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Permeability, also called magnetic permeability, is a constant of
proportionality that exists between magnetic
Materials that cause the lines of flux to move farther apart, resulting in a decrease in magnetic flux density compared with a vacuum, are called diamagnetic. Materials that concentrate magnetic flux by a factor of more than 1 but less than or equal to 10 are called paramagnetic; materials that concentrate the flux by a factor of more than 10 are called ferromagnetic. The permeability factors of some substances change with rising or falling temperature, or with the intensity of the applied magnetic field.
In engineering applications, permeability is often expressed in relative, rather than in absolute, terms. If µo represents the permeability of free space (that is, 1.257 x 10-6 H/m) and µ represents the permeability of the substance in question (also specified in henrys per meter), then the relative permeability, µr, is given by:
µr = µ / µo
= µ (7.958 x 105)
Diamagnetic materials have µr less than 1, but no
known substance has relative permeability much less than 1. Certain ferromagnetics, especially powdered or laminated iron, steel, or nickel
alloys, have µr that can range up to about 1,000,000.
When a paramagnetic or ferromagnetic core is inserted into a coil, the
inductance is multiplied by µr compared with the
inductance of the same coil with an air core. This effect is useful in the
design of