There are multitudes of plastics, and they vary widely in their mechanical properties. It is not possible to assign a tensile strength to "plastic" as there are so many.
spider silk's tensile strength (per unit of density) is about ten times that of steel cable.
no iron has any tensile strength
Tensile strength annealed 207
The tensile strength of concrete is 10% of it's compressive strength.
The proportional limit is the stress value at which the stress is no longer linear with strain. After that, the material will begin to yield and become non-linear, or plastic, and then it will fail at a higher value called the tensile strength. For most metals, the proportional limit is well below the tensile strength; for example annealed stainless steel has a proportional limit near 30 ksi and tensile strength of 80 ksi; aluminum has a proportional limit of 35 ksi and tensile strength of 42 ksi.
Tensile strength of Fe410Wa is 410 Mpa Min
tensile strength of astm A672Gr.55
Liquids do not have tensile strength. The equivalent property is viscosity.
Tensile strength was discovered by Leonardo Da Vinci in the 1800s.
You mean tensile strength. Different steels have different tensile strengths. The way they are made (drawn, cast, forged, etc.) is critically important to the tensile strength. By the way--steel is more important for its stiffness than its tensile strength.
tensile strength is approximately between .08 to .15 of compression strength in concrete
Modulus of rupture > Splitting strength > Direct tensile strength