GCSE PHYSICS -  MAGNETISM AND ELECTROMAG  -  LESSON 8 -  demagnetising

GCSE PHYSICS - MAGNETISM AND ELECTROMAG - LESSON 8 - demagnetising

Demagnetizing a Magnet: Methods and Concepts

Understanding Magnetism and Domains

  • The lesson focuses on methods to demagnetize a magnet, specifically how to remove its magnetism.
  • Permanent magnets are made from ferromagnetic materials where each atom acts like a tiny magnet, aligning their magnetic fields in the same direction due to magnetic coupling.
  • This alignment creates individual magnetic domains within the material, which is crucial for understanding how to demagnetize.

Method 1: Heating Above Curie Temperature

  • To demagnetize a magnet, one effective method is heating it. As temperature increases, iron atoms vibrate more vigorously.
  • When reaching the Curie temperature (named after Pierre Curie), the alignment of magnetic fields becomes disorganized, leading to loss of magnetism.
  • Different ferromagnetic materials have varying Curie temperatures; for example:
  • Iron and cobalt: over 1000°C
  • Nickel: lower than iron
  • Commercial ferrite magnets: about 720°C
  • Neodymium: approximately 600°C

Practical Demonstration of Heating

  • In practical demonstrations, heating neodymium magnets above their Curie temperature shows immediate loss of magnetism as they drop from an iron support when exceeding 600°C.
  • This illustrates the strong nature of these magnets and how heat can effectively disrupt their magnetic properties.

Method 2: Using Alternating Current

  • Another method for demagnetization involves placing the magnet inside a solenoid and passing alternating current (AC).
  • The AC causes the solenoid's magnetic field to change direction rapidly (e.g., north-south-north), which disorients the magnetic domains in the permanent magnet.

Summary of Demagnetization Techniques

  • Two primary methods for demagnetizing a permanent magnet include:
  • Heating above its specific Curie temperature (e.g., >1070°C for iron or >600°C for neodymium).