Social Sciences, asked by Joses5172, 10 months ago

High elastic modulus in materials arises from what bonds

Answers

Answered by MyStiCalDiMpLeS
0

Answer:

The Young's modulus is the slope of the initial section of the curve (i.e. m in y = mx + b). When a material reached a certain stress, the material will begin to deform. It is up to point where the materials structure is stretching and not deforming.

Answered by juniyaelsalm
0

Answer:

The answer is high strength of bonds

Explanation:

The elastic behavior is well understood, with reversible deformation and stress proportional to strain.

The modulus of elasticity is defined by the slope of the linear section of the stress-strain curve.

The interatomic distance determines the basic modulus of elasticity at the atomic level.

The interatomic bonding force is directly proportional to the modulus of elasticity.

The greater the interatomic bonding force, the greater the resistance to elastic deformation and, as a result, the higher the elastic modulus.

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