inshallah r u stupid or something. a steel ruler has a much higher melting point due to the giant lattice of electrostatic bonds, with very high heat energy need to the break them. on the other hand, the plastic ruler only contains weak intermolecular bonds, and thus little heat energy is needed. Ik ur all grown up now. i wish you luck with your life
kind regards, Thine Mother
Accuracy has more to do with the measurement lines on the ruler than the material. In terms of making measurements , however, a steel ruler has several advantages to a plastic ruler of the same accuracy. For starters, steel rulers are often thinner than plastic rulers, positioning the measurement lines closer to the paper. As well as this, many steel rulers feature a backing made of a gripping material such as cork, which keeps the ruler firmly planted while drawing lines and making measurements. Lastly, the measurement lines on steel rulers are frequently embedded into the metal, whereas plastic rulers tend to have the lines painted on. After a while, these marks can be worn away, reducing the accuracy and readability of a plastic ruler.
Stainless steel is a metal that does not react with oxygen when heated. This is due to the presence of chromium in stainless steel, which forms a protective oxide layer on the surface, preventing further reaction with oxygen.
It depends on the type of steel. Steel is not one particular thing, there are different steels for different purposes. Between 1100 - 1300 ºC
surely a metal can be melt , but every metal has different melting points. Not only will all metals melt, a few are capable of burning and require special fire extinguishers. Oddly, certain forms of carbon (diamond in particular) have higher melting points than most metals. ADDED: "capable of burning". Combustion is a powerful exothermic oxidation, and some metals (and diamond) will burn if heated to incandescence in oxygen. This is the principle of oxy-gas cutting of steel: the white-hot iron burns rather than simply melts in the stream of oxygen..
No, a plastic spoon is not magnetic. Plastic is not a material that can be magnetized. Magnetism works on materials that have magnetic properties, such as iron or steel.
Accuracy has more to do with the measurement lines on the ruler than the material. In terms of making measurements , however, a steel ruler has several advantages to a plastic ruler of the same accuracy. For starters, steel rulers are often thinner than plastic rulers, positioning the measurement lines closer to the paper. As well as this, many steel rulers feature a backing made of a gripping material such as cork, which keeps the ruler firmly planted while drawing lines and making measurements. Lastly, the measurement lines on steel rulers are frequently embedded into the metal, whereas plastic rulers tend to have the lines painted on. After a while, these marks can be worn away, reducing the accuracy and readability of a plastic ruler.
you use it in technology and car care you use the steel ruler for straight lines for wood and plastic and other things.
steel is all three. when it is heated it melts into a liquid. if it is heated even more it evaporates into a gas. if gas steel is cooled it condenses into liquid steel and if liquid steel is colled even more it hardens into a solid again
Of course steel melts. That is how is shaped into steel objects.
It depends on what the ruler's made out of. A plastic ruler would inevitably weigh less than a steel ruler.
where does the steel go befor it melts
Plastic melts. Metals conduct heat energy just as well as the do electrical energy. That leaves Ceramic.
No, steel is a metal.
A ruler made of stainless steel.
heated up to kindling temperature of the mild steel
Another ruler
Using plastic over steel wings on a windmill is a good idea because the steel will eventually rust. The steel is heavier and the motor on the windmill will have to work harder to turn steel, than plastic. The cost of the plastic is actually a little more than steel, though.