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7.3: Brittle Bones

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    Brittle materials have a small plastic region and they begin to fail toward fracture or rupture almost immediately after being stressed beyond their elastic limit. Bone, cast iron, ceramic, and concrete are examples of brittle materials. Materials that have relatively large plastic regions under tensile stress are known as ductile. Examples of ductile materials include aluminum and copper. The following figure shows how brittle and ductile materials change shape under stress. Even the cartilage that makes up tendons and ligaments is relatively brittle because it behaves less like example (c) and more like examples (a) and (b). Luckily, those tissues have adapted to allow the deformation required for typical movement without the brittle nature of the materiel coming into play. We will learn about that adaptation in the next chapter.

    500px-Ductility-300x289.png

    Profile (a) is an example of the material that fractures with no plastic deformation, i.e., it is a brittle material. Profile (b) is an example of a material that fractures after very little plastic deformation. These two profiles would be classified as having low ductility. Profile (c) in contrast is a material that plastically deforms before fracture. This material has high ductility. Image Credit: Sigmund (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

    Materials that are very malleable can undergo significant plastic deformation under compressive stress, as apposed to tensile stress. Very malleable materials can be pounded into thin sheets. Gold is the most malleable metal.[1]



    This page titled 7.3: Brittle Bones is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lawrence Davis (OpenOregon) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.