How Do Diamagnetism and Paramagnetism Relate to Lenz's Law?

AI Thread Summary
Diamagnetic materials orient their dipoles opposite to an applied magnetic field, while paramagnetic materials align with it, both phenomena relating to Lenz's Law. Lenz's Law states that induced currents will oppose changes in magnetic fields, which explains the behavior of diamagnetic materials in increasing fields. The discussion emphasizes that Lenz's Law is not merely a hand-waving argument but has a solid mathematical foundation and is linked to the conservation of energy and Maxwell's equations. The conversation also touches on the molecular structure of materials, suggesting that the pairing of electrons in molecular orbitals influences their magnetic properties. Overall, the relationship between magnetism and Lenz's Law is rooted in established physical principles.
apiri
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Simple question, kind of. I know that paramagnetic materials, when in the presence of a magnetic field will have its dipoles orient with the field while diamagnetic materials when introduced to a magnetic field orient opposite to the field. I've read that this has something to do with Lentz's Law, but is there someone that could help put this in slightly better perspective?
 
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apiri said:
Simple question, kind of. I know that paramagnetic materials, when in the presence of a magnetic field will have its dipoles orient with the field while diamagnetic materials when introduced to a magnetic field orient opposite to the field. I've read that this has something to do with Lentz's Law, but is there someone that could help put this in slightly better perspective?

http://www.cmp.liv.ac.uk/frink/thesis/thesis/node35.html
 
Lenz's law makes things oppose the change of applied field. So when a diamagnetric material experiences and increasing field, it lines up its spins in the opposite direction to reduce the net field inside the material. This is not really an explanation. More of a hand-waving argument.
 
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Gokul43201 said:
Lenz's law makes things oppose the change of applied field. So when a diamagnetric material experiences and increasing field, it lines up its spins in the opposite direction to reduce the net field inside the material. This is not really an explanation. More of a hand-waving argument.

I don't think we can dismiss Lenz's law simply as "hand-waving". For one, it has a very detailed mathematical formulation. This implies it makes quantitative description and predictions. Hand-waving arguments very seldom have that.

It is also a direct consequence of the conservation of energy. Now that principle is certainly not hand-waving.

It is also from one of Maxwell's equations. So it is part of a well-established formulation of classical E&M.

What you might have wanted to say was that it is a phenomenology, which I have no arguments with. Classical E&M, as per Maxwell equations, is really phenomenology - none of those equations can be derived from classical First Principles formulations. Coulomb's law, for example, was not derived - it is a description of a phenomena.

[I purposely did not bring QED into this.]

Zz.
 
I never meant that Lenz's Law was a hand waving argument. I was talking about mine. My argument didn't explain what made a certain material diamagnetic.
 
i forget what lenz's law is. But wouldn't it have to do with the molecular orbital and if the outer orbital of a molecular orbital structure was paired or not.
 
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