plastic deformation การใช้
- Plastic deformation is retained after the release of the applied stress.
- Hardness measurements quantify the resistance of a material to plastic deformation.
- Brittle failure occurs with little to no plastic deformation before fracture.
- No plastic deformation is allowed at this level of a load.
- This phenomenon is called " plastic deformation ".
- Once this begins the material has entered a stage called plastic deformation.
- The criterion was introduced to deal with the plastic deformation of soils.
- Furthermore, plastic deformation alters the form and geometry of the part.
- Note the plastic deformation of grains visible on the right.
- Plastic deformation ends with the fracture of the material.
- Ductile materials can sustain large plastic deformations without fracture.
- Reaching the surface means the material undergoes plastic deformations.
- Because dislocation motion is hindered, plastic deformation cannot occur at normal stresses.
- Now as metals become warmer, their resistance to further plastic deformation decreases.
- I'd say it will undergo elastic deformation, not plastic deformation.
- The result is a permanent change of shape within the crystal and plastic deformation.
- Most materials in the linear-elastic category are usually capable of plastic deformation.
- Unlike most thermoplastics, polycarbonate can undergo large plastic deformations without cracking or breaking.
- Work hardening is a consequence of plastic deformation, a permanent change in shape.
- Therefore, these bonds break at relatively lower stresses, leading to plastic deformation.
- ตัวอย่างการใช้เพิ่มเติม: 1 2 3