Brittle Material
A material is brittle if, when subjected to stress, it breaks without significant deformation (strain). Brittle materials absorb relatively littleenergy prior to fracture, even those of high strength.
Breaking is often accompanied by a snapping sound. Brittle materials include
mostceramics and glasses (which do not deform plastically) and some polymers, such as PMMA and polystyrene. Many steels become brittle at low temperatures (see ductile-brittle transition temperature), depending on their composition and processing.
When used in materials science, it is generally applied to materials that fail when
there is little or no evidence of plastic deformation before
failure. One proof is to match the broken halves, which should fit exactly
since no plastic deformation has occurred.
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