The answer depends on the grade of the steel, but 7.85 g/cm3 is generally accepted for plain steel. If the steel has added alloying elements such as tungsten, then it can be as high as 8.05 g/cm3
they are normally formed from plastics or galvanised steel (steel that is coated in zinc to prevent it rusting)
Density is how much mass is compressed into a state of volume. Considering bread is made of water, carbon, and other light molecules, it doesn't have much mass. Steel has much more mass and thus will be more dense; however, if u can compress the bread until it has the same mass at the same volume of the steel, it will have the same density.
density
Its is 10 cm³ hun
Steel is a base, hence the reason it corrodes. The Iron and other elements in the steel are formed to create 'steel', and hardened in a process called galvanizing to stop the corrosion. Also by definition, any metal is a base.
When steel gets hot, it gets slightly larger due to thermal expansion. Since the mass stays the same, and density = mass/volume, it gets (very, very slightly) less dense. So cold steel is more dense than hot steel.
7.87 g/cm^3
A galvanized iron is similar to steel; it is material that composed of cold-rolled and hot-dip galvanized mild steel. It has 7850 kilograms per cubic meter density same as a steel.
Steel has the greatest density of the three.
The density of aluminized steel is 2710. Additionally, the density of its counterpart, carbon steel, is slightly different at 2833.
The density of steel as per IS 2062 will vary. This is because steel's density typically changes with composition.
density of galvanized steel 7850kg/m3
density of galvanized steel 7850kg/m3
Asko Talja has written: 'Simplified design expressions for cold-formed channel sections' -- subject(s): Cold working, Design and construction, High strength Steel, Steel, Steel, High strength, Testing
The density of a substance stays the same, no matter how much space it takes up.
the density of TMT R/F steel is 7850
All types of steel have a density of 7,85e03 kg/m3