Researcher X
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How hard can something be without being easily breakable?
The discussion revolves around identifying the hardest material that is not brittle, exploring the balance between hardness, toughness, and resistance to fracture. Participants consider various materials and their properties, including metals, ceramics, and advanced composites, in the context of practical applications and theoretical limits.
Participants generally agree that steel is a strong contender for the hardest non-brittle material available today, but there are competing views on the potential of other materials like silicon carbide and advanced composites. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the absolute best material, with various hypotheses and models presented.
Participants note limitations in defining "easily breakable" and the dependence on specific applications. The discussion also highlights the challenges in quantifying material properties without experimental data.
"The armor-piercing concept calls for more penetration capability than the target's armour thickness. Generally, the penetration capability of an armor piercing round is proportional to the projectile's kinetic energy. Thus an efficient means of achieving increased penetrating power is increased velocity for the projectile. However, projectile impact against armour at higher velocity causes greater levels of shock. Materials have characteristic maximum levels of shock capacity, beyond which they may shatter on impact. At relatively high impact velocities, steel is no longer an adequate material for armor piercing rounds due to shatter. Tungsten and tungsten alloys are suitable for use in even higher velocity armour piercing rounds due to their very high shock tolerance and shatter resistance."
Mapes said:Engineering ceramics are still likely to fracture before they yield, however. For a material that can be made in bulk form today, I don't think you're going to beat steel (~1 GPa strength, 100 MPa m1/2 fracture toughness).