Question:

Which of the following materials is typically brittle?

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If a material shatters like glass under stress, it's brittle. That’s a signature property of ceramics — hard, strong, but break easily!
Updated On: June 02, 2025
  • Metals
  • Polymers
  • Ceramics
  • Composites
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The Correct Option is C

Solution and Explanation

Brittleness is a property of materials that break or shatter easily when subjected to stress, without undergoing significant plastic deformation.
Why Ceramics Are Brittle:
  • Ceramics are made of ionic and/or covalent bonds which are strong but directional and rigid.
  • When stress is applied, these bonds do not allow layers of atoms to slip past one another (as in metals), leading to sudden fracture.
  • Examples: Glass, porcelain, and bricks — all of which break rather than bend when force is applied.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
  • (A) Metals: Generally ductile; they undergo plastic deformation and can bend or stretch before breaking.
  • (B) Polymers: Usually flexible and capable of absorbing energy by deforming; not brittle in general (though some hard plastics may be).
  • (D) Composites: These are engineered for specific properties; many composites are designed to combine strength and flexibility, so brittleness is not a general characteristic.
Therefore, the correct answer is ceramics, which are inherently brittle due to their atomic structure and bonding nature.
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