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just to add my two cents - I was always under the impression that carbon made a metal more brittle - hence the "stressed areas" of a piece of non-passivating metal rust more quickly, due to the carbon in the metal alloy which becomes clustered around it.which is not very ductile and malleable... (we already know that metalz are not brittle)..
it rusts faster not because the carbon weakens it, but because it is an impurity!!Originally posted by Weisy
just to add my two cents - I was always under the impression that carbon made a metal more brittle - hence the "stressed areas" of a piece of non-passivating metal rust more quickly, due to the carbon in the metal alloy which becomes clustered around it.
so... can the strength of a metal be defined by now brittle it is? (considering that if it is brittle, it is not malleable or ductile, and these can be thoughtof what makes a metal 'soft')