnetic material and magnetic material must produce a combined repulsive force to overcome the force of gravity. There are a number of ways to achieve this:

Placing Diamagnetic Material in Strong Electromagnetic Fields

Modern Electromagnets are capable of producing extremely strong magnetic fields. These electromagnets have been used to levitate many diamagnetic materials including weakly diamagnetic materials such as organic matter. A popular educational demonstration involves the placement of small frogs into a strong static electromagnetic field. The frog, being composed of primarily water, acts as a weak diamagnet and is levitated.

Levitating Frog

Placing Diamagnetic Material in Strong Magnetic Fields

Advancements in the development of permanent magnets and diamagnetic materials such as pyrolytic graphite have produced a simple method of diamagnetic levitation by simply placing a thin piece of pyrolytic graphite over a strong rare-earth magnet. The pyrolytic graphite is levitated above the magnet.

Pyrolytic Graphite Levitation

Placing Magnetic Material in Strong Diamagnetic Fields

Developments in superconducting materials have produced an easy and dramatic method of demonstrating diamagnetic levitation. A superconductor will not allow a magnetic field to penetrate its interior. It causes currents to flow that generate a magnetic field inside the superconductor that balances the field that would have otherwise penetrated the material. By placing a strong permanent magnet above a superconductor, the magnet will levitate.

Superconductor Levitation

Placing Magnetic Material in Diamagnetic Fields with a Biasing Magnet

The last method, and most easily duplicated by the average individual, uses a combination of readily available rare-earth magnets and diamagnetic material such as carbon graphite or bismuth. Through the use of a biasing or compensating magnet, a small rare-earth magnet can be levitated above a piece of diamagnetic material. For added stability, the small magnet is generally placed between two pieces of diamagnetic material. Below is a diagram of this method:

Biasing Magnet Levitation


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