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Disintegrating

Disintegrating is the process by which something loses cohesion and breaks apart into smaller parts, fragments, or dissolved constituents. It can occur through physical fragmentation, chemical decomposition, dissolution, or biological breakdown, and it is influenced by material properties, environmental conditions, and time. Disintegration can be rapid, resulting in immediate fragmentation, or gradual, occurring over extended periods.

In materials science and engineering, disintegration happens when stress, fatigue, corrosion, abrasion, or weathering weaken a

In biology and medicine, disintegration describes the degradation of tissues or organic matter by enzymes, microbes,

In practical use, disintegration describes how a tablet breaks apart in a digestive tract, or how a

solid
until
it
fractures
or
crumbles.
In
chemistry,
disintegration
refers
to
the
breakdown
of
compounds
into
simpler
substances,
often
promoted
by
heat,
light,
catalysts,
or
reactive
solvents,
followed
by
dissolution
or
phase
change.
or
other
biological
processes.
In
physics,
nuclear
disintegration—more
commonly
called
radioactive
decay—is
the
breakdown
of
unstable
atomic
nuclei
into
lighter
nuclei,
sometimes
accompanied
by
emission
of
particles
or
radiation.
Timescales
vary
from
fractions
of
a
second
to
geological
ages,
depending
on
the
system
and
isotopes
involved.
larger
object
becomes
unusable
or
nonfunctional
through
progressive
loss
of
integrity.
The
term
is
also
used
metaphorically
to
describe
the
collapse
of
organizations,
plans,
or
reputations.