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  2. Diamagnetism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamagnetism

    For example, the magnetic susceptibility of diamagnets such as water is χ v = −9.05 × 10 −6. The most strongly diamagnetic material is bismuth, χ v = −1.66 × 10 −4, although pyrolytic carbon may have a susceptibility of χ v = −4.00 × 10 −4 in one plane. Nevertheless, these values are orders of magnitude smaller than the ...

  3. Magnetochemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetochemistry

    The force of the interaction tends to push the atom out of the magnetic field. By convention diamagnetic susceptibility is given a negative sign. Very frequently diamagnetic atoms have no unpaired electrons ie each electron is paired with another electron in the same atomic orbital. The moments of the two electrons cancel each other out, so the ...

  4. Electron pair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron_pair

    They can form a chemical bond between two atoms, or they can occur as a lone pair of valence electrons. They also fill the core levels of an atom. Because the spins are paired, the magnetic moment of the electrons cancel one another, and the pair's contribution to magnetic properties is generally diamagnetic .

  5. Bismuth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bismuth

    Bismuth has few commercial applications, and those applications that use it generally require small quantities relative to other raw materials. In the United States, for example, 733 tonnes of bismuth were consumed in 2016, of which 70% went into chemicals (including pharmaceuticals, pigments, and cosmetics) and 11% into bismuth alloys. [67]

  6. Magnet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnet

    Diamagnetic means repelled by both poles. Compared to paramagnetic and ferromagnetic substances, diamagnetic substances, such as carbon, copper, water, and plastic, are even more weakly repelled by a magnet. The permeability of diamagnetic materials is less than the permeability of a vacuum. All substances not possessing one of the other types ...

  7. Magnetism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetism

    Diamagnetism appears in all materials and is the tendency of a material to oppose an applied magnetic field, and therefore, to be repelled by a magnetic field. However, in a material with paramagnetic properties (that is, with a tendency to enhance an external magnetic field), the paramagnetic behavior dominates. [ 15 ]

  8. Rydberg atom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rydberg_atom

    As diamagnetic effects scale with the area of the orbit and the area is proportional to the radius squared (A ∝ n 4), effects impossible to detect in ground state atoms become obvious in Rydberg atoms, which demonstrate very large diamagnetic shifts. [19] Rydberg atoms exhibit strong electric-dipole coupling of the atoms to electromagnetic ...

  9. Zinc compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zinc_compounds

    Zinc oxide turns yellow when heated due to the loss of some oxygen atoms and formation of a defect structure. Compounds containing zinc are typically diamagnetic , except in cases where the ligand is a radical.