Chemistry, asked by gursimran1204, 8 months ago

what is mallaebility? which of them shows mallaebility- Metal or non-metal?

Answers

Answered by karansshettyk
1

Malleability is a substance's ability to deform under pressure (compressive stress). If malleable, a material may be flattened into thin sheets by hammering or rolling. Malleable materials can be flattened into metal leaf. One well-known type of metal leaf is gold leaf. Many metals with high malleability also have high ductility. Some do not; for example lead has low ductility but high malleability.

Malleability is a physical property of matter, usually metals. The property usually applies to the family groups 1 to 12 on the modern periodic table of elements. It is the ability of a solid to bend or be hammered into other shapes without breaking. Examples of malleable metals are gold, iron, aluminum, copper, silver, and lead.

Gold and silver are highly malleable. When a piece of hot iron is hammered it takes the shape of a sheet. The property is not seen in non-metals. Non-malleable metals may break apart when struck by a hammer. Malleable metals usually bend and twist in various shapes.

Zinc is malleable at temperatures between 100 and 200 °C but is brittle at other temperatures

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Answered by AKStark
0

Answer:

MALLAEBILITY IS PROPERTY OF METALS BY VIRTUE OF WHICH METALS CAN BE BEATEN INTO THIN SHEETS.

METAL ONLY SHOW MALLAEBILITY.

EXEPT MERCURY ,GALLIUM OR METALS WHICH ARE LIQUID AT ROOM TEMPERATURE.

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