paramagnetiky
Paramagnetiky refers to the property of materials that are weakly attracted by an external magnetic field due to the presence of unpaired electron spins. In the absence of a field, paramagnetic materials show no spontaneous magnetization. When a field is applied, the magnetic moments tend to align with the field, producing a small, positive magnetization proportional to the field strength (M = χH). Thermal agitation reduces alignment, so the susceptibility is typically small and temperature dependent.
Two main microscopic sources exist: localized moments from unpaired electrons in ions (Curie paramagnetism) and conduction-electron
Common examples include molecular oxygen, and metal ions such as Fe3+, Mn2+. Aluminum is a weak paramagnet;
Measurement of paramagnetiky is typically done with magnetic-susceptibility techniques (SQUID magnetometry, AC susceptibility). Applications include MRI