The paramagnetic effect will be directly proportional to the number of aluminium molecules in line with the magnetic field - the thicker the ribbon, the more effect will be realised. The wider the ribbon the greater the effect but then it’s reduced by the increase in pole gap thus reducing field intensity between the magnetic poles. A more deeply corrugated ribbon, thus longer with more aluminium present between the pole area would exhibit a larger effect as well. As this effect is inherently part and parcel of the “sound” of an aluminium ribbon the only way to minimise this is to reduce the amount of material between the poles of the magnet - as ribbons are in the region of 2 microns or less, realistically the only other way to reduce this is to use electrostatically deposited super thin metal film on a strong, light formable plastic ribbon - as is present on microphone capsules.
A typical layer thickness is around 400 Angstroms of gold on a diaphragm. This equals a thickness of
0.00000156 inch. The Angstrom unit is one ten-billionth of a meter; or 0.0000000039 inch. However using gold (also copper, zinc, silver) is maybe not a good idea as it’s diamagnetic (acts perpendicular to magnetic field by repulsion) and this may tend to twist the ribbon.
A ribbon in a microphone is around 20,000 Angstroms - 10,000 Angstroms to the micron.
Aluminium is the best choice of materials as it is the most workable metal having strength and low mass and is the lowest in paramagnetic effect beside magnesium which is not really useful here. You can test yourself how much force is applied to ribbon by cutting a thin strip of aluminium foil and holding it between the poles of a magnet at right angles to the field direction an see how much it twists into line with the field - compare this with blowing lightly on the strip when it’s between the poles and see how much holding effect there is due to paramagnetism.
Point to note - oxygen is also paramagnetic, however nitrogen is not - does this create turbulence in the airflow between magnetic poles when sound waves pass through?