Definition, Betydelse & Synonymer | Engelska ordet BRITTLENESS
BRITTLENESS
Definition av BRITTLENESS
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Exempel på hur man kan använda BRITTLENESS i en mening
- Sefström was a student of Berzelius and, when studying the brittleness of steel in 1830, he rediscovered a new chemical element, to which he gave the name vanadium.
- Disadvantages include brittleness and fragility, limited availability and applicability in medium and large bearing sizes and capacities, and friction variations if the load is not axial.
- Pieces of ore with high concentrations of copper were initially pounded into a rough shape, heated to reduce brittleness, pounded again to refine the shape, and reheated.
- Osteogenesis imperfecta - hereditary condition marked by reduced bone mass, weakened bones, increased brittleness, and short stature.
- The PLC effect is known to induce blue brittleness in steel; additionally, the loss of ductility may cause rough surfaces to develop during deformation (Al-Mg alloys are especially susceptible to this), rendering them useless for autobody or casting applications.
- Losing ductility, or increasing brittleness, is dangerous in RPVs because it can lead to catastrophic failure without warning.
- Fracturability: The force with which the sample crumbles, cracks or shatters – Fracturability encompasses crumbliness, crispiness, crunchiness and brittleness.
- The quenched metal undergoes a martensitic transformation, increasing the hardness and brittleness of the part.
- Although this material allows various methods of sterilising and disinfecting to be carried out, repeated sterilisation can cause discolouration and brittleness.
- To discern from other common beet diseases such as Rhizoctonia or Pythium root rot, leaves can be tested for brittleness or a burned or scorched appearance.
- The disingenuous ceruse was thought to contain a mixture of chalk or whiting, which compromised the whiteness, brittleness and weight in comparison to Venetian ceruse.
- Segregation to grain boundaries, for example, can lead to grain boundary fracture as a result of temper brittleness, creep embrittlement, stress relief cracking of weldments, hydrogen embrittlement, environmentally assisted fatigue, grain boundary corrosion, and some kinds of intergranular stress corrosion cracking.
- Extended invention of solvent-free nanofluids, nanoparticles that form moderate to high viscosity liquids at room temperature in absence of any added solvent, by Giannelis, Archer, Wiesner groups at Cornell to create reactive solvent-free nanofluids to create new resins and materials and exotic cross-linking agents in photoinitiated UV (free radical), polyurethane, and polyurea (air curing) systems – Demonstrated applications in producing UV-protective overcoats, new adhesives and sealants, and lubricants – Showed that such liquid colloids can be used to mitigate brittleness and increase toughness induced by nanofillers in nanocomposites – Developed core-free solvent-free nanofluids derived from organo-trialkoxysilanes that, because of high polydispersity, provided first experimental examples of coexistence of multiple phase domains due to polydispersity – Showed that such glass transition and melting in such core-free nanofluids are lambda transitions and second-order (continuous) phase transitions – Presented reactive nanofluids as additive manufacturing inks (featured in C&E News).
- Onychorrhexis (from the Greek words ὄνυχο- ónycho-, "nail" and ῥῆξις rhexis, "bursting"), is a brittleness with breakage of finger or toenails that may result from hypothyroidism, anemia, anorexia nervosa or bulimia, or after oral retinoid therapy.
- Resiliency: The converse of brittleness, which for a resilience system is “zero” loss of minimum normalcy.
- Dosima is distinguished from Lepas by the form of the carina, and by the exceptional thinness and brittleness of its exoskeleton.
- The novels are plot-driven stories where a central character is drawn inexorably into a predicament that exposes the brittleness of human equanimity and the delusion of self-determination.
- Firesetting is the process of exposing a rock face to high temperatures to induce cracking, spalling, and an overall increase to the brittleness of the rock in order to make it more susceptible to mining processes.
- Armstrong modifies Ryle's Behaviourism by suggesting that the mind's dispositions may be explainable by science in Materialist terms, in the same way that glass's brittleness can be explained in terms of molecular structure.
- They include acute symptoms, like paresthesia, twitching of the hands and feet, unconsciousness, and trouble breathing; and chronic symptoms, including seizures, tiredness, irritability, cardiac insufficiency, abnormal heart rhythms, papilledema, cataracts, calcium deposits in the brain, and loss or brittleness of hair, skin, and nails.
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