I Inhibit repulsion between two like poles

AI Thread Summary
Magnetic shielding, particularly with materials like MuMetal, effectively inhibits interaction between magnets by attracting and redirecting magnetic field lines, which can cause magnets to stick to the shielding material. Superconductors, on the other hand, repel magnetic fields, suggesting that magnets would not be attracted to them. The discussion also highlights the need for ferrous materials to achieve effective magnetic shielding. While no specific non-attracting materials were identified, the potential of superconductors for repelling magnets was acknowledged. Overall, the conversation explores the principles of magnetic shielding and the behavior of magnets in relation to different materials.
john1111
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Please excuse the lay terms that will follow.

I have been doing some reading on "magnetic shielding" and have come across alloys such as MuMetal which have high permeability and so can block interaction between two magnets.

My question;
  • Is this inhibition of interaction between the two magnets a result of their attraction to the MuMetal?
  • Will they stick to the MuMetal sheet now instead of being attracted or repulsed to each other?
  • If so, are there any materials that will block interaction between two magnets but still not attract them?
 
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john1111 said:
Please excuse the lay terms that will follow.

I have been doing some reading on "magnetic shielding" and have come across alloys such as MuMetal which have high permeability and so can block interaction between two magnets.

My question;
  • Is this inhibition of interaction between the two magnets a result of their attraction to the MuMetal?
  • Will they stick to the MuMetal sheet now instead of being attracted or repulsed to each other?
  • If so, are there any materials that will block interaction between two magnets but still not attract them?
Welcome to the PF. :smile:

Magnetic shielding (not the superconductor kind) works by attracting and re-directing the magnetic field lines. A material needs to be ferrous to do this, so yes, magnets will stick to such materials.

http://www.magnetic-shield.com/index.html
 
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I see, thank you for your reply!

Would the super conductor kind of shielding work without magnets being attracted to it?
 
john1111 said:
I see, thank you for your reply!

Would the super conductor kind of shielding work without magnets being attracted to it?
I'm not that familiar with superconductors, but since they repel magnetic fields, I would guess that the magnet would be repelled from the superconductor, but I could be wrong.
 
BTW, can you say what your application is? Maybe there is a better way to go about it... :smile:
 
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Thank you for taking the time to look that up, that is a very interesting link!

As for application I don't really have one as of yet, my mind tends to wonder and think about seemingly random topics.
 
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