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Ferrite ceramics and ferromagnetic materials are a number of crystalline materials that exhibit ferromagnetism (or ferrimagnetism). Ferromagnetism is a phenomenon by which a material can exhibit a spontaneous magnetization. It is one of the strongest forms of magnetism. Each ferromagnetic material has a definite temperature, above which they cease to exhibit spontaneous magnetization, called Curie temperature. Some the most commonly used ferromagnetic materials are cobalt, iron, and nickel. Ferrites are ferromagnetic ceramic materials, compounds of iron, boron and barium, or strontium and molybdenum. A ferrite material has a high magnetic permeability, which allows it to store stronger magnetic fields than iron, and are known as ceramic magnets. Ferrite ceramics and ferromagnetic materials have many unpaired electrons, and they align to create a measurable macroscopic field.

Ferrite ceramics and ferromagnetic materials are generally crystalline alloys but amorphous (non-crystalline) ferromagnetic metallic alloys can also be produced by rapid cooling of a liquid alloy. Ferrite ceramics and ferromagnetic materials have the advantage that their properties are nearly isotropic (not aligned along a crystal axis). This results in low coercivity, low hysteresis loss, high permeability, and high electrical resistivity. Attaching an RF ferrite to a cable or looping a cable through a ferrite can help in reducing unwanted high-frequency interference. An RF ferrite is consistently stable over time and over a wide temperature range, and provides RF suppression without high eddy-current losses. An RF ceramic such as an RF ferrite is also used in reducing unwanted frequency from the specimen it is attached to. A microwave ferrite and a microwave ceramic are used with the most advanced microwave systems for cooking, drying, package sterilization, and pasteurizing.

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