Copper (Cu) is primarily ductile, meaning it can be drawn into wires or stretched without breaking. This property allows it to be easily shaped and formed, making it ideal for various applications, including electrical wiring and Plumbing. While copper can become brittle at very low temperatures or when alloyed with certain elements, under normal conditions, it exhibits excellent ductility.
brittle
They are generally brittle.
They are generally brittle.
Polythene is a type of plastic that is generally considered to be ductile. This means it can deform without breaking when subjected to stress or strain, making it suitable for a variety of applications where flexibility is required.
Cast iron, is one example of a non-ductile metal. Unlike ductile metals, copper, steel, aluminium - cast iron is too brittle to be reworked.
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.
No, silicon is a brittle material and not ductile.
Doubtful. Ductile by definition means "not brittle, easily stretched, malleable".
brittle
A fluoride salt is brittle.
Sulfur is brittle.
more brittle
is factor of safety of brittle material half of ductile material
They are generally brittle.
They are generally brittle.