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This is a neodymium magnet - it's pretty darn strong.
And now, after heating it in a flame... it's no longer magnetic.
What just happened?
Well, to build a magnet, all you need to do is find a bunch of magnetic atoms (that's
easy - they're the ones with half-filled electron shells in the middle of any of the major blocks
of the periodic table) and then make a compound where the magnetic fields of the atoms align
in the same direction - this is Ferromagnetism, named after Iron, which is pretty darn magnetic.
However, it's not so easy - sometimes the atoms actually want to align their magnetic
fields in alternating directions - this is called "anti-ferromagnetism," and it means
the bulk material won't have a magnetic field at all.
Or, sometimes the tendency of the atomic magnets to align (or anti-align) is just too weak
to overcome their intrinsic jiggling - that is, their temperature!
In which case, even though all the individual atoms in the material are magnetic, once more
the material as a whole isn't.
However, in a strong external magnetic field, the atoms do tend to align with each other
in the direction parallel to the field.
This is called "para-magnetism," and liquid oxygen is a great example - it's attracted
by a magnet, though it doesn't stay magnetized afterwards.
But let's get back to the question - how do you destroy a magnet?
Well, a material can only be ferromagnetic if its temperature is low enough: above a
certain point, the nicely ordered atomic magnetic fields "melt" into disorder, just as ice crystals
melt into water when heated past zero celsius.
So to destroy a magnet, you just need to heat it up past its "magnetic melting point", called
the "Curie Temperature" - it probably won't look like much is happening, but once the
atoms are jiggling around enough, when they cool off, their magnetic fields will no longer
all point in the same direction.
Magnet destroyed!
And just as different elements melt from solid to liquid at different temperatures, they
also melt from being ferromagnetic to paramagnetic at different temperatures, which you can explore
in this sweet interactive periodic table.
Which also plays all
of
the Periodic Table
of Videos.