Physics, asked by mdsana7070, 6 months ago


What happens when you repeatedly hammer a piece of aluminium?

Answers

Answered by DebmalyaBarman
6

On hammering, change of metal into thin sheets is called malleability. It is the ability of a solid to bend or be hammered into other shapes without breaking.

Examples of malleable metals are gold, iron, aluminium, copper, silver, and lead.

In case of aluminium,if we repeatedly hammer it,it will be converted into thin sheets instead of breaking.This property is known as malleability

Answered by nasaarjunsoni
0

Answer: On hammering, change of metal into thin sheets is called malleability. It is the ability of a solid to bend or be hammered into other shapes without breaking. Examples of malleable metals are gold, iron, aluminium, copper, silver, and lead. So, malleability is the ability of a metal to be hammered into thin sheets.

Hope this helps

Similar questions