No. Very brittle.
brittle. ceramics are generally brittle.
Yes, potassium can be brittle depending on its form.
No, polytetrafluoroethylene (trade name: Teflon) is generally not brittle.
No. Metals are generally malleable, meaning they can be hammered into thin sheets, and ductile, meaning they can be pulled into wires.
is polythene ductile or brittle?
it is ductile. For hardened stainless steel it gets less ductile, but not brittle.
Silicon has a Brittle-to-Ductile transition at around ~500 C.
Ductile and brittle are NOT the same thing. In fact, almost the opposite.
Doubtful. Ductile by definition means "not brittle, easily stretched, malleable".
Sulfur is brittle.
A fluoride salt is brittle.
brittle
more brittle
is factor of safety of brittle material half of ductile material
Faults are formed by brittle deformations and folds are formed by ductile deformation.
They are generally brittle.