Damage-tolerant composites are materials that can keep working even when they get a little broken.
Imagine you're playing with lego blocks, if one piece cracks or breaks off, the whole tower might fall. But damage-tolerant composites are like having super strong, flexible lego blocks that can still hold up your tower even if one block gets a little hurt.
Like a team working together
They're used in real life
A good example is airplane wings. Even if tiny cracks appear from flying through storms or turbulence, the material still works well, just like how your lego tower can still stand even if one block isn’t perfect.
So damage-tolerant composites are like strong, smart materials that keep things working even when they're not perfect, and they help make airplanes, cars, and other cool stuff super reliable.
Examples
- A car's bumper made from damage-tolerant composites can absorb a crash without breaking.
- A bike helmet uses layers of material to stay intact even after multiple falls.
- A bridge made with these materials can handle heavy trucks without cracking.
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See also
- What are honeycomb panels?
- How waterproofing works (and fails)?
- What is concrete?
- What is strain?
- What are stronger materials?