A simple
model of a
paramagnet concentrates on the particles which compose it which do not interact with each other. Each particle has a
magnetic moment given by \vec{\mu}. The
energy of a
magnetic moment in a magnetic field is given by : E = -\boldsymbol{\mu} \cdot \mathbf{B}, where \mathbf{B} = \mu_0(\mathbf{H} + \mathbf{M}) is the magnetic field density, measured in
teslas (T).
Two-state (spin-1/2) particles To simplify the calculation, we are going to work with a
2-state particle: it may either align its magnetic moment with the magnetic field or against it. So the only possible values of magnetic moment are then \mu and -\mu. If so, then such a particle has only two possible energies, -\mu B when it is aligned with the field and +\mu B when it is oriented opposite to the field. The extent to which the magnetic moments are aligned with the field can be calculated from the
partition function. For a single particle, this is : Z_1 = \sum_{n=0,1} e^{-E_n \beta} = e^{\mu B\beta} + e^{-\mu B\beta} = 2 \cosh(\mu B\beta). The partition function for a set of
N such particles, if they do not interact with each other, is : Z = Z_1^N, and the
free energy is therefore : G = -\frac{1}{\beta} \log Z = - N k_{\rm B} T \log Z_1. The magnetization is the negative derivative of the free energy with respect to the applied field, and so the magnetization per unit volume is : M = n \mu \tanh\frac{\mu B}{k_{\rm B}T}, where
n is the
number density of magnetic moments. The formula above is known as the
Langevin paramagnetic equation.
Pierre Curie found an approximation to this
law that applies to the relatively high temperatures and low magnetic fields used in his
experiments. As temperature increases and magnetic field decreases, the argument of the
hyperbolic tangent decreases. In the
Curie regime, : \frac{\mu B}{k_{\rm B}T} \ll 1. Moreover, if |x| \ll 1, then : \tanh x \approx x, so the magnetization is small, and we can write B \approx \mu_0 H, and thus : M \approx \frac{\mu_0 \mu^2 n}{k_{\rm B}} \frac{H}{T}. In this regime, the magnetic susceptibility given by : \chi = \frac{\partial M}{\partial H} \approx \frac{M}{H} yields : \chi(T \to \infty) = \frac{C}{T}, with a
Curie constant given by C = \mu_0 n\mu^2/k_{\rm B}, in
kelvins (K). In the regime of low temperatures or high fields, M tends to a maximum value of n\mu, corresponding to all the particles being completely aligned with the field. Since this calculation doesn't describe the electrons embedded deep within the
Fermi surface, forbidden by the
Pauli exclusion principle to flip their spins, it does not exemplify the quantum statistics of the problem at low temperatures. Using the
Fermi–Dirac distribution, one will find that at low temperatures M is linearly dependent on the magnetic field, so that the magnetic susceptibility saturates to a constant.
General case When the particles have an arbitrary spin (any number of spin states), the formula is a bit more complicated. At low magnetic fields or high temperature, the spin follows Curie's law, with : C = \frac{\mu_0 \mu_\text{B}^2}{3 k_{\rm B}} n g^2 J(J + 1), where J is the
total angular momentum quantum number, and g is the
g-factor (such that \mu = g J \mu_\text{B} is the magnetic moment). For a two-level system with magnetic moment \mu, the formula reduces to C = \frac{1}{k_{\rm B}}n \mu_0 \mu^2, as above, while the corresponding expressions in
Gaussian units are C = \frac{\mu_{\rm B}^2}{3 k_{\rm B}}n g^2 J(J+1), C = \frac{1}{k_{\rm B}}n\mu^2. For this more general formula and its derivation (including high field, low temperature) see the article
Brillouin function. As the spin approaches infinity, the formula for the magnetization approaches the classical value derived in the following section. == Derivation with classical statistical mechanics ==