düktilite

listen to the pronunciation of düktilite
Türkçe - İngilizce
ductility
Ability of a material to be drawn out longitudinally to a reduced section without fracture under the action of a tensile force
Ability of a material to be bent or otherwise formed without fracture
The ability of a material to deform plastically before fracturing
The property of a metal which allows it to be permanently deformed, in tension, before final rupture Ductility is commonly evaluated by tensile testing in which the amount of elongation and the reduction of area of the broken specimen, as compared to the original test specimen, are measured and calculated
– The property of a material by which it yields and continues to deform when a certain applied stress level is reached
The property of elongation, above the elastic limit, but under the tensile strength A measure of ductility is the percentage of elongation of the fractured piece over its original length
The property of a metal that enables it to be drawn through a die to form a wire
Tractableness; pliableness
The measurement of a metals ability to bend or deform from stresses supplied by external forces before fracturing The measurement is defined by elongation and reduction of area performed on a tension test
The property of a metal which allows it to be drawn into wires or filaments
The ability of steel to withstand permanent distortion without rupture
That property of a material which permits of its being drawn out into a thread or wire
a measure of a material's ability to undergo appreciable plastic deformation before fracture E
Capacity of a material to deform permanently (e.g., stretch, bend, or spread) in response to stress. Most common steels, for example, are quite ductile and hence can accommodate local stress concentrations. Brittle materials, such as glass, cannot accommodate concentrations of stress because they lack ductility, and therefore fracture easily. When a material specimen is stressed, it deforms elastically (see elasticity) at first; above a certain deformation, called the elastic limit, deformation becomes permanent
{i} malleability, flexibility, pliancy
The ability of a cursive font to stretch or compress the connective baseline to effect text justification
Ability of steel to undergo permanent changes in shape without fracture at room temperature
The capacity of a metal to be hammered into a thin sheet or drawn into a fine wire without breaking
Is the ability of a material to withstand large inelastic deformations without fracture Structural steel has considerable ductility
The property that permits permanent deformation before fracture by stress in tension
düktilite