Copper and platinum.
Gold
-- copper-- tungsten-- playdoh-- taffy
No, ductile is not an element. Ductility is a property of some elements and materials that allows them to be stretched or deformed without breaking. Examples of ductile elements include gold, copper, and platinum.
In order to be ductile a rock usually must be very hot. Rocks in lowest part of the crust and in the mantle (apart from the lithosphere) are usually ductile. Rock salt often exhibits ductile behavior as well.
examples of ducktile
Materials that are ductile, or have the property of ductility, will stretch and deform when they are pulled, rather than breaking. Gold, silver, copper, iron, and lead are common examples of ductile materials.
Examples are metals as gold, silver, copper, platinum etc.
Yes, ductile materials can be stretched into wires, malleable materials can be hammered into thin sheets, and lustrous materials have a shiny appearance due to reflecting light. Some examples of ductile, malleable, and lustrous materials include gold, silver, and copper.
Ductile metals can be easily stretched into thin wires without breaking. This property is due to the ability of the metal atoms to slide past each other when subjected to stress. Examples of ductile metals include gold, silver, and copper.
Gold, Platinum, Copper, Aluminum, Silver, Iron and Nickel.(and those are only metals)
Most metals have ductility. Gold and silver are two excellent examples. A ductile material can be beaten into a thin sheet like gold leaf or drawn into a long thin wire like copper or silver.
Examples: making wires, sheets, components obtained by pressing.