Yes, potassium can be brittle depending on its form.
no they're not malleable and ductile
Several metals are ductile and malleable.
No. Metals are generally malleable, meaning they can be hammered into thin sheets, and ductile, meaning they can be pulled into wires.
Gold is malleable and ductile. It is not magnetic.
malleable
Sulfur is brittle.
Doubtful. Ductile by definition means "not brittle, easily stretched, malleable".
Brittle
Brittle
Hydrogen is neither malleable or ductile. It can't carry a current or be hammered into sheets because it is a gas
Most metals are not brittle.
Yes, it is. All the metals are malleable and ductile
Non metals are brittle. They are neither malleable nor ductile.
Well, it's pretty brittle, so relatively, no. More malleable than diamonds, less malleable than copper.
Yes, potassium can be brittle depending on its form.
no they're not malleable and ductile