Coal is neither malleable nor ductile. It is brittle. It would crumble if you tried to draw it into a wire.
Metals can be easily drawn into wire because they are malleable. These metals are also really wonderful conductors which is why they are picked for wires.
can be drawn into wires.
Yes
The metallic property of ductility allows it to be drawn into thin wires.
not sure
DUCTILITY
No, wires cannot be drawn out of wood because wood is not a suitable material for making wires. Wires are typically made from metals such as copper, aluminum, or steel due to their conductivity and malleability, which wood lacks.
copper can be drawn into thin, long wires~`
No, cables can't be drawn out of graphite. As wires can be drawn out of ductile substances like metals As graphite is highty brittle in nature. and non- ductile substance can't be drawn into the cables. thanks you have nice day
No, cables can't be drawn out of graphite. As wires can be drawn out of ductile substances like metals As graphite is highty brittle in nature. and non- ductile substance can't be drawn into the cables. thanks you have nice day
The ability of a metal to be drawn out into thin wires is called ductility. Metals that are ductile can be hammered or stretched into different shapes without breaking.
Wires may only be drawn from ductile (malleable) materials. By the definition of wire, it must be of metal, though some solder wires contain a core of rosin.